It's very healthy but getting misshapen from being pruned for too tight a space and being sited up against the wall.
I thought about asking Jeronimo to transplant it to the new garden by the fence. I originally planned upright flowering perennials there -- a salvia, an agastache, a Rocky Mountain penstemon and a dwarf goldenrod.
All lovely, and I even ordered the plants before having to cancel everything with my foot injury. Would the visual weight of the rosemary be better?
But of course the new space in front of the fence is barely wider than where the rosemary is crammed now.
I had A.I. show me what it could look like there. I think it's too much and would create the same problem in this strip.
It's evergreen, and a nice looking evergreen in winter, giving me something to look at against the fence from inside the house. The perennials would be a complete nothing in winter, dormant at ground level. But I think not. I'll ask Jeronimo to remove the rosemary and discard it, not transplant it.
I'm totally confused about how big rosemary 'Arp' was supposed to get. I didn't think it would be this big in the gravel strip by the house wall.
So I asked A.I. about that -- I'm learning I can have actual conversations with ChatGPT with back and forth brainstorming and a clear explanation of the logic behind its answers.
In fact, here's the whole thing, starting with my conversational request for advice!
> Me (I attached a photo of my rosemary):
What is the mature size of rosemary 'Arp"? Nursery sites selling 'Arp' are all over the place, some say 5 feet wide, some say 2 feet wide but 6 feet tall. Some say 3 feet tall and 4 feet wide. What is your best advice on the eventual size growing in Santa Fe conditions in gravel against a sunny stucco house wall? Here is a picture of mine in a too small space. What do you think? I know I need to move it but how big will it get?

















