Garden Centre
Saturday, June 27, 2009
A rose by any other name
The way I acquired it was strange: I wanted to buy a garden lantern and saw exactly what I wanted at a car boot sale. As the owner wrapped it up, she held out a twig in a pot and said, “Want this?” Under the table she had quite a few of these twigs and explained that her husband had been a driver for a nursery which laid him off while he still had a van full of roses. Three months later they hadn’t been to collect them and she was giving them away with every purchase. As I say, for three years the twig remained a twig, but this year it’s rewarded my patience. I hope all its siblings were as lucky.
Labels: june garden, june roses, pink roses
The All Seasons Gardener at 4:52 AM 0 Comments
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Violas – unsung summer beauties
One of my favourites, this year, has been the violas I grew from seed. They are F1 hybrids, which means any offspring they have won’t come true to the parent, but I still think for the subtle colours they’ve produced, it’s worth having them, even if they won’t reproduce truly for future generations.
Because they are so low growing, violas are often neglected, but they are ideal plants for some of those places where nothing else will grow. I’ve put mine as an underplanting below my winter jasmine, which is in a concrete trough on a north-facing wall – the jasmine takes most of the moisture and there is probably less than ten minutes of sun a day for the flowers to bloom on, but they are still doing a sterling job, sturdily getting five or six flowers a plant out there and as long as I dead-head, they will give me gentle colour right through until September.
I haven’t decided yet whether to treat them as annual bedding or give them perennial status – so few flowers have coped with this hostile situation that I’ve got used to planting the trough as summer bedding only, but somehow I think these violas may thrive where others have suffered.
Labels: violas, winter jasmine
The All Seasons Gardener at 8:37 AM 0 Comments
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Kniphofia – a lily by any other name?
Kniphofia is also know as Tritoma, Red Hot Poker, Torch Lily, and Poker plant – it’s African in origin and has bright rocket-shaped flowers in many shades, not just the red/orange/yellow combo that I personally favour. Nor does it have to be a four foot tall spire of showy brightness that I adore – there are cream and green kniphofias, pale yellow ones, and even some miniature ones. Lovely I’m sure, but why, I wonder, would you bother with such subtlety when there are a thousand other summer bloomers that will deliver those minor garden notes? If you want a Stravinsky-like blurting of incandescent colour, go for the very early (June) or very late (mid-August) classic kniphofias and enjoy them for their spectacular, firework-like, brilliance. Actually, what they most remind me of is the Rocket ice-lolly I used to eat as a child!
Kniphofias are not difficult to grow at all if you understand that they get a lot of water in the growing season in their natural home, but none at all in winter – they insist on good drainage, especially in the colder months. Give them that, and you’ll have a firework display of your own.
Labels: knifophia, red hot pokers, torch lily, tritoma
The All Seasons Gardener at 4:37 AM 0 Comments
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
June Flowers and Invalid Gardeners
At other times you can only see the big picture. Two weeks ago I found myself having unplanned major surgery. Now I have another four weeks where I can’t dig or lift heavy things or even drive. It’s a surprise to me, just how much time I’ve spent with my eyes lowered to the task in hand, instead of raised to the garden as a whole.
Enforced leisure can be fun, but it brings other problems: I can see what needs to be done but I can’t do it! My fingers twitch to pull out the annual weeds that are springing out of my borders, and to dead-head the roses but I mustn’t. I can mention it to my nearest and dearest but if they don’t listen I can hardly nag them to do what they don’t even notice.
But after a few days, my eyes adjusted and I started to see certain charms that I’d never seen before, often because I’d removed them from the garden before they had a chance to be charming! Take this field poppy. I have glorious oriental poppies in the border, but usually these chance blown seedlings get removed before they have the chance to flower. This one escaped my weeding this year and has rewarded me with a smaller, simpler but perhaps more graceful flower than its blowsy oriental cousin.
Don’t worry though, I shall be back to frantic weeding by Mid-July!
Labels: june garden, june tasks, poppies
The All Seasons Gardener at 3:43 AM 0 Comments
- The November Greenhouse
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- Autumn features - bark
- Pyracantha
- After the rain
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