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Friday 28 February 2014

Hoophouse Happiness

I love my polytunnel at the minute, or hoophouse as I would call it if I were across the pond. Not the actual structure which has been blattered, twisted & punctured what with all the gales, but the interior - has never been more organised & tidy. 10,000 labels, 3 Sharpy markers, pots & trays to hand and most importantly of course, lots of bonnie wee plants:

Autumn sown annuals - snapdragons, ammi majus, orlaya grandiflora, nigella Mulberry Rose.
Last year sown perennials - lupins, verbascums, veronica longifolia, echinops, primulas.
Also tree lupins & hydrangeas from cuttings.

In the border there is applemint, feverfew, senecio, hesperis, muscari, narcissus, sweet william, wallflowers & ranunculus - all for Mother's Day (fingers crossed).

Today I received this year's new arrivals - iris lousiana Heather Stream, lilium henryii, delphiniums Blue Jay & Blue Fountain, scabious Clive Greaves, campanula pyramidalis, phlox Katje, thalictrum Delavayi, chasmanthe floribunda Saturnus (new to us), & echinacea Hot Summer - all for the ornamental garden. Also some dahlias & peonies for the cut flower field. All were potted on and set aside in the tunnel to hopefully bulk up before hardening off and planting out.

It was a beautiful day today, it would have been lovely to work outside but the new plants couldn't wait and with both ends of the tunnel fully open and the ipod, (with my trusty solar powered dock) on shuffle, it was a little piece of paradise.


Wednesday 19 February 2014

Hope Springs

It has been such a mild winter to date that a lot of our garden plants haven't stopped growing and some of the perennials are making bonny clumps of fresh green growth, the problem being that, by the law of averages, we are bound to be in for a rotten spell of freezing weather. Here's hoping that the easterly winds will be kind to us.

Today, we managed to clear the prairie bed of weeds and cut back the perennials. This border was made only last year but with copious amounts of garden compost used, the plants are supersized - crocosmias, kniphofias, heleniums, rudbeckias & geums are all thriving. As are the weeds of course - buttercup buttercup.....I will be pulling them out in my sleep. Although the perk of using our own organic garden compost is the free plants - toadflax, aquilegia, poppies & foxgloves as big as cabbages.


Some of the grasses are establishing better than others - the panicum virgatum - both Heavy Metal & Prairie Sky are doing well, others will hopefully thrive this summer.

Elsewhere, in the "front" garden, we have cleared the overgrown shrubs (planted 17 years ago) - pyracantha, cotoneaster & brachyglottis, which has left room for new plants!! Physocarpus Darts Gold & rosa Graham Thomas moved from elsewhere. The yellow flower on the right is Canary Bird, a wonderful early flowering rose.



Geranium oxonianum Rebecca Moss had outgrown her allotted space in this border (around the corner from this photo!) so we have moved some pieces to other parts of the garden, including shady areas which should work well - will keep you posted!

Wednesday 5 February 2014

Garden News

The long term weather forecast: Rain and gales, with a side order of more rain and gales.

The garden is saturated and as I type this, the most severe gales are howling outside, I'm dreading checking the tunnel in the morning as the entire frame has twisted ever so slightly, just enough to prevent the doors closing properly.

At least today was just perfect - sunny with no wind - amazing!

The blue and white bed in the cottage garden has been re-edged, dug over to remove every single piece of achillea ptarmica The Pearl and filled with a mountain load of old horse manure. All other existing plants were dug up and taken to the polytunnel, which is like quarantine...no exit until every single tiny piece of white root removed. The safe plants have been divided and replanted: white phlox, lupin, penstemon and blue campanula persicifolia, pulsatilla, aquilegia, delphinium, veronicastrum & geraniums Rozanne, Gravetye, Summer Skies & Johnson's Blue. Snowdrops and muscari have also been returned and we have ordered some more delphinium.

I will also move, from the cut flower field, the anchusa Dropmore and some veronica longifolia Pacific Ocean together with a handful of self sown cerinthe and autumn sown echium Blue Bedder. It may look too neat in the first season as it has lost the exuberance that comes from years of self sown thugs filling every possible gap but hey ho, it had to be done.


The bed in early June last year, growth was rather behind with the terribly cold spring but you can see to the right of the picture a large area of achillea ptarmica The Pearl fighting with lysimachia clethroides (both not yet in flower). Looking at this picture, we need more white flowers in early summer and more blue in late summer - has given me something else to google!