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Monday 9 May 2016

A Little Piece of Kilcoan

This week, I’ve been creating a tiny (2m x 3m) show garden as part of the Antrim Garden Trail’s exhibit at Garden Show Ireland.
I wanted to create a little sample of Kilcoan in spring and, judging by the feedback, I think I may have pulled it off.
The weather has been so cold which helped as I would rather the plants were just beginning to flower than going over. On hind sight, I should have moved certain plants in to the tunnel a few weeks earlier, such as galium odoratum, centaurea montana, geranium macrorhizum, camassia and alliums. All of the plants were propagated  from our garden stock, except for the bulbs which were purchased and potted up in autumn.
The plants are as follows:
Bulbs
Muscari Peppermint, narcissus Geranium & Silver Chimes, tulipa Abigail & Blue Diamond, camassia esculenta and allium cowanii
Perennials
Galium odoratum, primula veris, geum rivale, silene dioica, geranium macrorrhizum Bevans Variety, polemonium Lambrooke Mauve, polemonium Stairway to Heaven, brunnera Jack Frost, alchemilla mollis, centaurea montana, lupin Chandelier, thalictrum aquilegifolium and aquilegia.
Trees – betula pendula & acer campestre
The focal point of the display is an “insect hotel” at the end of the path, adding a vertical dimension in a kind of sculptural sense. Although it looks ornamental, the spec is such that it should prove useful – corrugated card for lacewings, correct diameter of holes for solitary bees. It will also face south / southeast when brought back to Kilcoan which is important.
It was such a wonderful experience and the atmosphere was so amazing that I would highly recommend a visit (next year!).



Monday 2 May 2016

New Pond

Time has run away with me as happens so often…I will try to catch up.
Since early March, we have been busy and the new pond is finally finished. We ended up having to use a liner as the soil was surprisingly sandy when we started to dig. The pond is essentially for wildlife and so we placed some of our clay soil on top of the liner, made the pond quite shallow with a gradual gradient all around. The stone wall at the back faces south and I’m desperately hoping to attract newts.
There is still plenty of work to do – I have ordered more oxygenators online and the edge on the meadow side is still very much bare soil but I’m sure it won’t be long filling out. I want to keep it as native/natural as possible. Plants so far are as follows:
Just beside the pond edge: Variegated flag iris, iris Gerald Darby, cowslips, geranium maculatum, water forget-me-not.
Behind the pond wall: lythrum salicaria Rosy Gem, aruncus dioicus and japanese astilbe.
In the pond: Caltha palustris, iris lasvigata, nuphar lutea, ranunculus lingua.

I have scattered local wildflower seed on the bare soil on the wild side beside the existing meadow, we still have a stone seat to make overlooking the pond. Gardeners may need patience but I’m willing to bet this time next year, the pond will look as if it’s been there forever…..and hopefully the wildlife will  approve!


Thursday 18 February 2016

Cottage Garden Tasks

So much to do in so little time, and yet the ground is as wet as ever, unworkable in most areas which is frustrating. Bitterly cold the past few days which at least has slowed down growth after the mild winter. The cottage garden beneath the old ash trees would be the driest part of the entire garden which can be a problem in summer but we can at least work the beds no matter the weather.
A few pleasant days this month allowed us to complete a few tasks on our winter’s “to do” list. We removed the greenhouse in the cottage garden as, with the polytunnel, we don’t really need it – its removal will allow room for more plants – yippee!!
We have also removed the gravel paths in the herb garden to renew with better weed suppressing fabric underneath – the paths were rather uneven and full of weeds, very boring but necessary!
Back to the cottage garden, all beds have been cut back and weeded, the two large lupins have been lifted, divided and replanted. We have also lifted geranium Mrs Kendall Clarke who was accidentally planted at the front of the blue and white bed…now divided and replanted between the tall hybrid tea roses (to help hide their ugly legs!) and a few pieces have also been planted in front of the laid hawthorn hedge among the old roses.
The large golden daylily in the purple and gold bed was also lifted and divided (flowering had diminished last year) and another geranium wlassovianum added to make three in that bed – I love its neatness and foliage colours in spring and autumn.
Some 100 dutch iris have been planted together with some allium cowanii, we just need a decent mulch of composted bark and we can look forward to spring!


Sunday 31 January 2016

New Year, New Dreams


So excited about this year 2016…the first year that the garden will be open (from April to September) to the public and I can’t wait to share the garden with all sorts of folk from around the world. A few years ago, this would have seemed unbelievable but we are so lucky to have the opening of the Gobbins Cliff Path on our doorstep and since its opening last August, there have been 26 different nationalities stepping onto our lovely island.



I’m trying to forget about the fact that it has rained almost every day since Christmas (no kidding) and that we have had one storm after another – there is so much to do in the garden before we open again in April…here are just a few items on the “To Do” list:
Make a new sign for the top of the lane.
Build a new pond beside the sapling wood in the upper garden.
Make a fruit cage in the veg garden.
Build an arch between the orchard and herb garden (for some climbing roses).
Resurface the paths in the veg garden.
Clear, weed and mulch all borders.
Divide and replant congested perennials.
Prune, feed and mulch roses (all 120 of them!) and plant 15 new ones.

Need I say more? I think I need to get a move on!