Category Archives: Flowers

Bulbs

I’m not very good at planting bulbs – and they don’t seem to last. I thought you just put them in and they came up for ever but quite often I come across them and they’ve rotted. I do love tulips though – and who doesn’t like spring bulbs coming up. Today I planted a load of tulips I got from Sarah Raven and some mini daffs Amanda gave me

Sarah told me not to plant until late Oct/ Nov because this stops them getting diseases. Tho I don’t know whether that is “November” as in when it is actually cold or now, when it’s still what would be October weather. We’ll see.

To remember, I planted….

  • Prinses Irene – in the pot at the back and in the front pots too and some in a long green pot that might be for Edie, or might not.
  • Mini daffs in 2 round pots.

All the others are white or yellow because I bought the “Sherbet Lemon” collection. Why? These aren’t the colours I like – why did I buy these? Anyway there are…

  • Green Dance and Westpoint in the bed by the honey suckle.
  • And in the back bed and the pot by the back door, there are World Friendship, Golden Apeldoorn and praestans Shogun.

Amanda also gave me some red tulips and some Green star which are white with green markings which I’m going to plant at the Red Cross. See what I’m doing there.

Let’s see…

Me vs Fuschia, Fuschia vs Pond

One of the things about trying to garden in a different way, is that I sometimes don’t have anything to do. Not that my garden is finished – it’s still a mess – but that if I am trying to let nature do more, then I need to do less. For ex, usually this time of year, I would clear up and cut back, but I am trying to let things die and rot back into the soil.

Today everyone was driving me nuts and I wanted to do some soothing gardening. But I couldn’t find anything to do. Then I turned to the fuschia, as I often do, because you can hack great bits off it with impunity and really no result.

As previously discussed, the fuschia needs chopping because it’s too big and not actually a tree and always trying to be a bush. Ilove it when I cut it’s shape clearly. I’m going to go back and cut more later and I’m thinking about turning it into one of those pom-pom trees! I think I need to learn more about pruning.

Also as previously discussed, the fuschia is killing the pond. Today I took out a ton of old rotting leaves and disturbed a very cross looking frog. It seems a shame to have got the pond properly done with bricks and tadpoles into maturity and let the bushy tree kill it off.

Planning for 2022

I”m going to use this as a list of things I”m thinking about for next year:

1. Get rid of this

If this comes up again – give it to Amie. You don’t like it, it’s massive and it doesn’t do anything. She will like it because it is architectural.

Maybe make a big effort to find out what it is and give some away.

2. Fuschia

Cut it right back. In the winter and then throughout the summer.

3. Gooseberries

Managed to keep next doors cat from sleeping in that bed. Didn’t manage anything else. Find out how to look after them better.

4. Back bed

AGAIN. needs sorting. Has needed sorting for the last 5-10 years. Now needs either to become a shady bed or a mixed one but either way, needs sorting

Foxglove Final

So some of the old spikes have had new spikes (the ones that got cut off cleanly, not just died). And some of them have new green growth but not new spikes. These are the ones in the pot by the door (one of which is at least 2 years old) and a new spike on the one in the left hand bed.

Things I have learnt this year: foxgloves are more complicated than you think. Or more straightforward. If you cut them back, some come again. They might last for several years. They can have lots and lots of spikes at the same time, or a succession. Just because someone smacks them with a cricket ball or a hammock, doesn’t mean it’s over. But somtimes, if you cut them back after flowering, that’s it and they turn into stumps.

I think I’m ready to move onto something else now. Though I have collected and scattered the seed in a slightly more methodical fashion than usual this year, and am interested to see what happens…

Nicotiana

I grew these from seed. The ones in my garden are tiny and have no flowers but I went to the Red Cross last week and look! Huge red trumpets! I think they got more sun and no snails. I’m not sure what’s in the soil but it suits them.

Wild or messy?

Where’s the line between a wildlife garden and a mess? When does it stop being a garden? I guess it’s like the definition of a weed – you decide for yourself. But I’m still finding where my line is.

When we got back from Norfolk, the garden looked terrible. The comparison doesn’t help! But every thing is too big – I have this problem as a lot of things that survived the kids & the neglect have outgrown their space. And there aren’t many flowers in my garden this time of year, and it has been raining so much, the green has shot up. The fuchsia, which mostly I love so much, has bushed out, and put the whole of the back bed in shade. And in this funny stormy light, it looks a horrid salmony pink.

Turning things from a mess to a garden seems mostly to involve cutting stuff right back, tidying stuff up & killing things. I’ve started in this photo, and also cut the edge of the lawn with shears (I will mow the middle). I like the right-hand side more than the left because it’s still wilder….

So I know like it messy, but I think there is still some way to go to make it look like a lovely garden. The trouble is, as soon as you cut things back, you find things living there. Frogs in the grass, caterpillars in the bushes and the fuschia is so full of honey bees, it buzzes. The old dilemma about gardening for wildlife. When do you stop gardening if you really want the wildlife to flourish?

As I am thinking discontentedly what I need to do to this week to rebalance the garden, I should remember… while Chris and I were sitting in the kitchen today after lunch, a BIG beautiful frog hopped across the garden. It sat by the pots for a bit and then it did a massive jump into the cranesbill. That is worth lots of mess!

Learn from mistakes not repeat them…

Things that haven’t worked this year…

Sweet peas: they are spindly & stunted! They have tiny stems. And loads of plump green aphids. And mildew! As predicted in I love Sweet peas and Sweetpeas don’t love me!

I have finally pulled up the poles I put in the back bed as there are no sweet peas growing up there. I am going to give up cutting the ones in pots (too short-stemmed to put in vases) and let them go to seed – if there is any point in having mildew-prone, short stemmed seeds….

PS: August 6th update: got frustrated with them and pulled them up! Will maybe buy seedlings from Sarah Raven next year. But must ONLY get mildew-resistant ones.

Veg: as predicted in I can’t grow veg, I can’t do that either. I have grown beans that we failed to eat and are now so huge and hard I am working out how to save them as dried beans (all 10 of them). I have a trombocino that … well who knows really? And some unappealing-looking Swiss Chard that I don’t want to eat either. I’ve got some pea sprouts that have gone all hairy.

Let it go! Give up thinking you can sneak some in, because you can’t. Try and grow some parsley and don’t worry about the rest.

Sunflowers: this isn’t quite fair because they have grown – but they’ve also been eaten! (Unlike my vegetables). This has been a bumper year for snails – but I need to remember that things need to be really big and strong not to get eaten up as soon as they get planted out,

PS: August 6th update: cut them all down

Scabious: 6th August update: I have one scabious! Pic to follow

See also seedlings: the half way point and Chilli for some more failures. But Nicotiana for a rare success!

Reverting Rose

This is a “Sophie’s Perpetual” Rose that Marion gave me – I think for my 40th Birthday. It is lovely and it is reverting, which means it is turning back into the wild, has 7 leaves (not 5) and some flowers that look like wild dog-roses. The internet says it should only happen on canes developing below the graft, but mine seems to have wild leaves on all of it, though only a few flowers that don’t look true.

I love my fuschia

This is one of the first plants I ever bought, about 20 years ago, in a tiny pot.

Now it is basically a small tree. It wants to bush back into a shrub but I have pruned it over the years to be a tree. I love it because it is beautiful. And partly because it won’t die easily – before I started tree-pruning it, I tried to dig it out and it just grew back; every year I hack huge swathes out of it and it just gets on with it. It is so full of life, that when I use sticks from it as supports for other plants, they start rooting.

And partly because it is a part of THIS garden. It grows out at an angle over the pond, so you couldn’t buy one and plant it like that. It can only be – and can only have grown up over time – where it is.

I also like it because it I once read an article in the FT by Robin Lane-Fox saying tree-pruned shrubs were INCREDIBLY fashionable – mostly for snobbish reasons about how long it takes to grow them – but it made me feel ON TREND.

It is always covered in flowers and full of honey bees, that often bite through the tops of the flowers to cheat their way to nectar.

In the last couple of years, it has got fuchsia gall mite, probably from some cheap plants I got from B&Q to grow on for the school fair (which is galling ho-ho). This isn’t going to kill it, but it distorts the leaves and stops the flowers developing properly so that the plant ceases to be “viable”. I cut the infected bits off, and cut it right back in the winter – I read somewhere that very cold winters can kill the mite. So far this year, it looks alright and I”m hoping the cold winter/ spring/summer has delayed it for it a bit. I’ve also read that it gets worse through the summer, as successive generations breed and numbers grow. I think it is such a large plant it will probably be okay – you can chop it back for ages and there is still loads left, but I would be very, very sad if it ceased to be “viable”.

I love Sweet Peas

“If you can’t be with the one you love, love the one you’re with”.

Generally, I am good at this. I love the things that I am good at growing. I love the way they surprise me and flourish. Sweet peas are an exception. I am not very good at growing them but I still love them. I am not romantic about flowers but I am about sweet peas.


I know what the problem is – I grow them in pots and they get mildew. I need to grow mildew resistant ones, but I fall in love with ones that aren’t. I should grow them straight in the soil, but I have so many slugs and snails, they never make it. And every year, I know I can’t do it properly but I do it anyway!

Last year, along with the cerinthe, I bought some from Sarah Raven (Lord Nelson, Matacuna and one other) and grew them in pots on my balcony they were so beautiful. They all died in the heatwave in London, even though someone was watering them. But I harvested seed and I have some in my greenhouse. Let’s see…