
Everything is going bonkers! Weeds are outgrowing the plants, all the early flowerers have suddenly realised it’s mid-May and they had better get a shift on. The dry April has been replaced by ‘mixed’ weather conditions. Rain then sun then cloud then rain again, it just can’t make its mind up! This Cerinthe and the feverfew are fighting for position in the cottage garden border.

The Hemerocallis lilioasphodelus grown from seed a few years ago are delightfully scented and pack a real citrus yellow punch in late spring, way before the other taller varieties behind strut their stuff. I suppose it’s a survival of the fittest thing, get in early, do your thing, get out.

Have you ever seen anything more delicious than this?! Rosa ‘Boscobel’ is one of the best roses in my little collection and is one of the few David Austin roses that manage to hold their frilly heads up instead of drooping under the sheer weight of their flower power. Highly recommended if you are looking for a modern repeat flowering shrub rose with modest scent, healthy foliage and the most gorgeous flowers.

Nobody bothered to tell Clematis ‘Hagley Hybrid’ that it’s only mid-May and she shouldn’t be flowering just yet. She is starting subtly though, six inches off the ground so no-one can see!

Love-in-a-mist (Nigella damascena) should come with a warning label which says “regardless of what you would prefer, this plant will decide on its own position and grow accordingly”. Last year it was sown in the narrow cottage garden border where it flowered prolifically, went to seed and decided it preferred the adjoining gravel path, which has a weed suppressing membrane beneath! It needs no goodness, just to be left alone.

My Tradescantias are coming into flower and I am busy recording interesting things about their habits, flowering dates and cultivation. This one is Tradescantia bracteata from the mid-west of the United States and one of the shorter, more well behaved species. Delicate foliage and lavender blue flowers are a beautiful combination in a grassy plant, or weed as my wife calls them! Ah well, they feed my obsession and make me happy in my old age!
Have a great weekend, I am off trout fishing near Chipping Norton today to see if the Mayflies are about. Wish me luck!
David
I love how nature does its own thing and plants grow in places we wouldn’t expect them to. Good luck with the fishing, I haven’t seen any May flies yet this year.
Hi Rosie. I feel the same about most plants, particularly if they don’t mind being lifted and placed elsewhere occasionally! I currently have Foxgloves everywhere, Thalictrum coming out of my ears, and Scabious completely taking over one border! Fingers crossed for a Mayfly hatch later this morning, they usually come out around lunchtime and then again in the evening. It is still a bit early in the year but you never know!
Nice to see a David Austin rose that doesn’t flop! Thanks for pointing it out.
The cerinthe and lime-green feverfew make a nice color arrangement. And I like the soft yellow of the daylilies. My love-in-a-mist does the same thing, but it’s so pretty and fuzzy to touch that I forgive it. 🙂