Plant of the Day

My plant of the day is Gladiolus callianthus commonly known as the Peacock Orchid. It is a simple, beautiful, pure white flower with a maroon centre and strappy leaves. Unlike the usual gladioli where a straight stem is a must, these charming cousins from the high mountains of central Africa droop modestly.

Sometimes also called Acidanthera murielae or Abyssinian sword lily, they have a light scent, especially in the evenings, which may indicate it is a moth attractor.

The corms are not fully hardy but it will be easy to lift them in November and store them in the shed in a paper bag with some shredded paper until spring. I will try them as cut flowers when a few more come out to see how long they last. They are supposed to be good and, being white, would work on their own or with other stronger colours.

Update 31 August 2012

The blooms work well as cut flowers, particularly against a dark background as this photo shows

Helenium Heaven

I look forward to mid August when the Heleniums finally open their tight fat buds to display a feast of bold bright colour in the late summer border. Their timing is perfect. The monardas and echinaceas are just beginning to look a little tired, the crocosmias are over and the foxglove spikes have been chopped down. And then, suddenly, this happens!

Talk about making an entrance! I am looking forward to a similar happening in a few weeks when hundreds of chrysanthemums begin to unleash themselves and start a riot!

Daily Jottings

My first Carnations, Garvineas and Alstroemerias from the new cutting garden. Delighted!

The autumn clear-up has begun today with the obelisk of sweet peas being removed from the front garden. It has been fabulous this year with several hundred flowers picked from just 6 plants. They are old fashioned strongly scented Grandifloras from saved seed and are always very prolific in pink, purple, red and blue.  Strangely, no white ones appeared this year so I guess the seed must still be in the packet! This year we mixed them in the vase with Ammi majus flowers and Thalictrum foliage (a bit like Maidenhair Fern) and it set them off a treat.

My friend Bob Lawson has kindly given me two seedlings of Lothospermum scandens sometimes called Asarina. The common name is ‘climbing foxglove’ and that is exactly what it looks like. A twining climber reaching about 8 ft in a single season and covered top to bottom in shell pink foxglove shaped flowers in mid summer. It self seeds everywhere. Bob has them coming up in his tomato pots! I have kept one and given one to my friend Paddy who has a huge heated Hartley Botanic greenhouse so we will see who has the best plant next year. I love a bit of competition!

In Praise of China Asters

In my view, this is a very underrated annual for the cut flower garden. It is easy to grow from seed, is self branching and comes in shades of white, cream, blue, pink and purple. I grew several varieties this year from the dozens available and was not disappointed with any of them. The main attraction is their similarity to chrysanthemums but on smaller stockier plants that don’t need staking. They last up to a week in a vase with a water change every two days and fade slowly without dropping petals  everywhere. I love ’em!

Callistephus chinensis, the China Aster

New Variety?

Every so often something turns up which is not what you expected, a variation or “sport” which may indicate that you have found a new variety. Excitement mounts; you imagine the royalty cheques rolling in from Thompson & Morgan, a plant with your name on the label perhaps, the write-ups in the gardening press, even a launch at Chelsea! And then you realise that it is not new, not special, it actually happens all the time.

This happened to me last year and I got so carried away I decided to see if I was about to become rich beyond my widest dreams by researching and then contacting the people who hybridise and introduce new plants into the market. I thought I had found a new variety of Nicotiana mutabilis because one of 7 plants I had raised from the same packet of seed was completely different from all the rest. The usual colour combination of white,light pink and dark pink were replaced by greenish cream, peach and dusky pink. A subtle difference perhaps, but one which might indicate a permanent mutation worthy of it’s own name. After all, in some species a tiny change in hue or petal shape is enough to warrant singing from the rooftops at every show in town. Here they are side by side for you to judge:

The people I contacted and who know about these things suggested it might not be all it seemed. It was only on one plant out of seven and the seed from it may revert to type the following year. They suggested I save some seed and try again in 2012. So that is what I did and, lo and behold, the same colours appeared! So what now? Will it be accepted? Will I be rich? Will my new variety set the horticultural world on fire? I doubt it!

Bees, Butterflies & Blooms

Just been to see a wild flower meadow created by a group of volunteers on the edge of a local playing field. Partly inspired by the Sarah Raven TV series on BBC 2 earlier this year, the volunteers stripped the turf in April, removed the topsoil and broadcast a wild flower mix. The warm wet weather has helped to produce this lush and colourful meadow which is loved by the locals and respected by the children. The organisers, Charlton Kings in Bloom, are hoping to create similar areas in other parts of the village. I wish them luck.

Green Waste Weeds!

This is another reason why I don’t like using compost containing recycled green waste, the weed seeds and liverworts that develop within days of being transferred out of a bag, into a pot and exposed to the light. The high temperatures achieved composting on an industrial scale is reckoned to kill these seeds but the evidence suggests otherwise.

Echinaceas potted on a week ago into cheap peat free compost containing recycled green waste

If you leave them, in a couple of weeks it gets worse.

Three weeks after potting on these astrantias, the weed seeds and liverworts have taken hold.

I never get this problem with peat based products and it is evidence that the manufacturers have still got a long way to go to produce viable  peat free alternatives.

Flower Show Nerves

Yesterday was the Cheltenham Horticultural Society Summer Flower and Craft Show at the Pittville Pump Rooms in Cheltenham and I got a little carried away on the entry form! I ended up with 9 entries  for cut flowers and fruit, and Cathy entered a beautiful babies dress and shoes she had crocheted, and four perfect ginger nuts in the home baking class.

I was in the garden at 5.30am selecting and cutting the flowers in my dressing gown and flip flops. Hope the neighbours didn’t see! Got three enormous buckets full and we managed to get them down to the show at 9am without spilling any water in the car, mainly because Cathy was holding on to them for dear life. We came away at 10.30am having fiddled and faffed about with the regulation vases, stuffing them with newspaper (poor man’s Oasis foam), and placing them artistically on the judging tables.

We returned at 2.30pm for the ritual insults and humiliation and were amazed and delighted to find that Cathy had won first prize in the handicrafts competition and I had won five second prizes and a third! Not bad for a first attempt. Can’t wait until next year!

Compost Matters

For the last three years or so, I have gradually begun thinking more carefully about the seed and potting composts I use. This has partly been caused by a stirring of conscience due to what I have read in the peat-v-peat free debate which has appeared regularly in the popular gardening press, but also because of some poor results which I am now putting down more and more to the compost I use and not just my poor plant husbandry. I purchase quite a lot of compost each year, probably 20 bags or more (1000+ litres), and so I have tended to buy cheaply at Garden Centres and DIY stores. Three bags of multi-purpose for £10 – £12 has been the norm. However, I now believe this may have been false economy and when it comes to potting compost, it seems to me you definitely get what you pay for.

I subscribe to Which? Gardening and when they  publish the results of trials, the ‘Best Buy’ products are usually heavily promoted by the manufacturers and become good sellers with such a ringing endorsement. However, they only seem to test the big brands and therefore the results might not actually reflect the best products at all. Nowhere is this more true than with compost. Of course, if you only ever go to the big chain garden centres and DIY sheds you will only buy what is on offer, and that is normally the major brands with whom they have exclusive arrangements. But, if you cast your net wider to the nurseries and smaller independent garden centres, I believe there could be better alternatives. These may only be available locally or regionally, but it may be worth seeking them out rather than sticking to the ‘safe’ major brands. That is what I have done recently and I think the results are beginning to show. I have nothing in particular against any of the big brands or their products but I have tried most of them and only one, J. Arthur Bowers, has been consistently good. In virtually all the others either the consistency and moisture content has been poor or I have found foreign objects, large pieces of glass, wood, plastic and stone which can only mean one thing, poor quality control. However, I accept that many customers are totally happy with B&Q, Homebase, Westland, New Horizon, Levington, Miracle-Gro and many other popular brands and my experience may not be typical, but I would also argue that many customers simply accept shortcomings without complaint or don’t know the difference.

The best bag of potting compost I have used this year by far has been a “professional growing media” as the trade call it, which I managed to buy from a local nursery owner who admitted to me that she couldn’t afford the risk of using a poor compost and needed better ingredients and better nutrient levels to grow decent plants for sale. She let me have 3 bags for £7.50 each. It is sold by the pallet load of 40 plain white bags and is a beautiful consistency, about 75% sphagnum moss peat and 25% sterilised loam with added nutrients which apparently last for up to 3 months. So why might the quality be less good in the popular multi-purpose brands? I suspect it would simply be too expensive to mass-produce any better and you wouldn’t be able to buy three bags for £10 – £12 which is what the average garden centre or DIY store customer (like me) expects to pay.This year, I noticed a proliferation of more expensive composts with added water retaining granules, or ‘enriched’ with John Innes or organic nutrients making an appearance, but I think this is just window dressing. The real value is in the basic ingredients of the compost itself. Which brings me nicely on to peat-free composts.

There is a popular nursery not far from me which proudly boasts it’s peat free credentials. I went there recently with the intention of buying certain plants but came away with nothing. I was dismayed at the poor quality of the stock, the weed seeds which had germinated in the pots, the mosses and liverworts on the compost and the general pallor of plants for sale at full prices. I managed to inspect an open bag of the compost they use which seemed to be wood fibre and recycled green waste. It was dark and claggy and far too wet. When I squeezed a handful it stayed compressed and didn’t spring back and crumble like a peat based product would have. It didn’t take much imagination to guess where the weeds and liverworts came from. Numerous tests by very clever people have shown that these peat free products are still not as good as peat based. However, things are slowly but surely improving. I was informed by a nurseryman last week that he now uses a peat free compost which he mixes with some John Innes No.2, Osmocote granules and 6mm grit for all his seed sowing and potting-on. The manufacturer is W E Hewitt & Son in Leicester and it is marketed as Petersfield Peat Free Supreme but again, it is only available in bulk and is comparatively expensive.

On my journey to find Petersfield composts I stumbled across a small manufacturer in Hereford called Carrs Special Organic Products.This turned out to be an innovative farmer who composts his cattle manure with worms, harvests the wormcasts and mixes them 50/50 with Irish moss peat, grit and added nutrients to produce a beautiful potting mix with a wonderful silky consistency. It was developed in conjunction with Pershore College of Horticulture so it has been fully tested and is of proven quality. It is as expensive as all the other ‘specialist’ composts at £7.49 a bag but this seems to be the benchmark cost, about twice the price of the “3 for £12” brigade, but I have come to the conclusion that it is worth every penny in results.