I am so used to sowing seeds and waiting 5 – 15 days before anything happens that this rocket took me by surprise. Sown on Wednesday, up on Friday!
I am so used to sowing seeds and waiting 5 – 15 days before anything happens that this rocket took me by surprise. Sown on Wednesday, up on Friday!

Allium ‘Ambassador’, huge, purple, £2.95 a bulb and this is the way they look! Why do Alliums have such manky foliage?! What is happening to the tips of the leaves? No sign of a flower spike yet but it had better look spectacular!
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This rather unprepossing plant is Tagetes minuta, a half hardy annual and presumably a weed in its native Mexico, which is reputed to kill the roots of my nemesis, Aegopodium podagraria or ground elder. I heard about it by chance in comments on a Facebook page and decided to check it out on the interweb. Sure enough, even the sage Sarah Raven sings its praises and claims to have cleared a bed of ground elder with it. I have ordered a large packet of seeds for a few pence which will be incredible value if it really works.
According to those who should know, the plant has herbicidal root secretions which destroy the roots of perennial weeds such as ground elder, lesser celandine and couch grass. It is apparently 2.5m tall with finely cut foliage and small creamy yellow flowerheads which are unlikely to turn heads but who cares! If it gets rid of the ground elder and celandines in my prize herbaceous border I don’t care how ugly it is just as long as it doesn’t kill all my other plants as well.
I will make this one of my summer projects with regular updates. I would be very interested in your comments about this subject, particularly from people who may have tried it.


Well, that’s my afternoon sorted! One metric ton of screened topsoil/compost mix to top up the raised beds. It’s a bit chilly today so barrowing that lot round the back will keep me warm!

A good friend kindly brought me some coppiced hazel peasticks today to support my tall perennials before disaster strikes in May. Normally I am way too late putting any supports in. I wait until it’s too late and then prop things up. What a mess! I am gradually learning that a stitch in time saves nine and putting the supports in early.
I was pleased with how the birch circle responded to having six inches of garden compost heaped on it in November. I cleared almost everything above ground apart from the three immature Cornus sanguinea ‘Midwinter Fire’ which I hope will eventually provide winter contrast to the Jacquemontii silver birches. I then emptied three barrow loads of compost over the whole area because it had become impossible to weed amongst the surface roots of the birches. The anemone blanda and narcissus have come through without any trouble as well as the inevitable lesser celandines. It looks great at the moment and I just hope the hairy bittercress and chickweed are reduced this year. 
I have given up the battle with lesser celandines in the photinia hedge border; it is a battle I was losing anyway because the root tubers are soil coloured and therefore impossible to identify. The recommended treatment is Glyphosate but that would kill everything else including the anemone blanda which, actually, looks good with the yellow celandine flowers! And anyway, by June all the foliage is gone and I forget them for another year.
These wild primroses are everywhere at the moment and multiply like mad in my sticky clay soil. Once the flowers are over I split the clumps and transplant them under the hedges to spread them round a bit. It’s one of the joys of Spring.

It’s race week at Cheltenham so here are some red hot tips for you!

Euphorbia characias
At long last, things are beginning to get going in the garden. I find winters very depressing and this year we took the plunge and went away for two weeks in February to find some sunshine in the Caribbean. It was wonderful but it also reminded me of how lucky we are to have seasons. In Barbados they have summer all year round. I came back itching to get out into the garden full of ideas and enthusiasm. The holiday obviously worked!
All around the garden the green shoots of spring are appearing. Time to get the slug pellets down before the Delphiniums get munched! They revel in the damp conditions and enjoy the annual mulch of mushroom compost.
The rhubarb is almost ready for the first pickings. I have downsized from 9 plants to 3 as we couldn’t cope last year. There is only so much space in the freezer! I was delighted to find it transplants so well, hardly any check to its growth since being moved in December.
The Clematis macropetala ‘Wesselton’ is about to unleash it’s beautiful violet blue double flowers to give a wonderful display right outside the garden room window which always lifts my spirits. I pruned this back hard for the first time after flowering last year and it looks like it was the right thing to do. I am always a bit of a wuss when it comes to pruning but it just goes to show that the plants respond and improve as a result of a good haircut!
It’s far too early for tulips but these little beauties obviously haven’t heard. Should be in flower next week! Tulips in mid-March, is that a record?!
I always start seed sowing too early but I was keen to fire up the propagator and get on with it. Just a few of the usual suspects here, nothing to get excited about. Masses of Lychnis chalcedonica in the corner, the majority of which will probably end up in the compost bin. Why do I never sow just a few? I know they will ALL germinate!
This, however, is a first for me, Heliotrope arborescens ‘Marine’, or Cherry Pie plant, which I saw again at Bourton House last year and fell in love with its scent. The head gardener told me she keeps it going each year by taking masses of softwood cuttings and keeping them frost free over winter. But you have to start with seeds! Looks promising at the moment.

Gardening Club members enjoying a plant sale on a lovely day out in Cheltenham
Why would anyone want to start a new gardening club! Membership is declining all around the country, clubs are not attracting younger members (and when I say young I mean under 60!) and entries at local shows and competitions are dwindling.
However, turn on the TV most nights and there is usually a gardening programme on. Go to Chelsea, Malvern, Tatton or Hampton Court and the bigger crowds each year would suggest that gardening is thriving. Look a bit closer though and it’s often more about ‘lifestyle’ where the garden is actually an instant ‘outdoor room’ with a barbeque on the patio, cushions on the rattan seating, a fire pit and mood lighting. A few carefully placed pots of totally unsuitable plants provide a summer of contentment only to disappear into mush at the first sign of frost!
Call me cynical, but this ‘fashionable’ sort of gardening preys on the vulnerable, the gullible and those wishing to impress rather than to learn. Don’t get me wrong, I have a barbeque on the patio and somewhere to sit but my plants are the star of the show; a huge variety of flowers, colour and scent in abundance, herbs, fruit and veg, lawns, hedges and trees. Yes, there is a bit of statuary and stuff I’ve bought and regretted including a chiminea which now lurks in a dark corner amongst the old compost bags and chicken wire! But give me traditional gardening every time; a packet of seeds, a begged cutting or a plant split and swapped with friends. And so it was that I found myself in conversation with like minded people who suggested we start a ‘proper’ gardening club for people like us!

Enjoying a recording of BBC Radio 4 Gardener’s Question Time- spot anyone under 60?
An internet search quickly revealed more than 150 gardening clubs already in Gloucestershire alone so this was either a very bad idea or there is always room for one more. We decided it was the latter! As a past committee member of the Cheltenham Horticultural Society and know a bit about how clubs are run I was tasked to make a plan. I am also lucky enough to be a member of the Hardy Plant Society Western Counties Group which is thriving, well run and well attended with very good speakers and the wonderful Bob Brown of Cotswold Garden Flowers usually in attendance. It occurred to me that there was potential for a Cotswold Group of the Cottage Garden Society to be just as successful if only we could attract enough people and give them what they wanted. And there’s the rub. How do we do that?! After listing out all the ‘fors’ and ‘againsts’ it became clear just how tricky this was going to be!
It became clear to me that the crucial thing was going to be finding ways of attracting and keeping a younger audience, new members in their 30’s, 40’s and 50’s who like the principles of cottage gardening but need help and encouragement. A group which stays true to the objects of the Society but modernised and relevant to a new generation of tech savvy, health conscious gardeners who want to make the most of their little patch to grow flowers, eat their own fruit and veg and literally stay ‘grounded’. These people recognise the health benefits of gardening for themselves and their family, the outlet it provides for creativity and expression and the potential increase in value a well tended garden can bring when it’s time to move on.

Meeting Carol Klein at BBC Gardeners World Live – always a joy!
It occurred to me that, without realising it, cottage gardening is often the style a lot of gardeners end up with in the normal course of events. An arch, a pond, beds and borders filled with plants acquired from well meaning family and friends, pots of herbs, a grow-bag with tomatoes or chillies, a mini-greenhouse and a small shed. What is that but cottage gardening? Only the pigs and chickens are missing! It may be on a modern urban estate but it is no less relevant. They may buy their plants from garden centres, not nurseries, and make a lot of expensive mistakes along the way but, sooner or later, and if they don’t become disheartened in the meantime, they could become the talented gardeners of tomorrow. These are the people gardening clubs need to capture, nurturing their fledgling interest and turning it into a passion.
Of course, it is essential for any group to be inclusive and cater for the needs of everyone who wants to join whatever their age and experience, and to provide all the ingredients for a contented and satisfied membership. It is certainly going to be challenging getting the right blend of old and modern, traditional and contemporary, but I believe it can be done. Indeed, it has to be be done otherwise there is no point. Without an annual injection of new and younger members, gardening clubs and societies will slowly decline and wither away.

Cups and prizes for the best at local shows
After a lot of coffees in our local Italian, my friends and I decided that it should be a two-pronged attack. First we would contact the existing membership in North Gloucestershire and ask them to join us, and then use local advertising and social media to attract budding gardeners who want to learn the basics, improve their skills, fill gaps in their knowledge or just join a bunch of plant mad people, allotmenteers, beekeepers, smallholders and others keen to share their knowledge and skill before it gets lost.
Stay tuned, I will let you know what happens next!
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