Six on Saturday

It’s June, which means roses, and they are very good this year…..so far! I caveat any comments about roses because disaster could strike at any moment. Aphids, rose sawfly, blackspot, mildew etc., etc. However, this year I was lucky to have an army of Blue Tits which cleared all the aphids and caterpillars, and so far little or no blackspot. This is Rosa ‘Bonica’ grown as a standard and pruned to within an inch of its life in January, showing just how well they respond by producing an enormous number of flowers on shortish stems.

Hydrangea arborescens ‘Annabelle’ is a bit hit & miss in my garden. Some years it’s great, some years not so great. It is very dependent on the extent of spring rainfall. However, I learned something interesting last year from a professional gardener at a country house who said she was unhappy with the way the huge floppy flowerheads drooped, particularly after rain. So, she experimented with the pruning and discovered that if you don’t prune them so hard, the flowerheads are smaller but they stand upright on stronger stems. So, that’s what I did and it works! The flowers will still be impressive and should remain upright.

I am trialling this Amaranthus paniculatus ‘Foxtail’ for Which? Gardening magazine this year as part of their seed trials. They would like to know how well it grows and how striking the foliage looks in a pot. I managed to germinate 12 plants which are now all planted out in containers of various types and size. They are a bit weird and remind me of the stalks of millet seed we used to poke through the budgerigar’s cage! However, they are covered in ‘flowers’ and doing well. Not sure if I would grow them again though!

I grow a lot of clematis but ‘Hagley Hybrid’ is the most reliable and probably the most striking. Not the most evocative name in the world, almost like they couldn’t be bothered to choose a real name, but it has stood the test of time and flowers just when the roses are at their best too. The pale pinky mauve colour is a bit ‘washed out’ and could do with a new 2nd cousin with stronger hues, but that might reduce its vigour and reliability, so I will stick with the original.

When I clear the big pots of their spring bulbs in mid-May, I refresh the top 6″ of compost, add some Osmocote controlled release fertiliser pellets, and go off to Lidl to buy a few trays of Pelargoniums. You literally cannot go wrong with 6 plants for £4.99 and the results are always good. In the past I have tried growing them myself from tiny plugs but, to be honest, Lidl plants are better and cheaper!

There was a slight shower last night which the roses appreciated. I admire ‘Darcey Bussell’, the rose and person; so pretty and graceful, almost dancing in the rain.

The low growing catmint, Nepeta faassenii ‘Kit Kat’ and ‘Junior Walker’ that border the low wall in the rose garden are buzzing with bees all day and set off the roses well. We do get a few cats in the garden, but mostly at night judging from the toilets I have to clear up each day! So, I have never seen a cat doing what cats are alleged to do and flattening the catmint in the process. Thank goodness!

Have a great weekend

David

Six on Saturday

Back in the day, my Mum & Dad raved about Rosa ‘Blue Moon’ and so when I heard about Rosa ‘Twice in a Blue Moon’ I thought it must be pretty special. What a let down! Pale, floppy, untidy and uninteresting muddy purple flowers following a perfect pink rose bud. Just goes to show, don’t believe the hype!

The Rudbeckia fulgida ‘Goldsturm’ are providing some much needed interest and colour in the herbaceous border and cover the greenery of earlier plants which have finished for the year. Lovely pops of yellow dazzle and crave attention.

I just love bright red Geraniums (actually Pelargoniums but everyone calls them Geraniums!) these beauties were 79p each in modules of six from the forecourt at Lidl and such great value for months of colour. They are forgiving if you forget to water them for a week, need hardly any feeding and keep flowering until the frosts cut them down in November. They add a touch of glamour to the steps too!

The Silphium perfoliatum, or Cup Plant, is a tall perennial daisy from the prairies of North America and a reliable hardy addition to the shrubbery where it provides height and late colour. I grew it from seed several years ago and it now self-seeds freely which provides me with spare plants to offer in plant sales and to exchange for things I want. Very attractive to bees, bulletproof and a great alternative or addition to perennial sunflowers, Rudbeckia and other yellow daisies…..if you like yellow daisies….which I do!

I wonder if anyone can help me identify this plant please? I have a suspicion it might be a variegated form of Ophiopogon but it could equally be a Carex, Liriope or similar grassy plant. A kind friend gave it to me without a label, because she didn’t know what it was either! It is short, 30cm, hasn’t flowered (yet) and seems to spread by underground runners (like Ophiopogon). I look forward to suggestions please!

Finally for this week, Astrantia major which is having a second flush of ‘Hattie’s Pincushion’ flowers, probably thanks to the warm and wet July and August. It is usually over for the season by now, just another oddity in an odd year for the garden.

Have a great weekend

David

Six on Saturday

Good morning from a bright and sunny Cheltenham! The Violas gave me a cheery wink when I went out with my camera to see what was interesting enough to photograph amongst the detritus and windblown plants in my garden.

The Alstroemerias are suddenly enjoying the cooler temperatures and producing loads of stems to pull and bring indoors. This one is ‘Summer Break’.

Rosa ‘Darcey Bussell’ is flowering for the third time and, although she is not as shapely as usual, she certainly puts on a show! Most of my other roses are ready for the early winter chop but Darcey just keeps going.

The NIgella damascena has shed millions of seeds into the gravel path which will have to be carefully culled to leave a manageable number to flower next year. I do love a self-seeder as long as the resulting progeny are where I want them!

A few weeks ago I popped a cutting of Tradescantia pallida into a shot glass to root which it kindly has. It has also decided to flower for me! This is the third flower so far and I suspect there are more to come. Isn’t nature wonderful!

I can’t bear to throw good plants away and these bedding pelargoniums which flowered all summer outside in big pots are now tucked up in the cold greenhouse where they continue to flower their heads off. If we have a mild winter they will survive and be used again next year; if not…….compost heap here we come, but only when they have died of natural causes!

Have a great weekend

David