Six on Saturday

I want to start by thanking all those who helped me with my media storage issue last week. Deleting all the pre-2020 images in the WordPress media library has resulted in 2.4GB of free space, and by resizing images by 10-50%, the quality does not seem to be overly compromised and it means I can continue with the blog without additional storage costs. As many followers have said, realistically, how many people stumble across older posts anyway? My stats would suggest….not many!

The image of Wisteria sinensis ‘Prolific’ above has been reduced to 90% of it’s original size, but this has resulted in a massive drop from 4.3MB to 1.9mb without any discernible loss of quality. The Wisteria is already beginning to suffer from the cold nights and chilling wind we have experienced recently, so this is the last shot for this year. Can you smell the fragrance though?!

I suffer one or two clumps of ‘Spanish’ Bluebells where I think they have a positive effect, and these very dark ones add a splash of colour to an otherwise green scene at the moment. However, as soon as the flowers go over, up they come! As I mentioned to Jim a few weeks ago, these are not the true Spanish Bluebell, Hyacinthoides hispanica, but a hybrid called Hyacinthoides × massartiana which accounts for the huge disparity in colour forms. I even have white and pink ones! Apparently, there are now no true Spanish Bluebells in the UK, they have just left us their hybrid offspring. Of course, in Scotland, Bluebells are an entirely different thing!

A landscape image of the rear garden where I keep the Tradescantia National Collection and this was just to see what effect size reduction had on it. Not as clear and sharp as the original but an 75% saving in storage size from 4.3MB to 1.1MB, so well worth it.

The hardy Tradescantias all survived the relatively mild winter and have loved all the rain. I have been lifting and dividing them for plant sale donations, plus heirs & spares as insurance against losses. However, in 4 years, I have only lost one plant out of 55, so they are tough!

Philadelphus coronarius ‘Aureus’, the Mock Orange with brilliant yellow foliage, is looking splendid at the moment with lots of flower buds forming. However, it doesn’t do well in full sun with the leaves turning brown and ‘sunburnt’ later in the summer. I will chop this one back hard after flowering as it is outgrowing its spot. A great centrepiece at this time of year though, it positively shines.

My scruffy old lean-to red cedar greenhouse has been an essential part of my gardening for the past 15 years and was a good decision even though, as all the books tell you, it is never big enough! It has been my sanctuary on wet days, my excuse for not doing heavy work if I am feeling a bit low, and a great place to listen to the radio. My homemade propagator with its heating cable under a bed of sand whose thermostat broke years ago; the shelving brackets from Ikea holding slatted shelves made from old roofing battens, and the windows which now have to be propped open because the automatic openers died ten years ago; these are the things we just put up with. I wish I had kept a record of the thousands of plants grown from seeds & cuttings, brought on from mini-plugs, and overwintered as tender perennials and tubers. It has been a good friend, and now needs a good clean!

Finally, for anyone looking for a good dark tulip that comes back year after year, I can definitely recommend ‘Queen of Night’. These were planted 7 years ago after growing in a container for a year and have multiplied by at least 100%. Admittedly, they are in a bed in the back garden which gets baked hard in summer and never watered, which is what they get in their natural habitat, but they seem to thrive on that neglect.

Well, that’s my six for this week. Photos reduced in size and none the worse for it.

Thanks again to my fellow bloggers for their help and advice. It was much appreciated.

Have a great weekend

David

Resizing images

In my quest to avoid higher media storage costs from WordPress, fellow bloggers have recommended I reduce the file size of my pictures before uploading them to a post. This never occurred to me before, but it would seem to be the answer to my problem provided the resizing doesn’t compromise the quality of the picture too much. So, I have uploaded the above image of Helianthus ‘Happy Days’ in its original 3.8 MB form.

I discovered that in Windows 10, there is a simple facility to resize the file and save it to a folder. This is the same picture reduced to 75% of its original size and now just 639 KB

And reduced to 50% of its original size and now just 410 KB, a massive reduction compared to the original.

To the untrained eye, although there is a slight reduction in quality, I don’t think the picture is compromised by much.

Do others feel the same? Your feedback would be appreciated.

Thanks

David

Six on Saturday

I went to upload new pictures into my WordPress media library this morning, to find I had reached the 6gb limit and have to upgrade my plan to be able to continue with my blog! That is going to be expensive and I have to judge whether it’s worth it. The alternative is to free up space by deleting dozens of photos in my media library, but if I do that the pics will disappear from the past posts in which they featured. Sneaky! So I have no choice but to select Six photos from this time last year while I decide what to do. If anyone has any bright ideas or hacks to increase my media library, do please get in touch asap.

Meanwhile, the Wisteria sinensis ‘Prolific’ is now in full flower and looks exactly like this pic from this time last year. The scent is overpowering and I am grateful to Mother Nature for keeping the late frosts away so I can enjoy the wonderful flowers and fragrance.

The Iberis sempervirens or Perennial Candytuft, is shining brightly in the sunshine and billowing over the low wall and down the steps as intended. This makes a pleasant change as most of my plants turn out to have different ideas to what was intended!

The hybrid bluebells are back! I thought I had managed to remove all the bulbs last year but obviously not. They are growing in the gravel margin up against the wall of the bungalow so there is no soil at all. I removed the gravel, sifted through and removed dozens of bulbs, but just as many have returned!

Clematis ‘Guernsey Cream’, a Group 2 variety, is now flowering with it’s unusually separated flower petals like a cartwheel. I find it a rather weak grower and nowhere near as abundant or vigorous as the Group 1 types I have, ‘Wisley Cream’ and C. cirrhosa ‘Freckles’, but it provides some colour in a dark corner while I am waiting for the roses to bloom.

I am pleased to say that all my dahlias survived their winter hibernation in the shed and are now romping away. The tubers were stored in Strulch, a lightweight, dry, mineralised straw which I use to dress the Tradescantia beds in the Spring, and it seems to have been an ideal product for the purpose. Now potted up again in JI No.3, watered and snuggled up in the greenhouse until mid-May when they will be put in the ground. I nip out the tops at this stage to keep them shorter and bushier. It holds the flowers back slightly but there are more of them eventually.

Finally, a warning about this grass, Milium effusum ‘Aureum’ or Bowles’s Golden Grass, which I first saw at one of the many NGS garden openings we have in Gloucestershire in May & June. The owner said it brightened up dark corners and “gently spread around”. On that basis, I purchased a small pot and placed it in a dark corner, from where it has decided to “gently spread” to every corner, crack and crevice in the garden! It is rather beautiful, and does brighten up dark corners but it also seeds like crazy, You have been warned!

I apologise that these are not photos from my garden this week as is the SoS protocol, but I am hoping normal service will be resumed next week. There is a lot of gardening photography coming up! If any of my followers are WordPress experts and can offer any advice on my current dilemma, I would be grateful to hear for them please.

Have a great weekend

David