Posts

Showing posts from August, 2011

GOODBYE ALBERTINE

Image
It's a sad thing when you have to get rid of a plant that is established and doing well but Albertine had to go.  Albertine is a rambling rose with thorns like fish hooks.  One got well embedded under the skin on my forearm the other day, when I accidentally fall into the rose, and that made my decision.  Albertine makes a glorious show of roses in summer but it is not a repeat flowerer and it is a savage thing, taking much pruning to keep it in shape and control as it can grow 12ft high and spread 15ft at least!  I shall have to look for something more gentle to take its place, something without thorns, a repeat flowerer, with a great fragrance.  Sorry Albertine. Albertine has vicious thorns Albertine When you've gotta go, you've gotta go.

ROSES SO PRETTY

Image
I know I keep banging on about roses but I cannot help it - it's an addiction of kinds.  I bought such expensive David Austin roses and while they are wonderful, they seem, somehow, unable to beat the beauty of Ice Berg and New Dawn.  Take a look... Ice Berg (the climber,but there is a shrub version) New Dawn New Dawn grows quite well on the shadier side of my garden.  I understand now that The Generous Gardener (a David Austin rose) could also be grown on the shady side, although mine is in the sun. The Generous Gardener

MEANWHILE, IN THE VEG PATCH, APART FROM PESKY PESTS...

Image
While pesky pests such as slugs and caterpillars have had a go at my plants, things are still coming up lovely.  If you haven't yet grown Apple Mint, I can recommend it.  I use it to make a refreshing change from coffee.  I do wish I liked ordinary tea, but it isn't going to happen.  Apple Mint It grows wonderfully, as do my chives.  I cannot eat them fast enough!  Chives And the new carrots, red lettuce and Rocket (in pots), are doing fine. Carrots (with a garlic clove), bergamot, and lettuce in pots

PURPLE POOP ON MY MARBLE TABLE

Image
If there is one thing I resent in my garden, it is the caterpillars gnawing on my hanging baskets' sapphire lobelia and pooping purple on my wonderfully divine marble table top.  Stop it or be squashed! I've had to move the table out from under the hanging baskets.  I know it is the purple poop that is doing it and not just the flowers themselves as the problem has only just started.  Million Bells on marble table I bought an expensive marble cleaner and a marble sealer last year from http://www.sealer-seal-sealant.co.uk/ .   The products are actually made by Tikko  http://www.tikkoproducts.com/ )    When you are lucky enough to find yourself a table so pretty, (Marks & Spencers, 2007) it is a pity to let it spoil.  At the cost of about £30-40 for two 1 litre bottles, it is a good thing that the products do a really good job.  You only need to use a little bit so it will last for years - hopefully! I am really pleased with the M...

NOTHING SWEETER THAN SWEET PEAS

Image
I think roses will always be my favourite garden plant but I do love sweet peas - they give so much.  For the past couple of years, they have not grown very well in my new garden but that is probably because the soil was not all it could be back then.  Now it is getting richer with the addition of compost and leaf mould, and this year my sweet peas are doing wonderfully.  The more you pick them, the more they flower.  I have them in the kitchen and in the living room. They have grown very tall!  Might have to borrow a ladder to get at them! 

COSMOS CRAZY

Image
This year I grew Cosmos at the front of my border.  I thought it would grow to maybe 12 inch high or so.  I'd seen it at the Royal Horticultural Society gardens in Harlow Carr, near Harrogate, and there's were quite weedy specimens, about a foot high. Not mine.  Mine are huge, dense bushes, filled with glorious flowers all reaching for the sky.  What is more miraculous is that the soil in which they are planted is hard, rocky, clay, and I could not dig deeper than about six inch.  I shall grow these again, but not at the front of my borders! You can see how big they are (there are two side by side).  They are burying the heuchera and inbetween, somewhere underneath all that, is a dianthus. 

WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS...

Image
When all else fails, you can always grow runner beans.  For the last few days we have had nothing but rain and grey skies and the garden is starting to look miserable.  The tomatoes are not ripening, the sweet peppers look as if they are freeze-framed, the courgettes are begging for sunshine (as am I) and the lettuce look to be shouting 'slugs, here I am'. But the runner beans are lapping up the rain.  I grow them as a small hedge, and I grow them tall up my back fence.  They are bursting with pretty pink and white flowers, and dripping with beans.  My only problem, can I eat them fast enough.  Sure I can, if I pick them young.  My first pickings this year   Grow them tall   Grow them small  

FLOWERS GALORE and CHEEKY BUGS

Image
My garden is small and it  has to be versatile.  I don't want heaps of flowers without the joy of eating my own garden produce; nor do I want loads of vegetables without the beauty and fragrance of flowers for picking or just enjoying in my garden.  Sometimes we miss things, I think.  When I take a photo and get real close, it is funny what the camera sees that I initially missed.  There is a spider in this hanging basket begonia.  Cheeky little beggar, pinching the bees' pollen.  I think begonias are lovely in a hanging basket and, of course, they tolerate partial shade.  One of my favourite things to grow is sweet peas.  This year I have sacrificed a little of the scent of the old-fashioned type by growing a mixture of a more modern kind.  They are still fragrant and so it is a happy compromise.

BLESSED RAIN

Image
Wonderful how rain can invigorate plans in a way that tapwater never can.  Must be all the nitrogen or something.  I grow everything for a salad except cucumbers. Lunch I haven't really grown carrots before - not successfully.  This year I bought a cheap packet of economy carrot seeds and put them in a pot.  They are wonderful, when picked young, with my salads.  I now have other pots of carrots growing, at different stages.  I plant a garlic clove in the centre.  The idea is to keep away carrot fly.  Don't know if it works or not but the carrots seem healthy enough. Young Carrots with a garlic clove in the centre To be honest, I cannot remember a time when things have grown so well.  This year we are getting plenty of sunshine here in West Yorkshire (UK), I think, as well as rain.  The temperatures are decent, and everything in my garden is quite happy.  Especially me!  My lettuces are growing so fast that ...