March 23, 2007

Snowdrops

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I love snowdrops. They are very dainty and appear to be delicate. They are much tougher than they look, however. They grow and bloom in the coldest and snowiest of weather. They give me hope that my long wait is nearly over. …

Source: OldRoses

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March 27, 2007

The patient gardener is rewarded

Good things come to those who wait. At least ten years ago, I planted the first of these snowdrops lining the path to the Secret Garden. You will have to click on the photo to enlarge it in order to… [[ This is a content summary only. …

Source: Kathy Purdy

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March 30, 2007

The Weirdness Chronicles 2007 - Chapter 1

The "Mystery Plant" that we all agreed was some sort of lily has instead turned out to be:. A snowdrop! This bed is probably the ONLY place in my yard that I have never planted snowdrops. Perhaps Mother Nature is trying to tell me …

Source: OldRoses

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March 2, 2007

In March, gardening hints bloom

Whether it arrives like a lion or a lamb, March in Southeastern Pennsylvania brings the first snowdrops, the Philadelphia Flower Show, and - hurrah! - the start of a new gardening season.

Source: unknown

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May 18, 2007

Hitch Lyman’s Garden: Garden Conservancy Open Days

Hitch Lyman is a national snowdrop specialist. Of course, the snowdrops are long gone, but doesn’t his garden sound wonderful? From the Garden Conservancy website: Enjoy this extraordinary… [[ This is a content summary only.

Source: Kathy Purdy

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January 14, 2008

Gardening Tips - What To Do In Your Garden This Month

Ok, here are a few things that could help keep you busy if you are in the middle of a cold winter.  If you are in the middle of your summer (you lucky people) enjoy! 

1. Give your grass a high cut every now and then. If you can, choose a dry, windy day when the dew has lifted so the clippings are removed.  Where I am, finding a windy day is not so much of a problem, finding a dry one… now that is a different matter altogether.  But if you are like me, hang in there, one will turn up soon.

2. Check the ties of shrubs grown against walls (Ceanothus, Pyracantha, Moroccan broom, etc) - those sudden gusts of wind that are all too frequent this time of year can throw them forward and crack roots.

3. Take old honeysuckles back to a strong, well-spaced framework of not-too-old stems, keeping a few young ones around the edges.

4. Clear away and burn the dead leaves from under roses to reduce the chance of any disease lingering.

5. Do not forget that central heating, as nice as it is this time of year, will play havoc with tropical houseplants. Increase the humidity by simply standing the pots on saucers or trays of damp gravel and keep them away from radiators (which is easy) and draughts (perhaps not so easy this time of year!)

6. If you have ever dreamt of scooping a prize at the local summer gardening show, start planning for it now. Have you ever thought about onions?  Exhibition ones are fairly easy to grow.  The biggest bulbs come from varieties such as Mammoth, which are sown any time now.

7. Try to remember where you have bulbs growing in grass. The new leaves should be well through by now and it is all too easy to walk on them unawares.  I am thinking of things like snowdrops, narcissi, crocus, fritillary, etc.

8. Have you worked out what you want to plant this season?  Well, if you still have to then why not fish out last years seed packets and you can work out what you want to buy for this season.  Great excuse to get down to the local garden centre, as if you needed one!

9. If you are lucky enough to be a gardener with a warm greenhouses (and do not forget your minimum winter temperature in there should be 55F), why not start growing indoor tomatoes such as Sparta, Shirley and Big Boy.  Now, early to mid January, is the perfect time.

10. Now wisteria has dropped its leaves, you can prune it. Just take back the long stems you pruned last summer to two or three buds. Also, cut out stray stems wrapped around gutters and slithering along walls. Be careful though: do not forget those buds can be thorny.

11. Why not treat your much-abused and maligned garden shears to a professional sharpening?  Afterall, they are not really needed at the moment and you will notice a big difference. You will not regret it!

12. In those long spells of freezing weather we can unfortunately experience this time of year, winter-flowering pansies can sometimes receive a knock to their growth. If this happens, wait until the weather warms up a little, then deadhead any spent flower stems. This should induce a mass of new flowers to emerge for you to enjoy.

Well, that little lot should keep you busy for a while and enjoy your gardening.  It can be just as much fun in the winter!

Take care for now.

The Gardener 

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March 12, 2007

Wet Weather Flowers And Plants

Hello everyone

Well, if you are a weekend gardener, I would imagine you're finding it pretty tough going at the moment.  Those two precious days don't leave you much of a window should the weather turn nasty and at this time of year, it can be very unpredictable in deed.  I mean one day will be superb weather, glorious sunshine that make it feel like the end of April already when the next day it can feel like mid January again.  The clouds, rain and wind return with a vengence.   So one day the sun is beating down, the next there's driving rain and you can hardly stand upright because of the Force 10 gale!  The weather, is in effect , halfing your  time in the garden at best!

Of course, it is fashionable at the moment to blame the "old" chestnut of global warming for these alternating conditions.  Only problem with that though is this type of weather really isn't new.  Take 50 years ago in London as an example.  In those days absolutely nobody was bothering with "carbon footprints".  At the time, down on the Thames river, there was increasing concern about the then Festival of Britain.  There is a classic account of the Festival by Russell Page in his "Education of a Gardener".  In the chapter on gardening "for the public eye" there is a very interesting account of the cruelty of the then English weather.  Page had won a commission to design a series of flower garden for the Festival site which was in Battersea Park.  In both 1950 and 51 severe gales and high tides had caused the Thames to burst over the embankment and turn the site of the Festival into a mud bath.  Page recalls, "Not infrequently we had many as 40 lorries stuck axle deep in the park."   He would also recount how he would return to his small office after spending a day gardening in "calf-deep" mud!

With two months to go to the Festival, the main central lawn area was still an inland sea and had to be covered with truckloads of finely ground cinders, two foot deep, unto which the new turf was directly unrolled.  He then found that the grass grew together within two weeks and rooted quickly through the cinders.  This is an often forgotten piece of advice for anyone planning to to lay or repair a lawn with ready made turf.  Unfortunately for Page nothing was going to save his white tulips.  He inspected the thousands of selected tulips at the very end of February.  They were to be the centre-piece of a white garden that was to be edge with lavender.  However, when he dug up the bulbs, he found that they had all rotted due to the wet winter.

So, basically, we have had wet early months before, it's not something new.  Statistics really only show averages and smooth out past fluctuations which, it has to be said, are no different to what we experience now.  Assuming all this continues I would focus on plants that actually enjoy the  wet conditions.  Many of the best spring things are plants and bulbs which like to wear a "wetsuit".

These can come in all shapes and sizes, from trees down to small plants on the carpet beneath.  Some of the best carpeters such as celandines are very happy on damp ground but they seed very freely and can become invasive.  Most carpeters belong on sloping banks or under the light shade of trees.  S long as they stay away from the flower beds they can be enchanting and love the weather we all hate.

So do all the primroses.  The favourite white flowered Spring Snowflake, a damp loving bulb, is recommended for any ground on which the rainwater is slow to drain through.  Unlike the tulips, as Page discovered, the bulbs never rot and they soon send up stems with hanging flowers like small lampshades.  They are just as pretty as their well known cousins, the snowdrops.

Perhaps the winners for the wetsuit prize are the ornamental willows.  The year is made for them as their stems and young catkins show up magnificently in the sunny intervals whilst their roots revel in the wet weather.  They are a perfect family for an informal garden because their bushes will spread freely and they will compete with any weeds as long as they do not dry out.  Mixed plantations of them have the sort of wild look which appeals to gardeners who want the minimum of bother in return for weeks of good colour.

One of te best is quite easy to control, a taller willow called Salix daphnoides Aglaia.  With good reason, the last part of its name means a gleam or a bright light.  The bulbs and young catkins are a glistening silver, which is scattered all over a tangled tall outline of stems.  The stems themselves are a pretty shade of purple and even in the summer the leaves are rather charming.

The beauty about these wet loving willows is that they root with absurd ease from long twigs cut off a parent and stuck into wet ground any time now.

Since 1951 and the Festival of Britain, the rhetoric of gardening has changed.  Now we hear so much about supposedly "natural" gardening.  If there were to be another Festival of Britain, I am sure that "native wild flowers" would dominate.  If Russell Page's tulips had rotted away this year, we would have been told to obey the biomass and plant willows instead.  In fact he replaced them with thousands of white double stocks.  They must have looked marvellous and I do not begrudge them a penny of their fossil-fuelled greenhouse heating.

The Gardener

www.ft.com/lanefox

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