Chronicles of a wayward garden and its over-worked guardian ...
Showing posts with label geranium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label geranium. Show all posts
Wednesday, 3 July 2013
Wordless Wednesday
Labels:
aucuba,
cotinus coggygria,
delphinium,
geranium,
hosta,
Ligularia,
rose
Tuesday, 28 May 2013
Garden for a friend ...
When our dear friend Helen died last September, life changed for all the people who knew and loved her. Our way of coping with her loss was to do something, to design and plant a garden where we could go, and sit, and remember her. She was a passionate gardener and keen plantswoman and we wanted to try to recreate her sort of garden, using some of her favourite plants.
We used a part of the garden that had been the site of a polytunnel, which fell victim to the weight of snow one bad winter, and basically imploded!
We used a part of the garden that had been the site of a polytunnel, which fell victim to the weight of snow one bad winter, and basically imploded!
After the collapse of said Polytunnel two years ago, we retained its footprint, using the beds for outdoor tomatoes and courgettes (with spectacular lack of success I have to say !)
In September, we cleared and dug over the area and then discussed and drew out the design for the new garden. We then started to work on it almost immediately and I found it very therapeutic to get out there and expend some energy in digging.
This is how it looked two months ago in March - bleak and uninviting ! In the foreground you may just be able to spot the newly planted bareroot Rose hedge of the old Gallica rose 'Charles de Mills'. It has a single flush of fully double, flat-faced blooms in colours described as 'variable' from crimson, to magenta pink. All plants have taken successfully and were a fantastically cheap way to grow this curving, informal hedge, to mark the boundary of 'Helen's Garden'.
The following photos were all taken today, and show, hopefully, how a pile of gravel can help to transform an area and give it definition. This is before we started, we knew where the paths would be, so I planted geraniums as edging back in October. You can already see them marking the edges of the new paths.
So, our task today was to clear any weeds, then lay a weed-proof membrane and barrow this into position ...
I can say with authority, that this pile looks deceptively teeny, and that it contains a lot more sweaty barrow-loads than you would imagine !
This is the start of the gravel-shifting ...
And on it goes ...
And on ...
Here it is, all finished, with a bench to sit on, plus a small table and chairs as well. I think we need a few pots on the gravel, with something like Dryopteris ferns in (clue is in the name !) as these would not need constant watering.
It is still a work in progress with lots still to do... there are big gaps with bare earth, and the plants need to fill out in places. The edges of the paths need softening further with more geraniums, and we also need 'something' on that central spot in the gravel ... maybe some sculpture, or a statue, or a bird table, or some driftwood ... I don't know what it will be, but I think we will know it when we see it. And we will enjoy looking ...
Labels:
design,
Dryopteris,
geranium,
gravel,
membrane,
new garden,
paths
Friday, 10 May 2013
Spring into Summer...
'The louder you scream , the faster we go' ! This is the start of the best ride of all, that fleeting, quickening whoosh that the garden makes, as it transforms from a Spring garden to a summer one.
The bare earth is vanishing, replaced by fresh green burgeoning growth, giving that lush feel of early summer. Most things are growing strongly now and just waiting for their turn to shine.
Some have stepped out onto the stage already ...
The bare earth is vanishing, replaced by fresh green burgeoning growth, giving that lush feel of early summer. Most things are growing strongly now and just waiting for their turn to shine.
Some have stepped out onto the stage already ...
Camassia
Berberis Thunbergii Atropurpurea
The buds are beginning to fatten on the peonies
This is the first Centaura of the year - how can something this beautiful be such a thug !
The first Geranium.
The first Vinca.
Euphorbia Wulfenii
Euphorbia Polychroma
This Angelica is well over a metre high already.
Wallflowers
Fresh new leaves on the Acer Palmatum.
It won't be long before the flower spikes start to form on these lupins.
There is something about daisy type flowers that I don't really like, and I don't like yellow flowers much as a rule ! How perverse ! However ... in the case of this Doronicum I make an exception, as it is so bright and cheerful early in the year.
Not the best photo in the world but I had to include it because it is the FIRST rosebud of the season. It is my favourite climber 'Cinderella' and it won't be long before it comes out to play !
However, it is not all sweetness and light ...
My poor Fremontodendron looks as if it may be the only victim claimed by the Winter this year, but I will wait with optimism, to see if there may be a flicker of life in there somewhere.
Labels:
'Cinderella' climbing rose,
Angelica,
Camassia,
Doronicum,
Euphorbia Polychroma,
geranium,
lupin,
peony,
Vinca
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