Creating and designing gardens from an enthusiastic beginner. Planting schemes, chickens, bees, bugs and plants all feature here. Vegetable patch, flower borders, evergreen shrubs and trees. Lessons learned along the way and helpful tips. Colour schemes, companion planting, sheds, chicken runs, greenhouse and pots. You're very welcome to join me on my journey.
Saturday, 14 August 2010
Border country
Although my Friday 13th August ended with us waiting at Luke's workplace for over two hours for an engineer to fix the alarm the rest of the day was delightful. After another trip to the garden centre (well it was payday & luckily the chap who saw me yesterday, see my last post, was off) I came away £71 poorer but a whole lot happier. I tussle all the time with saving or spending because when you have such lovely plants to view it brightens your spirit endlessly.
So, I arrived home armed with my Spring bulbs (can you believe it, Spring planting already?) and some shorter Verbenas in the same strong purple as yesterday's leggy ones. TO sit in amongst them, for a shock of colour, I bought some great orange flowers. One was a Rudbekia Tiger Golden Eye but for the life of me I can't remember what the other is called now and as they are currently outside where it's bucketing it down I'm not risking a soaking to find out. I also got an evergreen Euphorbia, Tasmania Tiger. I love getting evergreens because when the garden is in full flower you can forget how sparse it can look in the wintertime and if I incorporate evergreens into my planting scheme now they will sit happily in the garden once the perennials have died back.
So, with my purchases safely on the decking I photographed the space I was going to work on (this is something I love to do because the contrast between before and after photographs is always amazing to look at, I'd recommend it, particularly if you have a lot of hard work ahead of you as it's quite inspiring to see how far you have come when your enthusiasm is waning).
Once photographed I unravelled the hose and used it to mark my cutting edge. It's good to have a visual before you start digging as it doesn't always look how you hope it will so some tweaking with the hose can make for a more pleasing shape. I ended up with a bigger curve to my pastel border which I'd half expected anyway as I've positively crammed it to withing an inch of it's life for first year interest. I then surprised myself with a big sweeping curve around the base of the acer (which is about twenty feet tall). I've already put a climbing rose at the foot of this tree and checked yesterday with the garden centre man to see if I should change the climber I have in there to a rambler which would more happily wind it's way up. I hadn't bought a rambler simply because they didn't have any when I first went to purchase my roses but now they have a couple in. Ramblers clamour in a much looser way than climbers which seem to prefer straighter climbs (is it because their stems are more rigid?) The garden centre man told me that as long as I tied the young growth in it would be fine and though I still believe a rambler is better suited there I prefer the flower of my climber so I swill leave that there.
As I type this, a few minutes before 7 in the morning, I can hear the mew mew mew of the young buzzard in the field behind us. I am always entranced by the sight of the buzzards high, high above my head and without fail have to stop and gaze at them when they are out. They look so graceful, wings outstretched, heads immobile and just their wing tips dipping and adjusting before they move off elsewhere; I love them. However, having just hear two gunshots the mewing has changed to a much more shrill cry and I'm hoping that there's no foul play. I shall be relieved to see both parent and young in the sky to put my mind at rest.
This change in cry did result in me going outside to see if I could see them and thought there was nothing in the sky I did find out which other orange plant I bought yesterday, Gaillaird 'Orange Sunburst'. I got it cheap so there are only a few flowers on it and it's more round-petalled than the usual Gailliards.
Digression over, back to the border; I'm hoping to put in some ground cover to soften the edge of the rose and then, from there to the greenhouse I will put in my orange and purple plants. This stretch is hidden from the conservatory so will be a surprise when viewed from the dining room. Hidden gardens are so much fun but our overall garden shceme doesn't allow for one as it would mean cutting more into the space and visually shortening the garden which isn't something I want to do so we'll make do with this for now. Gardens evolve continually so possibly we will have a hidden garden one day.
This last stretch isn't going to be much fun as it's a mass of sand of roots. The well established shrubs which form the boundary between gardens have created a web of roots with little chance for anything else to grow. As I cut the shrubs hard back when we first moved in they are pretty bare on our side and not the most attractive of shrubs so I'm going to hack into this sandy ground and will have to add some decent compost to enrich the depleted soil. Next will come the bulb planting as I like the idea of an almost woodland feel in the Spring, with lots of bulbs popping up to announce the arrival of warmer times ahead. The trick here is to plant lots, you really can't have too many. However, I am mean and so have limited myself to about fifty bulbs all told. Some of them will naturalise and spread but this will take time. I just can't shake off my meanness and buy more even though I know I will be please once they are up. Maybe a separate trip to a garden centre will trick me into thinking I haven't spent so much.
Once my groundwork is done I can have the joy of planting up my new purchases and will then have an instant border to enjoy for a month or two. Hard work ahead but tomorrow promises to be sunny and a day in the garden is such a rewarding choice.
Sunday, 15th August saw a new border being created. It's a colourful contrasting scheme with white, orange and purple dominating.
I've got height with the leggy Verbena bonariensis, a metre high, which are in the far corner along with an Euphorbia from my last garden for evergreen interest. Infront of these I have planted another Echinacea White Swan (it's rather late to be planting this beauty but I've got one that is still in it's early stages) - it is directly opposite the other Echinacea in the black and white border and rather than making the garden look smaller it links the corners together. Next I planted 20 Ballerina tulips, a bright orange for Springtime colour and finished this corner by adding home grown Salvia Paten's Blue and Salvia Strata with a couple of violas in deep velvety purple.
A closer photo to show the girls enjoying it too.
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