Day 270: frost chicken

The month is flying by, but it’s still September, and there’s time yet for things to ping in the beds. Just – at least when it comes to flowers…

Read more

Day 268: Dahlia 'Otto's Thrill'

Thanks to the unfaltering efforts of plant breeders over the decades, there’s probably a dahlia to suit every personality. Even, it could be argued, those who can’t abide dahlias…

Read more
Follow

Day 267: autumn arrives

Autumn arrived yesterday, and with it, the rain, putting paid to any last remaining hopes of an Indian summer…

Read more
Follow

Day 266: Blue daisy bush

A blue daisy with a variegated leaf? Yes please. I love being introduced to new plants, and so it was with no small degree of delight that I found Felicia amelloides ‘Variegata’ …

Read more

Day 265: Rose 'Twice in a Blue Moon'

To give a rose a name like ‘Twice in a Blue Moon’ would seem to suggest that its flowers appear, if not hardly every, at least almost hardly ever. This is misleading…

Read more
Follow

Day 264: the importance of pencil

Every gardener carries a notebook of some kind or another. The sensible ones write therein with a pencil – possibly a biro, but where’s the joy in writing with a biro…

Read more
Follow

Day 263: old curiosity pots

While few would deny the merits of a well made, attractively aged terracotta pot, there’s nothing to say that a plant’s precious root system shouldn’t be contained in something altogether more esoteric…

Read more
Follow

Day 262: Tiarella ‘Sugar and Spice’

The frothy pink and white flowers on this foamflower (Tiarella ‘Sugar and Spice’) are very much the icing on the cake for a plant which has it all – at least if you have areas of light shade…

Read more
Follow

Day 261: Geranium 'Dusky Crug'

Cats have catnip – but for me, there are purple-leaved plants. I have to restrain myself as they always look their best in a ratio of at the very least six to one in favour of their more verdantly foliaged fellows and, were I to be indulged, the whole garden would be one mass of maroon…

Read more
Follow

Day 260: ruby chard

Is it possible my ruby chard will remain unslugmunched for the duration of the colder months? I do hope so. This is one of the aesthetic vegetables that really make the kitchen garden sing with colour, texture and structure…

Read more
Follow

Day 259: Fuchsia 'Hawkshead'

Probably the closest you’ll get to having a bush full of snowdrops in summer, that’s Fuchsia ‘Hawkshead’ for you. In shape the flowers are not dissimilar from its near relative Fuchsia magellanica ‘Riccartonii’…

Read more

Day 258: roses in the shade

The roses keep going, whatever I throw at them. In this garden it’s mostly dappled shade, especially at this end of the year – as a rule of thumb roses should have at least four to six hours of direct sun daily…

Read more
Follow

Day 257: Echinacea 'Southern Belle'

I’m not sure how I feel about ‘fun’ flowers, but there’s something about this pink coneflower Echinacea purpurea ‘Southern Belle’ that makes me smile…

Read more
Follow

Day 256: ragwort

Ragwort gets a bad rap for being poisonous to horses, which it is, but that’s hardly the fault of the wildflower, and rather more of a system that manages to package it up in feed for domesticated beasts…

Read more
Follow

Day 255: Allium 'Summer Beauty'

When it comes to alliums the larger varieties often steal most of the glory. Quite rightly, many of us know ‘Purple Sensation’, while diehard ornamental onion fans will go big or go home with christophii or giganteum

Read more
Follow

Day 254: snowberry

We’ve arrived at that time of year where I concede that there might be some point in the existence of the snowberry (Symphoricarpos albus) – at least for the gardener…

Read more
Follow

Day 253: pelargonium cuttings

Pelargoniums must be one of the absolute best things for the clumsy gardener (raises hand) to grow, for the simple reason that any bit you might accidentally snap off is almost certain to grow into a new plant…

Read more

Day 252: Japanese lily

Lilies add just that little flavour of the exotic to the garden. They’re not hard to grow (always assuming you can keep the dreaded lily beetle at bay – squish, ewwww...)…

Read more

Day 251: by the back door

Some of the best advice for new gardeners I’ve ever read (it was in Alys Fowler’s The  Thrifty Gardener) is to start your garden at the back door…

Read more
Follow