The Gardens, weeds & words podcast, Series 1 Episode 10

What do you do when you realise you’ve been living with someone else’s garden? In discussion with landscape architect Marian Boswall, we discuss intention and purpose in garden design, the place of the landscape, and who the client really is.

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Day 130: Tulip 'Black Parrot'

The tulips are just about done, ‘Black Parrot’ being one of the last to open. It seems a fitting variety with which to say goodbye…

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Day 129: camassias

May is camassia time, and if you’re lucky enough to live near a garden where they’ve been planted en masse, you’re in for a treat…

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Day 128: raising stakes

The first couple of weeks of May are just about your last proper chance of getting stakes into your flower beds in order to prevent top-heavy herbaceous plants from flopping about…

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Day 127: floral confetti

The May bank holiday arrives, and even the trees join in the celebrations, strewing their petals across the ground to provide a glorious carpet on which to tread…

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Day 126: Tulip 'Queen of Night'

Just as you start to worry that the tulips have had it, Queen of Night appears, reliably in time for the May bank holiday…

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Day 125: green alkanet

What’s green, blue, and hairy, and probably all over your garden right now? Green alkanet, that’s what, or Pentaglottis sempervirens to give it its full name…

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Day 124: petrichor

I hear the rain before I see it, look up to see its glinting edge drawn across the width of the garden, gaining ground…

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Day 123: considered disorder

There’s a little corner in the gardens at Penshurst Place that a casual observer might be forgiven for thinking had been overlooked by the gardeners…

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Day 122: Tulip 'Brownie'

There are double tulips...and then there’s ‘Brownie’. Officially, it’s a paeony-flowered variety, though it’s far more orange than any paeony I know…

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Day 121: scent of wisteria

It was years before I realised the flowers of wisteria were highly scented. I’m sure I thought the plant already gave enough…

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Day 119: Geranium phaeum

Geranium phaeum is a delightful plant with a host of rather sombre common names – dusky cranesbill, mourning widow, or black widow…

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Day 118: garlic mustard

Few plants grow with such a vibrant, verdant energy as garlic mustard, or Jack in the Hedge (Alliaria petiolata) in spring…

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Day 117: tulip fire

The closest I want to get to fire in my tulips are the bold markings on the fabulous petals of the viridiflora variety, ‘Flaming Spring Green’ …

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Day 116: bluebell woods

There’s enough going on in the world today to make any self-respecting human more than a little uncomfortable about proclaiming the superiority of the native English bluebell…

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Day 115: shuttlecock fern

Some ferns lend their lush greenery to the garden all year round, while others will deprive you of their company over winter. This latter group appear with many a languid gesture throughout spring, in the full knowledge that we’re looking upon the unveiling ceremony with wrapt admiration…

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Day 114: forget-me-nots and tulips

Forget-me-nots (Myosotis sylvatica) must rank high on the list of glorious self-seeders of which the over-zealous garden tidier might inadvertently deprive themselves…

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Day 113: old brick and yew

I want to take one last look at some of the details and textures that help to create the underlying structure in our gardens, before they disappear under a froth of exuberant flowers and foliage from now till November…

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Day 112: honesty

The cabbage family must be a good-natured clan. Have you noticed that so many of their flowers seem to have twinkly little eyes, set among a profusion of laughter lines?

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