Day 169: lady's mantle

From delicate young foliage that will capture and display a drop of morning dew to its very best effect in late spring, there’s no ignoring lady’s mantle (Alchemilla mollis), whether or not you consider it a weed…

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Day 168: floral decrepitude

Long past the point at which most people would have consigned them to the green bin, the flowers on the mantelpiece continue to hold a fascination for me…

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Day 167: Rose 'Lady of Shalott'

Arriving fashionably late, my ‘Lady of Shallot’ rose has graced the border with a bloom or two, just in time to catch the end of the wallflowers and some of the geums…

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Day 166: stone

I’m trying to think how I might incorporate some stone into our garden, without it looking ridiculous…

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Day 165: monstera

Our swiss cheese plant has moved back downstairs, though it’s yet to let us know whether or not this is a good thing…

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Day 164: the pelargoniums go out

The pelargoniums have been languishing for far too long indoors and, just as the overnight mercury climbed to a level acceptable to their delicate sensibilities, the ridiculous pummelling rain arrived...

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Day 163: Rose 'Gentle Hermione'

The rose ‘Gentle Hermione’ occupies a position on the spectrum somewhere just past ‘Gorgeous’, possibly even verging upon the territory of ‘Flouncy’…

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Day 162: black elder

Having been writing only last week on Instagram about a blue rose that isn’t really blue, it did me the power of good just now to wander into a rain soaked garden and discover that the black elder was living up to its name…

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Day 161: the hedge

The hedge was planted just after we moved in, just a long row of twigs then – mostly hawthorn, but some beech, dog rose, hazel, one guelder rose and a european spindle…

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The Gardens, weeds & words podcast, Series 1 Episode 11

Have you ever noticed that everything tastes a bit better outdoors? Wouldn’t it be great if we could move seemlessly from our houses to our outdoor space, pulling food straight from the garden, preparing it and even cooking it outdoors? I talk to garden designer Victoria Wade about how she makes this possible for her clients.

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Day 160: foxglove summer

As the cow parsley fades we could be forgiven for feeling a little downhearted. But, with impeccable timing, foxgloves appear…

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Day 159: sunshine and rain

Sunshine and rain – typical June weather. People tend to forget how showery June can be…

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Day 158: changing the scenery

When I was a child, I remember my dad coming home one evening with a cardboard theatre (I’ve a feeling it may have been from Pollock’s Toy Museum in Fitzrovia, but I might have made that up)…

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Day 157: first cosmos

The cosmos are coming into flower. From a practical point of view, this is a huge relief, as they’re one of the few plants I sowed seeds for this year and they’ve been taking up space in the greenhouse…

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Day 156: raindrops on roses

No kittens in this household, bewhiskered or otherwise, but thanks to this afternoon’s downpour there are plenty of raindrops on roses…

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Day 155: Sicilian honey garlic

Sicilian honey garlic (Nectaroscordum siculum) has a bit of an identity crisis, owing to botanists booting it out rather unceremoniously from the bosom of the allium family…

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Day 154: love-in-a-mist

My garden is absolutely full of love-in-a-mist (Nigella damascena) just now. It’s hugely gratifying, and looks as though the whole place has been artfully planted…

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Day 153: worn brickwork and weeds

With so much going on in the garden just now (turn around, another flower pops out), it may seem a tad perverse I’m using today’s post to talk about an old wall and a patch of troublesome Boraginaceae

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Day 152: purple cranesbill

While hardy geraniums might not be the rarest or most sophisticated of plants, they have a special place in my heart, and none more so that the purple cranesbill Geranium x magnificum

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Day 151: forget-me-not no more

The final days of May have been filled with forget-me-nots, though fair to say they’ve looked better. But they’ve done their bit, served their purpose which, as any fule kno, is threefold…

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