One of those plants that’s as useful in the vase as in the garden, Panicum elegans ‘Frosted Explosion’ is aptly named…
Read moreDay 224: waiting for asters
You have to feel a bit sorry for asters. Everyone waits about for the flowers, as if that’s the be-all-and-end-all of the matter, paying scant attention to the rest of the plant – the scaffolding, if you like, for the floral display…
Read moreDay 223: blackberry glut
It was obviously going to be a great year for blackberries. Not because of the rampant incursion of vigorous, thick primocanes (next year’s fruiting stems) into the garden following a wet June and a warm spell in July…
Read moreDay 222: gate latch
The back gate has been desperately in need of a new latch for some time, but I’ve just not found the right thing. I’m feeling fed up with functional and indifferent to decorative – something chunky and honest would fit the bill…
Read moreDay 221: blue torch cactus
This Pilosocereus azureus (variously blue torch, woolly blue spires) seems to be faring quite well, though I’ve only just realised I should have been watering it more than I have been over the summer. Houseplants, you see, are still something of a mystery to me…
Read moreDay 220: echinacea
Echinacea can be a bit of a stinker to get through winter, certainly on heavy clay soils, where I find they’ll cope with cold conditions, but not wet.The answer is to open up the soil by adding organic matter…
Read moreDay 219: Sanguisorba 'Tanna'
There are times of year when minimalism and restraint can be watchwords in the garden, bringing with them a sense of tranquil serenity. I’m not convinced it’s worth striving for this while surrounded by the effervescence of summer…
Read moreDay 218: meadow textures
There’s nothing natural about this meadow-style planting, but the combination so enchanted me when I came across it in the Cottage Garden at Wisley a couple of summers ago that I return repeatedly to this image…
Read moreDay 217: bindweed
Perhaps it’s cruel of me to expect you to start your Monday morning with a weed, but I figured if we could come to terms with bindweed over breakfast, we’d be nicely set up for the week…
Read moreDay 216: cut-and-come-again
Cut-and-come-again is a phrase most often associated with salad crops and leafy vegetables, but I see no reason why it can’t be applied just as well to the kind of plants who like to reward us with a seemingly inexhaustible supply of flowers…
Read moreDay 215: Russian sage
Russian sage (Perovskia atriplicifolia ‘Blue Spire’) is owning its space in the garden just now. A plant that lurks – not unattractively – for much of the year, tall white stems with pale green, sage-scented leaves…
Read moreDay 214: tiger lily
Just beyond the kitchen door of the house I grew up in, leaning precariously over the path in such a way as to threaten your clothes with their deep orange pollen which nothing could shift, tall dark stems of orange-flowered lilies lolled about each summer…
Read moreDay 213: broken bird bath
It’s been years since this bird bath has actually held any water – I’m sure there must be some kind of resin I can use to fix the crack but, till then, thirsty birds are catered for elsewhere in the garden. In the meantime, it’s the perfect staging post between greenhouse and just about anywhere else…
Read moreDay 212: Persicaria 'Purple Fantasy'
Here’s a fancy knotweed – Persicaria runcinata ‘Purple Fantasy’. I can’t remember quite where I first saw it – perhaps in one of the glorious container displays by the porch at Great Dixter – but I knew it would soon be in my garden…
Read moreThe Gardens, weeds & words podcast, Series 1 Episode 14
In this episode I’m mulling over good gardening writing that reinforces our own opinions, and struggling with when it doesn’t. For me, that means alstroemerias.
Read moreDay 211: Japanese anemone
Summer is the time when that most delicate of thugs, the Japanese anemone (Anemone x hybrida and A. hupehensis), appears in the garden…
Read moreDay 210: Tagetes cinnabar
Had the medieval courts of France and England vied to produce a bloom encompassing all their regal splendour and majesty, I doubt they could have done better than Tagetes ‘Cinnabar’…
Read moreDay 209: cutting lavender
Is it too soon? The bees and the hoverflies, the butterflies and the moths are still loving the lavender but, come the end of July, I’m itching to get in there with my secateurs…
Read moreDay 208: Rudbeckia 'Goldsturm'
One of at least two plants I can think of sharing the common name Black-Eyed Susan, Rudbeckia fulgida var. sullivantii ‘Goldsturm’ always begins to put in an appearance towards the end of July…
Read moreDay 207: Salvia uliginosa
Hardy salvias ask very little from the gardener. Lots of sun, a very little water. That’s a about it, and yet, they bring colour and volume to the summer garden with great generosity of spirit…
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