Two days of horrible weather over the last weekend and high easterly winds yesterday left the veggie patch looking a little the worse for wear.
The potatoes (in bags) look a bit battered but no lasting damage.
Fingers crossed for the broad beans - they were doing really well and have small pods forming about halfway up the plant already, with plenty of flowers at the top. Unfortunately the wind normally blows from the West here - they are sheltered from this - so the Easterly gale has nearly blown them flat. Last night was a case of prop them up as best as possible and fingers crossed that the stems are not damaged and they will recover.
All the other veggies are under fleece (caterpillar control) and seem okay.
Finally got to cut the grass after two days of constant rain - it really needed doing by Saturday so it was like mowing a meadow yesterday. One girl went to mow, went to mow a meadow, One girl and her dog ...
Joy of gardening. The weather is much improved today - we might even get to use our new hammock next weekend - fingers crossed
Tuesday, 26 June 2007
Sunday, 17 June 2007
This is the same border now, two months later.I thought today that I should start to list the seeds/plants actually grown/planted using their formal names: (I am going to create a photo album for scans of growing instructions)
Apples - Granny Smith & Cox's Orange Pippin
Cherry - Stella
Sweet Pea - Singing the Blues (growing strongly, sown indoors and transplanted)
Nasturtium - Empress of India (sown indoors and transplanted - just starting to flower this week)
Passion Flower - Passiflora Caerluea - (Sown indoors and very slow to germinate {so they ended up in a second sowing of basil!!} transplanted out end of May and growing well. No flowers expected this first year) I also bought in some plants, which seem to be establishing nicely.
Clematis - Radar Love (sown from out of date seeds and growing strongly outside 7 germinated and three gifted - these are like the wild clematis and has simple droopy yellow flowers followed by an old man's beard tassel)
Clematis - bought in plants (TBC)
Veggies to follow in separate post.
Labels:
border,
clematis,
nasturtium,
passion flower,
sweet pea
Saturday, 16 June 2007
The border is full of purple bugle, I don't mind this spreading everywhere for now it is great ground cover and as long as I clear it away from the base of new shrubs whilst they get established eventually it will make a lovely ground cover without needing to mulch.
There is also a lovely variegated lamium, doesn't spread as much and is a little taller than the bugle, and an alysum (white on blue green foliage - lovely) which forms large cushions. All of these are easily pulled up if they start to invade.
We inherited a couple of ground cover roses in pots which I have added into the border as well as some alliums I brought in pots. I bought some primula denticulata, carex, carex bronze, several other grasses and a selection of small shrubs (hebe, euonymous, etc) and some climbers (clematis, passion flower) and was given a climbing rose too. I sowed some sweet peas to provide some quick height this year because I love the cut flowers in the house and I wanted as many flowers as possible this year to encourage pollinating insects for the veggies.
I found some really good value fruit trees so bought two different apples which will grow as espaliers against this wall and a cherry (Stella) which is planted at the bottom of the garden. Its not a huge garden and the neighbours have some mature trees so it doesn't need too many trees and certainly not large ones, but the house name is Rowan Lea and I had a Rowan in my last garden so I had to have one here too - a birthday present has provided that and it has been planted in view of the kitchen window where it will throw shade over the patio and the dog runs at different times of the day.
I hope to add some either needle junipers or some golden elm column trees right at the bottom, which along with some trellis will hide an ugly wooden 'fence' belonging to the neighbours.
Friday, 15 June 2007
Welcome
This first post will try to set the scene and over the next few days I will bring the Blog up to date with where the garden here at Rowan Lea is at.
We moved in December last year, and even though we had rented for a year I had spent a lot of time making that garden nicer for the people that rented it next, but it wasn't the same as having my own garden to create.
One of the things that appealed about this house was that the garden was effectively a blank canvas. The house is in hamlet alongside a main road and the garden isn't huge, but it is a nice size. Behind us there are a few houses and then just fields for miles. We don't have a front garden, but when we look across the road, the fields stretch away up the hill into the distance - crops in the first two fields (with hares) and then trees (the cemetery).
The garden in December was a concrete area outside the back door, a rectangular lawn, a paved path down one side and a narrow border on the other. At the end of the garden an area was 'paved' with large stone sets (very uneven) and offered space for a shed (which turned out to be rotten). There was a small 'rockery' using some stone and mostly concrete.
The first priority was to make space and site dog runs. We decided to put them right by the house on the ugly concrete slab. Dad came over and helped us set out some large (very large) concrete paving stones to extend the area. We put the runs up and the dogloos inside. Next step was to demolish the shed and then get a new one up. I bought a mini shed to stand by the dog runs, useful for storing dog food and tools initially, and a larger shed for the end of the garden.
I wasn't going to do anything else with the garden this year, prioritising the house instead, but I couldn't resist. I bought a few plants and decide to shape the lawn - its now a roughly 6m diameter circle. The rockery was overhauled so it was stone and not concrete and new shrubs went in - they are only tiny but they will grow.
An obelisk went in at the end (next to the gate) with passionfruit to grow up it.
Then I found some strange large grooved bricks buried in the garden - enough to make a curved path across the lawn with the stone sets placed between then and then carried on to make a small 'patio' at the end of the garden - still to be finished when the old shed timber is disposed of).
I had over ordered on the slate for the kitchen floor so there was enough to make a square patio at the top of the garden. There were enough 60cm square concrete slabs unwanted to make a raised hexagonal pond shape (will need lining etc).
I really wanted to take on an allotment BUT with a house to renovate it really wasn't practical so I put in three 1 metre square raised beds for veggies. (see separate post).
I have grown clematis and passion flower from seed as well as buying some in, and they will grow across the trellis fence along the concrete wall at one side of the garden and make a lovely backdrop. I brought some pots of alliums with us and they have flowered, although some kind slug ate the sides of the stems and some of them flopped - never mind they will go in the garden now and may be better next year.
We have a toad and a frog in the garden and loads of birds - see 'Blackies' post later on. We found three flatworms (think they were the NZ ones) and yet we have a huge earthworm population so maybe they do settle into a balance over time.
The soil condition is lovely - the worms have obviously been doing their work and this suggests that 'no-dig' is healthy for a garden.
I have dug so many unused slates out of the ground that I have been able to use them as a decorative mulch on a bed dedicated to ferns, hostas and sedges.
We moved in December last year, and even though we had rented for a year I had spent a lot of time making that garden nicer for the people that rented it next, but it wasn't the same as having my own garden to create.
One of the things that appealed about this house was that the garden was effectively a blank canvas. The house is in hamlet alongside a main road and the garden isn't huge, but it is a nice size. Behind us there are a few houses and then just fields for miles. We don't have a front garden, but when we look across the road, the fields stretch away up the hill into the distance - crops in the first two fields (with hares) and then trees (the cemetery).
The garden in December was a concrete area outside the back door, a rectangular lawn, a paved path down one side and a narrow border on the other. At the end of the garden an area was 'paved' with large stone sets (very uneven) and offered space for a shed (which turned out to be rotten). There was a small 'rockery' using some stone and mostly concrete.
The first priority was to make space and site dog runs. We decided to put them right by the house on the ugly concrete slab. Dad came over and helped us set out some large (very large) concrete paving stones to extend the area. We put the runs up and the dogloos inside. Next step was to demolish the shed and then get a new one up. I bought a mini shed to stand by the dog runs, useful for storing dog food and tools initially, and a larger shed for the end of the garden.
I wasn't going to do anything else with the garden this year, prioritising the house instead, but I couldn't resist. I bought a few plants and decide to shape the lawn - its now a roughly 6m diameter circle. The rockery was overhauled so it was stone and not concrete and new shrubs went in - they are only tiny but they will grow.
An obelisk went in at the end (next to the gate) with passionfruit to grow up it.
Then I found some strange large grooved bricks buried in the garden - enough to make a curved path across the lawn with the stone sets placed between then and then carried on to make a small 'patio' at the end of the garden - still to be finished when the old shed timber is disposed of).
I had over ordered on the slate for the kitchen floor so there was enough to make a square patio at the top of the garden. There were enough 60cm square concrete slabs unwanted to make a raised hexagonal pond shape (will need lining etc).
I really wanted to take on an allotment BUT with a house to renovate it really wasn't practical so I put in three 1 metre square raised beds for veggies. (see separate post).
I have grown clematis and passion flower from seed as well as buying some in, and they will grow across the trellis fence along the concrete wall at one side of the garden and make a lovely backdrop. I brought some pots of alliums with us and they have flowered, although some kind slug ate the sides of the stems and some of them flopped - never mind they will go in the garden now and may be better next year.
We have a toad and a frog in the garden and loads of birds - see 'Blackies' post later on. We found three flatworms (think they were the NZ ones) and yet we have a huge earthworm population so maybe they do settle into a balance over time.
The soil condition is lovely - the worms have obviously been doing their work and this suggests that 'no-dig' is healthy for a garden.
I have dug so many unused slates out of the ground that I have been able to use them as a decorative mulch on a bed dedicated to ferns, hostas and sedges.
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