Archive for May, 2014


gressenhallfw's avatarGressenhall Farm and Workhouse

One of the lovely things about being a Heritage Gardening Trainee is the fact that we are able to garden in so many different heritage settings. Even within the walls of Gressenhall there are different focuses for each gardening area.

My focus has primarily been on the Dyer’s Garden and the Farmhouse garden. It has been a joy to get to know the volunteers who have spent many years in some cases caring for the different areas. Carol and Jenny who look after the Dyer’s Garden are extremely knowledgeable about the whole process of dying, from which plants to grow for which colour, through to the processes of dying fabric. Carol loaned me a fascinating book about the history of wool industry in Norfolk and how dying yarn and silk was a highly valued skill.

Dyer's Garden at Gressenhall FW Dyer’s Garden at Gressenhall FW

Starting the traineeship in winter was a good time to…

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A 'Land Print' using robotics to create a planting pattern- amazing

A ‘Land Print’ using robotics to create a planting pattern- amazing!

Old School Gardener

Municipal Dreams's avatarMunicipal Dreams

There are plenty of things that make the Churchill Gardens Estate in Westminster a bit special.  In 2000 the Civic Trust voted it the outstanding building scheme of the last forty years. When it was built it was the largest urban area to be built to the plans of a single firm of architects. But let’s begin with its founding inspiration.

'Luxury flats, Pimlico'.  The caption and image are taken from a Picture Post article of 1955 ‘Luxury flats, Pimlico’. The caption and image are taken from a Picture Post article of 1955

Churchill Gardens – the Pimlico Housing Scheme as it was originally designated – was the only major project within the visionary Abercrombie Plan for the post-war reconstruction of London to be completed.   Its scale – a 30 acre site, 1661 homes, 36 blocks, a population of some 5000 – and its design gives some indication of the ambition of post-war hopes.

Aerial view, 1960s Aerial view, 1960s

Charles Latham, then leader of the London County Council…

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The glorious Passion Flower

The glorious Passion Flower

Today’s question concern climbers that won’t flower, specifically Passion flowers and Wisteria. Jimmy Jones of Brighton asks:

‘I’ve a problem with two of my climbers. I have a Passion Flower growing over my front door which grows very vigourously, but produces no flowers or fruit. Likewise I bought a Wisteria a good few years ago and it did not grow for a long time. I fed it and recently it has begun to grow, but still has not flowered. Can you help please?’

The Passion Flower (Passiflora) needs one thing above all else- sunshine. So a south facing wall is really the only place where it will succeed in most parts of the U.K.- it must be open to the sun all day. If your location is right the other issue might be an over rich soil- this can produce a mass of foliage and stems at the expense of flowers, so if you’ve been feeding it perhaps lay off for a while and then make sure you use a feed rich in potassium (e.g.dilute tomato feed), which will encourage flowering.

As for the Wisteria, this is one of those plants that takes a fair while to come into flower. to make the wait even more agonising, it often grows very little in its first year or two. Help to induce flowering by shortening any unwanted long stems in July or August, cutting them back to about 30 cms or to 5 or 6 buds, and prune again in January, shortening all side shoots back to two or three buds, so concentrating the plant’s energy into a limited number of flowering buds. Again, an occasional feed with diluted tomato feed (or another feed rich in potassium) can also coax flowers from reluctant plants.

My own experience from transplanting a Wisteria seedling to my arbour in my Kitchen Garden, is that it’s taken a good five years for it to flower in any profusion, but I think the mild winter and warmish spring have also played a part- below are some pictures of how it looks today. I’m gradually training it over the top and sides of the arbour. You might also find  this article about using climbers in the garden useful.

Coincidentally my younger daughter (who lives in a basement apartment in the outskirts of Lisbon,Portugal), has just bought a Wisteria to go alongside a very successful Trachelospermum jasminoides she and her husband planted about 3 years ago (I’m told the fragrance just now is wonderful). I’ve suggested they train it along wires fixed to the walls of their patio garden and as it’s in a container to give it a fortnightly feed of tomato food to encourage flowering. Fingers crossed!

If you have any questions you’d liked answered then email me and I’ll do my best to feature your question and hopefully provide an answer!

My email address: nbold@btinternet.com, and put ‘GQT question’ in the subject line, please.

Old School Gardener

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Stepped and repeating curves

Old School Gardener

dramm-garden-hose‘To a gardener there is nothing more exasperating than a hose that isn’t long enough.’

Cecil Roberts

Do you agree? What is the biggest pain in YOUR garden?

Old School Gardener

gillians's avatarPlant Heritage

After our visit to Kristopher’s we headed out towards the coast to East Ruston Old Vicarage Garden.  ‘Very flat, Norfolk’, as Amanda says to Elyot in Coward’s Private Lives and beyond the city lies an area of open expanses, buffeted by gentle zephyrs from the North Sea and ideal for growing carrots.  Forty years ago, Alan Gray and Graham Robeson bought the house at East Ruston and over the decades have created a garden of views and vistas, cleverly borrowing focal points from outside.  Shelter belts of  Monterey Pine, Italian alder and Eucalyptus have created a microclimate capable of supporting a huge variety of plants in a multitude of garden rooms.

IMG_3493

This courtyard had recently been planted out with Aeonium which are overwintered inside.

Sculpture – one created to look like the waterspouts which occur off the coast.

The desert, carved out of the landscape with a JCB.

Two sides of the…

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Planting Patterns #17

Peace in Agave- via Guerilla Gardening

Old School Gardener

A large garden can be broken up into a series of more interesting spaces using arches, hedges, screens etc.

I’ve been approached by a TV producer who’s developing a potential new gardening series, which will involve a team of skilled and creative people with high functioning Asperger’s syndrome. The series will involve building a big and visually exciting show garden.

The producer, Claire Castle of Betty TV, wants at this stage to chat to people with Asperger’s who are passionate about gardening and outdoor pursuits, and ask them what they have done before, why they like gardening and if they have any other particular skills. It doesn’t matter if someone hasn’t been into gardening for that long, or their special interest is something different, as she wants different people to bring different skills and elements to the task.

It’s very informal at the moment, and Claire just wants to have a chat over the phone or can possibly pop over to meet people. She is already talking to a couple of people with landscape design and engineering backgrounds, and is especially keen to find soemone who knows a lot about plants! By having a team of people with Asperger’s she plans to explore the underlying theme of gardening therapy and autism, but essentially this is a chance to create something artistic, imaginative and inventive  in an unused green space.

The series is still in a development stage, so Claire needs to put a ‘taster tape’ together for the ‘big broadcasting channel’ she is working with, which will feature the team of people who would like to be involved. So if you’re into gardening or related areas, have Asperger’s and are happy to talk on camera about your green-fingered pursuits, why not get in touch with Claire via email:claire.castle@betty.co.uk, or phone her on 020 7290 0204?

Old School Gardener

 

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