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front garden1A front garden is on view to all, so must look good all year and be functional. Here are a few ideas for making your own ‘entrance’:

Focal points-

  • A statue, pot or some other hard landscape feature can be used to provide a focal point; something to draw the eye and give a sense of unity to the front garden.

  • Alternatively, box topiary shapes or other bold ‘architectural’ plants can fulfil this role and can be relatively easy to maintain. Likewise, planting groups of the same plant can be used to create a series of ‘green’ focal points.

  • Another idea is to create a feature such as a rockery that will be seen from the roadside and combines both hard and soft landscaping elements.

Paths and drives-

  • A path to the front door is a central feature of most front gardens. By laying this diagonally across the plot an illusion of depth can be created. If your plot is relatively small and your path from garden entrance to front door has to be primarily fucntional, they should take the shortest route if they are going to be used by casual visitors. However, they can be made to look more attractive by introducing gentle curves or by by using a mixture of path surfacing materials such as brick and stone. But don’t use more than two or three different materials as this can cretae a fussy, disjointed look.

  • If your plot is larger and you can fit in a second path which has a mainly decorative role, this can be routed to meander through the garden and provide easy access to each part of the plot; it could be a continuous ‘snake’ of paving or stepping stones, or a combination of both.

  • Don’t underlay gravel with different coloured or shaped chippings, as over time these will rise to the surface and the result will look ugly.

  • Try to avoid using impermeable materials for vehicle hard standings (there are now regulations in place about this) and if you do have large hard surfaced areas use planting pockets to break these up- a car can easily pass over low growing plants.

Planting-

  • Drought- tolerant shrubs such as Hebe and Choisya help to squeeze out weeds, so helping to keep the front garden looking tidy.

  • Plant tough plants at the edges of drives such as ornamental grasses, heathers or creeping thymes, which will survive an occasional clipping by a car tyre.

  • Use creeping plants near to the edges of the garden to create a natural look.

Good neighbour-

  • Abide by the law if you are thinking about some more major changes to your front garden e.g. if you are putting up a wall or fence adjoining a public road that is higher than 90cms or hedges in such locations. You need to contact the local authority before putting in solid boundaries and may be asked to cut back hedges that interfere with sight lines.

  • Likewise you need to contact the local authority if you plan to put in a vehicle ‘crossover’ over a public footpath and if you want to cultivate any grass verge outside your house.

front garden2

Source: Short Cuts to Great Gardens- Reader’s Digest

Old School Gardener

 

 

Picture: Bev Evans

Picture: Bev Evans

Picture: Lill Dunne

Picture: Lill Dunne

What a difference a week makes- double borders in full colour

What a difference a week makes- double borders in full colour

A brief couple of hours at Blickling this week, as I needed to get home to prepare for our journey to Devon. Still, the place looked superb and I managed to sort out a few lines of plants in the walled garden.

My fellow volunteer Jonny and I began the day (which was sunny again!) with Mike in the Walled Garden. Mike wanted to level some soil between a couple of rows of well established Foxgloves and Rudbeckia and to straighten a line of Nepeta. We set to and after this put in a few more lines of flowers- Agapanthus and Phlox.

The session was punctuated with a visit from a senior manager at Broadland Council, coming to see how a grant they’d made to help restore the greenhouse had been spent and to discuss volunteering. After that I hoed along some of the other lines of veg in the Garden and generally tidied up. Meanwhile Rebecca and Pam had been pricking out seedlings ready to put into the restored greenhouse, which is only about a third full at present (with Penstemons).

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Last week I got my new badge, this week I’ve been offered some National Trust clothing to wear in the gardens- nice to be looked after so well!

Further Information:

Blickling Hall website

Blickling Hall Facebook page

A 360 degree tour of Blickling Hall

Old School Gardener

 

PicPost: Golden Eve

St.Andrew’s Church, Whitchurch, Devon yesterday evening. Just before a pint of ale at the Whitchurch Inn….yummy.

wheelbarrow jpgI’ve been guilty of these, have you?

1. Taking on too much

2. Too optimistic about the weather

3. Misunderstanding soil

4. Forgetting to fertilize

5. Not giving plants enough space

6. Accidentally inviting bad company

For more details and some sound advice see the full article by Barbara Pleasant here

Old School Gardener

The Pimple, Tavistock, today..

'The Pimple' on the edge of Dartmoor, Tavistock, Devon- one of my favourite places...

‘The Pimple’ on the edge of Dartmoor, Tavistock, Devon- one of my favourite places…

The circular bed in the Front garden- mixed tulips and wallflowers with a Star Magnolia at the centre

The circular bed in the Front garden- mixed tulips and wallflowers with a Star Magnolia at the centre

26th April 2015

Dear Walter

Not much to say this month, old friend. A combination of building work in the house (I’ve built a boiler room to house our new biomass boiler amongst other things) and having to trek down to Devon to sort out Mother-in-law’s move to sheltered accommodation have meant I haven’t spent as much time tidying and doing the spring work that’s needed here in Old School Garden. Having said that, Deborah has been a great help in weeding and tidying up. I have also been spending some time at Gressenhall and Blickling doing voluntary gardening, so I suppose that I’ve been gardening all the same….

The grass has had its first couple of cuts, with newly serviced mowers, but also showing the clear signs of several years of mole damage! I’m also pleased that my new shed – to be used to house the mowers and other outside power tools etc. – is up and looking very neatly slotted into a corner of the rear garden. This was prompted by the conversion of some of the garage into the new boiler room, but it also makes for a better all round use of the various storage spaces we now have.

The new Shed

The new Shed

What else to tell you about in the garden? Well, the Melianthus has finally broken into flower and I’m pleased that I resisted the temptation to cut it down before it had the chance to do this. The only issue now is that it’s grown rather large and may have to be moved to a more suitable spot- something for the Autumn.

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Other ornamental areas are starting to fill up with greenery and flower colour rather nicely too, and we are just about holding our own- as usual- in the fight with the ground elder.

I’m managing to get the propagation production line going too, using a heated propagator inside the house, moving then to the greenhouse, then to cold frame and finally hardened off outside before planting out. I’ve just put out some French Marigolds into the kitchen garden along with some Calabrese. These are sitting alongside some autumn sown onions, broad beans and garlic (the latter hasn’t yet made a show above ground). The Early potatoes have yet to put any growth above ground, but recent rain may help with bringing them on- we’ve had a period of settled, warm and dry weather here, the dryness rather holding some things back, I think.

I’m making progress with the new pond, though there’s still a lot of soil to shift! Still I’ve got the big Silver Birch stump and an Elder out, and so created the start of some deeper holes in the pond area. I bought some shrubs a week or two ago and have earmarked some others I already have in pots, so the planting should get off to a good start, when I eventually get round to it! I ‘ve also got hold of some spare underlay so that will help with costs.

The pond area - with Silver Birch stump removed!

The pond area – with Silver Birch stump removed!

Some of the soil from the pond area is going onto an adjacent spot previously planned for the new shed, my new ‘spring garden’. I’ve levelled this off and its getting ready for planting, though this will probably be in the autumn.

I think it was this time last year when I was reporting on the pruning I’d done in mother-in -law’s garden in Devon and I’m amused to find that I’ve almost repeated that in the last few weeks, with 14 bags of prunings and weeds to be taken away by the Council! As you read this I’m down in Devon once more, for another bout of tidying and sorting, in anticipation of selling her house and moving her to more suitable accommodation.

As I mentioned above, I’ve been over to Gressenhall a few times and seem to have made an impact on tidying up and pruning- I tackled the ‘Rambling Rector’ there this week, so that should keep it in check for another year. The deepened entrance border is looking good with its selection of Narcissus and Tulips set off well among the grasses and Lavenders , which will put on their show later in the year.

I’m also gearing myself up for a possible new Garden Design course in the autumn, talking of which I went to the local high School’s Music event a few days ago (Deborah is a Governor there and is in the choir). I was approached three times by women who looked familiar, but who I couldn’t immediately place. They all turned out to be former students on my ‘Grow your Own’ and Garden design courses! It was good to catch up with them and hear of their progress and obvious enthusiasm; and warming too as they seemed to appreciate the work I put in for them!

So, another month gone, and almost May. When I return from the West Country there’ll be plenty of catching up to do, and hopefully not too many disasters- hopefully the neighbours will be on watering duties, an especially important task at present with so much new growth in the Greenhouse, Cold frame and Garden.

All the best for now.

Old School Gardener
 

 

 

 

Tulip at Oxburgh Hall, Norfolk. picture: Kelly Boldero

Tulip at Oxburgh Hall, Norfolk. picture: Kelly Boldero

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