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Make your own Christmas Wreath?

Make your own Christmas Wreath?

December’s key gardening tasks may seem a little like November’s (and January’s too). But it’s important to be determined and to keep on top of some routine jobs, especially leaf raking (and leaf mould making), and clearing away spent stems and leaves from areas where, if left, they will encourage pests and diseases (but don’t be too tidy). On the other hand, the pace of activity has definitely slowed, so you can afford to take it a bit easier this month (well I  suppose that should read transferring your energies from gardening to christmas shopping, putting up christmas decorations etc.).

Here are a few ideas to help you stay connected to your garden during the onset of winter.

1. Digging (and mulching)

Continue to dig over beds and borders and incorporate as much organic matter as you can (spade work in heavier soils, or border forks in lighter soils like that in Old School Garden). This will not only help to prepare the soil for next year, it will reduce some pests by exposing them to hungry birds. If conditions are too wet or the ground frozen, avoid digging and instead spread a good layer of organic mulch- and let the worms do the work for you over the winter.

2. Clearing

It’s important to clear away old plant debris to prevent slugs and snails setting up home in the warm and damp conditions layers of leaves and stems can create.  Take special care to remove leaves around alpines – they will die if covered up in damp material. It’s also worth covering bare patches around these plants with a top up of gritty compost to aid new growth. But don’t be too tidy as you’ll remove valuable cover and shelter for hibernating animals and insects.

3. Planting

From now through until March is a great time to plant deciduous hedging (bare – rooted whips can be bought from nurseries). Some varieties – Beech and Hornbeam for example –  will retain their old leaves over the winter, and provide good screens. Hawthorn is good for a traditional country hedge and provides a natural, dense barrier (you can add in dogwoods, maple, dog rose and guelder rose to increase the wildlife value). To plant hedging first dig a trench a week or two before planting. This will allow the soil to settle. Then plant out your whips when the ground is moist (but not waterlogged or frozen). If the right conditions are a little while coming either ‘heel in’ your plants somewhere temporarily or keep them in compost in containers. Other trees and shrubs can also be planted – but again, wait for the right conditions.

It’s also a good time to take cuttings from rhododendrons, azaleas, and other evergreen shrubs. New growing tips should be cut to about 10-15 cms long, just below a leaf node, strip off most of the lower leaves and place the cuttings in pots of gritty compost in bright light, keep them moist and at a temperature of around 21 degrees C.

Hedeg planting- now's the time to get started

Hedge planting- now’s the time to get started

4. Protecting

Mulch Hellebores with wood chips to protect their flowers from rain splashes and remove any black spotted leaves (a fungal disease).

Lift any Dahlias in potentially cold and wet positions and store them in a gritty compost or vermiculite somewhere dry, cool but frost-free for the winter. It’s best to leave these (and any begonias you want to keep) in the ground for as long as possible to fatten their tubers- lift after the foliage has been blackened by frost.

Keep an eye on temperatures and if there’s a sudden drop forecast, then erect a temporary cover for tender flowering plants like Rhododendrons, Camellias, Azaleas and Daphne. A few stakes driven into the soil around the plant and a covering of fleece or a sheet should do the job. But make sure the material doesn’t touch the plant and remove the cover as soon as the temperature rises.

Avoid your hose freezing and splitting by stretching it out with both ends open, so allowing water to drain completely. It can then be coiled up and put away somewhere frost free. Likewise make sure any outside taps are covered to protect them from freezing.

Prevent your compost bin from getting too wet or frozen (and so slowing the decomposition process), by covering it with old carpet or plastic sheeting.

5. Decorating

Why not cut some shoots and branches for Christmas decorations and maybe make your own wreaths? Add in cones, dried orange slices, cinnamon sticks, and broad, wired ribbon.

If you normally have an artificial or cut Christmas tree, why not consider buying a rooted one this year? They don’t cost that much more and can be planted out to add a feature to your garden as well as saving a living tree! Make sure that you water a living tree well before bringing it inside and limit the tree’s ‘indoor holiday’ to no more than 10 days, making sure you keep it watered and ideally not in a warm room. Here’s a link to advice on caring for your tree.

A living Christmas Tree this year? In some places you can rent them!

A living Christmas Tree this year? In some places you can rent them!

6. Feeding

Now’s when birds start to go short of natural food, so provide good quality bird food and fat or suet balls, ensuring that feeders are out of the reach of cats. And make sure clean water is available and remains unfrozen.

7. Pruning- or not

Have a quick whisk round trees and shrubs and cut out dead, diseased or dying branches. The spurs on smaller fruit trees can be thinned out, and new horizontal tiered branches on Espaliers can be tied in. Apples, pears, quinces and medlars can be pruned. Cut down the canes of Autumn fruiting raspberries (or leave these in place until February if they are in an exposed position) and prune gooseberries, red and white currants.

Now is the time for coppicing native trees and shrubs. This technique is good for limiting the size of trees in small gardens, turning a tree into a multi-stemmed shrub. It will also provide shelter for wildlife and a breeding ground for butterflies, and lets more light through to the surrounding plants that would otherwise be shaded out by a bigger tree. This opens up the possibility of planting bulbs and ground cover plants around the tree.  Pollarding involves pruning to create a single main trunk, with cutting back of higher level stems. If you are growing shrubs for winter stem colour- e.g Cornus, then wait until spring to cut back the stems to the base.

Avoid cutting back all your perennials as they can provide food and shelter for wildlife in the winter. Anyway, many perennials (e.g. Agapanthus and Rudbeckia) have attractive seed heads and so add a little interest to the winter garden. I particularly like to leave the bleached stems of deciduous grasses in Old School Garden.

8. Harvesting

If you have them, these crops should all be ready for harvesting:

  • Beetroot

  • Turnips

  • Parsnips (best left until the weather has been frosty)

  • Brussels sprouts

  • Celery

  • Swedes

  • Cabbages

  • Leeks

9. Watering

Rain or snow might tempt you to think you don’t need to water your plants, but those which are growing underneath large evergreens or the eaves of the house or in other ‘rain shadows’, may become very dry. A lack of water in winter can be the death knell for these plants.

10. Winter projects

The weather may be good enough for you to complete a special project to enhance your garden:

  • Add a few native trees and shrubs into your borders and more exotic plantings

  • Build a compost heap – use old pallets to get the cheapest, most effective and sturdiest result

  • Feed hedgehogs with tinned dog food (but not bread and milk)

  • ‘Create’ a pile of sticks and logs to make a wonderful ‘des res’ for hibernating hedgehogs and the like

  • Make a leaf container out of chicken wire and posts to make leaf mould out of fallen leaves (it normally takes about 1 – 2 years to rot down). Alternatively they can be stored wet in large black plastic sacks pierced with a fork to make holes

  • Dig a wildlife pond

Oh, and finally, stay off frozen grass!!!

Old School Gardener

I’m very pleased to feature another guest post from Andrew Parnell who wrote an earlier post on Charles Dickens House in Bethnal Green. Andrew is a walking tour guide with Footprints of London and East London on Foot who leads walks on architecture and housing history in Tower Hamlets. These include walks in Bethnal Green which take […]

via ECP Monson: A Thoughtful and Proudly Municipal Architect — Municipal Dreams

Autumn, early winter, is the time to put your feet up, relax and look back on the year as the plants go into hibernation. That is one approach, needless to say, gardening jobs never stop and there is always something to be doing. Building on our previous blog about ‘Sowing your winter culinary herbs’ we now look…

via Jekka’s tips on maintaining, growing and caring for your herb plants in autumn & early winter — Jekka’s – Jekkas Blog

At the gate into Woolbeding autumn crashes into view. Reds, yellows, and browns glow in a sudden break of sun from the clouds. The South Downs loom in silhouette beyond austere pine plantations on Midhurst Common, framing the autumn trees that edge the fields I’m entering.

via The Sussex Weald: autumn crashes into view — Daniel Greenwood

The Papillon Project, inspiring High Schools across Norfolk to develop sustainable allotments is launched! Last Friday, at Sprowston Community Academy in Norwich over 130 people came together to celebrate and hear about plans for the future.

Supported by Garden Guru Bob Flowerdew and Co founder of Permaculture, David Holmgren, the project is based on the successful Reepham Allotment Project and is already working with 3 new schools, with a further 6 in the pipeline and a growing number of others considering getting the Project’s help. Here’s a brief clip of David Holmgren (all the way from Australia) and how Papillon is helping to deliver Permaculture:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/va7lfzji98iltkm/David%20Papillon.mp4?dl=0

There were also presentations from Frances Tophill, presenter of the BBC’s ‘Gardeners’ World’, and a keen allotmenteer, and Richard Powell O.B.E. an inspiring campaigner for the natural world.

And here’s a short video of the launch event and the wider project by Amie Beth Steadman of ‘That’s Norfolk TV’:

https://youtu.be/HFN0VQvZqAo

The Papillon Project is currently a Limited Company and hopes soon to register as a Charity. I am proud to be its Chair of Trustees and support the inspirational Founder and Leader, Matt Willer.

Find out more at http://www.thepapillonproject.com

Old School Gardener

 

A fly tipped W.C. turned into a herb planter at Reepham Allotment Project

AWARD WINNING ECO PROJECT EXPANDS ACROSS NORFOLK

A nationally acclaimed school allotment initiative is being rolled out across the County.

Nine secondary schools have now signed up to the Papillon Project which has already been running for five years at Reepham High School near Norwich- largely created from things that people throw away – from fly-tipped toilets to canoes!

That pilot has shown that students establishing their own allotment and growing their own food has improved their sense of physical and mental well being.

The founder of the Papillon Project, teacher Matt Willer won the Royal Horticultural Society’s School Gardening Champion of the Year 2018 and an Eco Hero award – gaining national media coverage. Now he’s left his day job to set up this new charity so more schools can do the same.

Matt Willer

Matt Willer

Matt says: “I want to inspire children and young people to learn to grow their own food for their school and their community”

“We will work with schools and sixth-form colleges to create and develop an allotment growing area which the students will design, create and develop themselves. The Papillon Project is also about creating a shared responsibility and forging a community of volunteers from amongst staff, parents and the wider community.”

This new initiative has the backing of BBC Radio 4 Gardener’s Question Time guru, Bob Flowerdew:

“Our children can only benefit from familiarity with nature and the ways it sustains us and our food. In a world of much division, gardening is a common good, something we can all agree that our children should experience, can learn from, and most of all will surely enjoy.”

The Papillon Project is being launched on Friday 22 November at:

 Sprowston Community Academy, Cannerby Lane, Norwich, NR7 8NE (6pm-8pm).

Contributors include Frances Tophill (‘Gardeners’ World’ presenter) and Richard Powell OBE (Chair of ‘Wild Anglia’).

If anyone is interested in attending a limited number of tickets are available at: https://papillonlaunch.eventbrite.co.uk

Find out more at www.thepapillonproject.com

The ‘Rope Pump’ at Reepham Allotment Project

Well, the last will be first for this Six on Saturday post, as a temperature down to minus 2°C last night will sadly have seen off the dahlias for this year. The photograph was taken quite early in the day but a mammoth effort from a weak November sun was doing what it could to […]

via Six on Saturday: the First and the Last — Rambling in the Garden

https://wp.me/p1FfLZ-4kS

https://wp.me/pLbni-4V9

https://wp.me/p2CnX7-2C5

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