Tag Archive: garden


figs fruit

A Fig fruit

I have a fig in the courtyard here at Old School Garden, growing in a pot and ‘liberated’ as a young transplant when pruning a rather older and very vigourous example at our local primary school a few years ago. I remember gathering it when I helped to plant up the ‘Nectar Bar’ and ‘Eco Park’ there in 2007. Today our tree, along with a Grapevine, Olive and Peach, contributes a mediterranean touch to the space, and with last winter and spring’s mild and wet conditions it has put on some wonderful growth, including a crop of handsome and promising looking fruit. I can’t recall ever really tasting a ripe fig, but my recent experience of fig-flavoured yoghurt is tempting me to try to harvest some this year!

Common name: ‘Common Fig’

Native areas: A native of the Middle East and Western Asia.

Historical notes: The edible fig is one of the first plants that was cultivated by humans, predating the domestication of Wheat, Barley and Legumes, and may thus be the first known instance of agriculture. Figs were also a common food source for the Romans. The fruits were used, among other things, to fatten geese for the production of a precursor of foie gras. In the 16th century, Cardinal Reginald Pole introduced fig trees to Lambeth Palace in London.

An old Fig tree, grown under cover

An old Fig Tree

Features: A round-headed tree, if properly located and pruned, otherwise it can develop a mass of straggly growth (e.g if grown up against a wall and left untrained and its roots unrestricted). Mature height of 3 – 5 metres, it is grown for both its attractive, deeply lobed foliage, and fruits. Two crops of figs are potentially produced each year; the first or breba crop, develops in the spring on last year’s shoot growth. In contrast, the main fig crop develops on the current year’s shoot growth and ripens in the late summer or autumn. The main crop is generally superior in both quantity and quality to the breba crop.

Uses:  It makes a small and elegant tree that is perfect for gardens where space is limited. Grow in a container or open ground. The cultivar ‘Brown Turkey’ has gained the RHS Award of Garden Merit (AGM).

58571_Ficus_carica_LGrowing conditions: The fig likes dry, sunny, warm, sheltered sites, where the soil is dry or very well-drained. It thrives in both sandy and rocky soil. As the sun is really important it is better to avoid shade. Excessive growth has to be limited to promote the fruiting. This can be achieved by pruning to achieve the desired shape and encouraging fruiting branches and also by restricting root development; by growing in a container or in an enclosed bay in open ground where brick walls or other barriers keep the roots in check. It is also often grown up against a south-facing wall to maximise fruiting potential. I’ve had experience of pruning back hard a few old unkempt examples successfully in spring; alternatively, phase your pruning over a number of years to lessen the visual impact and reduce stress on the plant.  Some varieties are more adapted to harsh and wet climates. It is remarkably pest and disease resistant. 

Further information:

Wikipedia- Ficus

RHS- Figs

RHS- Ficus carica ‘Brown Turkey’

How to grow Figs- Daily Telegraph

Barcham trees directory

Old School Gardener

Picture by Bob Osborn

Picture by Bob Osborn

The ‘E’ in my A-Z of garden trees is a star autumn performer and can also be grown as a deciduous shrub. As I write this, my own (shrub) example of Euonymus (the alatus or ‘winged spindle’ species) here in Old School Garden has just lost all of it’s new leaves – possibly a virus or scale attack? Still, I have gathered some seeds from hedgerow examples of europaeus and the small seedlings seem to be doing well, so maybe I shall- in a few years- have a replacement or two!

Common name: ‘Spindle’, ‘European Spindle’, ‘Common Spindle’

Native areas: native to much of Europe, where it inhabits the edges of forest, hedges and gentle slopes, tending to thrive on nutrient-rich, chalky and salt-poor soils. It is a decduous shrub or small tree.

Historical notes: European spindle wood is very hard, and can be cut to a sharp point- it was used in the past for making wool spindles (used to spin the wool into thread).

Features: Euonymus europaeus grows to 3–6 m (10–20 ft) tall, rarely 10 m (33 ft), with a stem up to 20 cm (8 in) in diameter. The leaves are opposite, lanceolate to elliptical, 3-8 cm long and 1-3 cm broad, with a finely serrated edge. Leaves are dark green in summer. Autumn colour ranges from yellow-green to reddish-purple, depending on environmental conditions. Flowers are produced in late spring and are insect-pollinated; they are rather inconspicuous, small, yellowish green and grow in cymes of of 3-8 together. The capsular fruit ripens in autumn, and is red to purple or pink in colour and approximately 1-1.5 cm wide (opening, when ripe, to reveal orange seed cases).

Uses:  Spindle is a popular ornamental in gardens and parks due to its bright pink or purple fruits and attractive autumn colouring, in addition to its resistance to frost and wind. It has been introduced to North America where it has become an invasive species in some areas. Grown as a shrub it is useful for hedging and screens, is relatively low maintenhance and as a tree looks good in ‘Cottage’, informal and wildlife gardens.

The cultivar ‘Red Cascade’ has gained the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit (AGM).This is a small arching tree (mature height 3-5 metres), and produces an abundance of rosy red fruits which open to reveal vivid orange seed cases. The foliage display in autumn is fantastic with green leaves turning to rich red by November. This variety is one of the best forms for gardens, parks and resticted spaces.

Growing conditions: Grow in well-drained soil in sun or partial shade. propagate by sed or semi-hardwood cuttings. A good choice for even chalky soils, it will thrive in most soils, but avoid waterlogged ground. Prone to caterpillars and vine weevils and may suffer from powdery mildew.

640px-Illustration_Euonymus_europaea0Further information:

Wikipedia

RHS- Euonymus europaeus

Barcham trees directory- ‘Red Cascade’

How to grow Euonymus europaeus ‘Red Cascade’

Old School Gardener

butterfly bouquet via green renaissancevia Green Renaissance

Honeysuckle_(Lonicera)_Flowers_In_Garden._Hampshire._UK‘Late lingers now the light, and through the night

A glow creeps eastward round the northern sky.

The sun comes early, quickly rises high,

Shines down upon a world of June delight;

On fields of hay, and lanes where grasses sway,

Their graceful panicles in fine array.

Wild roses, soft of hue, and fragrant briar,

And wayside wastes with poppies set afire.

Now family parties picnic by the stream,

Or roam in wonder under mighty trees,

And little children plough through bracken seas,

Wild fancies flying in a waking dream.

At last dusk falls, and shadowy moths appear

Where honeysuckle scents the evening air.’

John (Jack) Kett

from ‘A Late Lark Singing’ (Minerva press 1997)

horse boot (1)‘The mowing was of course done by a stout little pony in leather boots and the soothing hum of the mowing machine was one of the pleasures of summer, instead of the noisy, smelly mowers which one now has to endure.’

Audrey Holland- Hibbert Hortus

horsedrawn_mower_LRG

Old School Gardener

IMG_8801You may have read previously that one of my latest projects involves designing, and then helping to install a new border alongside a 200-year-old ‘Crinkle Crankle’ Wall, near Fakenham town centre, Norfolk. I’m not sure about the history of the wall, but it seems to have enclosed a substantial garden for an important house next to the Church (possibly the old Vicarage or Rectory?). There’s certainly evidence of lean-to glasshouses on some (straight) parts of the wall, which are all ‘listed’ as being of historic or architectural interest.

Crinkle Crankle walls have an interesting history, as Wikipedia says:

‘A crinkle crankle wall, also known as a crinkum crankum, serpentine, ribbon or wavy wall, is an unusual type of garden wall.

The crinkle crankle wall economizes on bricks, despite its sinuous configuration, because it can be made just one brick thin. If a wall this thin were to be made in a straight line, without buttresses, it would easily topple over. The alternate convex and concave curves in the wall provide stability and help it to resist lateral forces.

Both crinkle and crankle are defined as something with bends and turns (Webster’s), but the term is also thought to come from Old English meaning zig-zag. The earliest reference to this meaning has been cited in 1598, but it was not until the 18th century that the term began to be applied to wavy walls. At that time these garden walls were usually aligned east-west, so that one side faced south (Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture by James Stevens Curl) to catch the warming sun and were historically used for growing fruit.

Many crinkle crankle walls are found in the East Anglia area of England where the marshes of the fen country were drained by Dutch engineers starting in the mid-1600s. The walls’ construction is attributed to these engineers who called them slange muur, meaning snaking wall……’

The Fakenham wall (which must be one of the oldest surviving examples in the U.K.), now encloses the Town’s Community Centre, Registry Office and other community buildings and the surrounding site is mainly laid to grass, with some areas of mature trees and more formal borders. Next to the wall is an old asphalt tennis court (no longer in use) and the border immediately in front was covered in weeds (mainly Alkanet- it has a pretty blue flower, but also has tough tap roots and is a real ‘spreader’), as well as a large area of Hemerocallis (Day Lily). Perhaps a legacy from the wall’s days as a backdrop for fruit growing, each ‘bay’ created by the wavy wall has a fruit tree- apple, cherry or fig. These old trees are all looking rather uncared for and one of my first jobs was to cut back the fig which was covering one of the old brick and slate seats that once must have been used to watch the tennis. Here’s what the area looked like at the start of the project….

The clients (the Community Centre and the Gardening in Fakenham Town – GiFT project) have ideas for improving this wider area and perhaps encouraging it as a space for wedding photos, outdoor events etc. The brief was to come up with a planting plan for the border in front of the south -facing wall to better show off its features, use plants that require limited maintenance and which can cope with the poor soil and aspect.

My design involved limited pruning of the other fruit trees, thinning out the large area of Day Lilies and using the thinnings to create a continuous ribbon of these around the base of the wall, and introducing a few shrubs and sub shrubs (Buddleja and Lavender) at key points. These, and a range of herbaceous perennials and grasses were positioned to provide contrasting textures and forms within a broadly colour-themed series of ‘waves’ to pick up the shape of the wall, and taking account of the other strong structural features of the seats and fruit trees.

These waves are alternating combinations of mainly blue and red; blue and yellow and with purple (including purple foliage) to tie these together as a more continuous ribbon through the whole scheme. In addition a selection of different grasses (including Stipa gigantea and Miscanthus sinensis) have been used around each seat to provide a taller, contrasting, soft veil effect with both flowers and foliage to catch the sunlight. I also suggested that old bricks, to harmonise with the wall, could be laid as flooring in front of each seat, softened with ad hoc planting of varieties of Thyme. The first of these seating areas has been used to pilot this and it is hoped that further work will be done to complete the other areas as voluntary help and materials become available.

Children from the local Junior School were involved alongside a handful of volunteers to help me clear the border, prepare the soil and then to plant it up. Here’s how it looked after clearing and planting up…

The final scheme involved planting over 200 plants supplied in the main by Howard Nursery of Wortham, Suffolk and Taverham Nursery Centre, Norfolk. The planting has deliberately been placed closer together than would ultimately be necessary, so as to speed up the ground coverage and so reduce the need for weeding. However, not surprisingly, some roots of the Alkanet remain and have started to sprout once more, so the border will need to be carefully managed to ensure the plants survive and the weeds are removed in its early days.

This week, the children from the Junior School returned to carry out the ‘first weed’ since planting and to draw the wall and look out for insects etc. This marked the formal completion of the project. Here are some pictures of that event…

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

And here’s one of me together with representatives of the main partners: from left to right Rhoda Hincks (Junior School), Janet Holdom (Community Centre) and Pauline Chamberlain (GiFT).

IMG_8926

This has been an interesting and enjoyable project and I look forward to seeing the border in a few months once it has become better established and to seeing progress on the improvements to the wider area. If you’d like to look at pictures and a brief account of the Junior School’s involvement take a look at their blog. 

Old School Gardener

IMG_8876We paid a visit to an ‘open garden’ under the National Gardens Scheme at the weekend, Oulton Hall, not far from Old School Garden. And we cycled! (about 10 miles in  total).

Home of the Agnew family, originally Oulton Hall was built in the 16th Century, but the present building is Georgian in style and incorporates a yellow brick stable. The house and stable block are surrounded by a garden (or rather gardens) designed by Chelsea medal winner, Clare Agnew.

With a strong overall structure, the gardens are a combination of spaces which together hang together as a delightful country landscape. However, there are several spaces which give a different feel to the place- Mediterranean and more contemporary designs (including ornamental grasses) are well integrated and used to good effect. The journey through the various small courtyards and niches as well as the grander open lawns, wider woodland and lakeside areas was a joy on a sunny Sunday afternoon.

I particularly liked the series of pergolas enclosing an old church font at the centre, overhung with white and lavender Wisteria, creating a quiet, monastic feel (see main picture, above). I also liked the vines trained into ‘parasols’ which, with surrounding features, create a mediterranean atmosphere. There is also a superb, densely planted walk with a seat by a bubbling water feature, illuminated by the sunshine. Certainly a garden where a lot of thought and skill has gone into creating a mix of experiences which aren’t overpowering, with the emphasis on the intimate and restful. Here’s a photo gallery of our visit.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

And  here’s a selection of some of the flowers in bloom when we visited.

Old School Gardener

jayA couple of interesting garden observations this week. Having just seen the first signs of slug and snail attack on my newly planted summer bedding (Portulaca) I resorted to the ‘blue sweeties’ to attract and ‘deal’ with the little ….pests.  (Yes, I know I shouldn’t, but I find that they are the most effective way of dealign with mass infestations).

The following morning, a nice ‘crop’ of newly frazzled corpses lay on the beds. I was sitting reading and glancing out of the french doors and saw a Jay land, pick up a snail in it’s beak, and ‘wipe’ it on some soil before flying off with it- and it happened again. An example of a bird that’s learned not to eat slug pellets?

Today, I fixed some supporting timbers to my ‘fruit fence’ (where I’m training a Cherry and a Plum as fans) and a pallet-based reinforcement to the bed the fence sits in (more on this little project in due course), As I was carrying out the summer prune of these two fans, I noticed (a bit late, I know) that the Cherry was covered in black fly. As I expected there were ants (who ‘farm’ the aphids for the sweet juice they suck out of the plant) and ladybirds doing their best to hoover up the infestation. But to my surpise, there were also many solitary bees finding their way into the furled up leaves – I can only guess that they too had discovered the free supply of sucrose!

 Have you seen either of these things in your garden? Do you have an explanation? Do you have any of your own interesting observations?

Old School Gardener

PicPost: Furred - up Arteries

Picture via Sociedad Argentina de Horticultura

Old School Gardener

hanging bottle gadn via urban organic gardener

Cut glass bottle window garden via Urban Organic Gardener

Old School Gardener

Finding Nature

Nature Connectedness Research Blog by Prof. Miles Richardson

Norfolk Green Care Network

Connecting People with Nature

Discover WordPress

A daily selection of the best content published on WordPress, collected for you by humans who love to read.

Susan Rushton

Celebrating gardens, photography and a creative life

Unlocking Landscapes

Writing, photography and more by Daniel Greenwood

Alphabet Ravine

Lydia Rae Bush Poetry

TIME GENTS

Australian Pub Project, Established 2013

Vanha Talo Suomi

The Journey from Finnish Rintamamiestalo to Arboretum & Gardens

Marigolds and Gin

Because even in chaos, there’s always gin and a good story …

Bits & Tidbits

RANDOM BITS & MORE TIDBITS

Rambling in the Garden

.....and nurturing my soul

The Interpretation Game

Cultural Heritage and the Digital Economy

pbmGarden

Sense of place, purpose, rejuvenation and joy

SISSINGHURST GARDEN

Notes from the Gardeners...

Deep Green Permaculture

Connecting People to Nature, Empowering People to Live Sustainably

BloominBootiful

A girl and her garden :)