Tag Archive: gardeners


To Walter de Grasse

wp_20161028_09_44_58_proDear Walter,

I heard the other day that the Met Office is saying that the growing season here has been extended by a month, due to global warming. Certainly, as I walked around Felmingham and North Walsham the other morning it was amazing to see how few trees are anywhere near bare of leaves, and there’s still so much green around!

I guess that I’m feeling as though I’m in a false sense of security, as it doesn’t seem at all urgent that I get on with planting bulbs and the perennials I’ve been nurturing in pots, sowing Broad Beans and onion sets or transplanting tender plants into the greenhouse. Of course I’m probably going to fall prey to a sharp frost anytime now and I’ll be shocked into the reality that it’s winter..well, it will be soon, as the clocks go back an hour tonight.

I look back and once more think about all that hasn’t been done in Old School Garden this month. Still I suppose a few important jobs have been ticked off- like putting in a new fence post and mending and creocoting the fence, gate posts and garden gate, cutting the grass and gathering leaves, putting out the first lot of bird food, weeding around the leeks and continuing to gather produce, especially apples and carrots. I’ve also cleared the front border (just below where we had the paint removed from the house flintwork) , levelled the edging, started to top up the soil and will eventually plant out a row of English Lavenders I’ve been growing on in pots, together with some Scabious grown from seed and some bulbs for spring colour. This will eventually be a Lavender hedge which should grow go well on this south-facing (if part shaded) wall.

I’ve also had a plant exchange with my friend Mandy; she’s given me some Veronicastrum virginicum ‘Fascination’ and Euphorbia seguieriana. The former is a hardy perennial with pale lilac flower spikes that become ‘fasciated’ (the stems and flower spikes flatten and twist into strange shapes) and so are rather curious to look at. I love Veronicastrum and look forward to growing this- perhaps alongside the two tall pale yellow Scabious I’ve grown from seed this year and which are also ready to plant out.

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Veronicastrum virginicum ‘Fascination’

Image result for images Euphorbia seguieriana

Euphorbia seguieriana

I gave Mandy a few Candelabra Primulas (also grown from seed) in return. I have rather a lot of these and have been thinking about where to put them; apart from around the pond garden that is, where they were initially intended to go. I think I’ll try a few in the triangular raised beds we have next to the terrace, perhaps mixed in with the Achillea nobilis ‘Neilreichii’ I’ve grown on from runners harvested at Blickling along with some more spring bulbs. I also think I’ll try some in the ‘plant theatre’ in the courtyard garden, in advance of the pelargoniums that normally make for the summer show.

Candelabra Primulas and Achillea ready to plant out

Candelabra Primulas and Achillea ready to plant out

As you may have seen I’ve been active on other fronts gardening-wise. A spent the first of what I hope will be regular sessions at the local high School Allotment Project, where the enthusiastic Mr. Willer is getting great results from the garden and pupils. I’m also drawing up a design for the ‘The Grow Organisation’ near Norwich, which is providing gardening and food growing opportunities for people with various needs, including some with mental health issues. This is exciting, the first bit of garden design I’ve done for a while! finally, the ‘Friends of Haveringland Parish Church’  have just about completed the first stage of turning over the churchyard to a managed conservation area with mown paths, easy access to still-tended graves and to provide a wildlife haven that’s also somewhere beautiful for humans to sit and reflect.

Haveringland Parish Churchyard- after its latest mow and ‘rake off’

Finally, my regular (well, pretty irregular recently) sessions at Blickling continue and apart from the practical gardening work I’ve begun to research the information for the new Tree Trail I’m designing there. this is throwing up some fascinating information; e.g. did you know that the ‘Monkey Puzzle’ Tree (Araucaria araucana, beloved of Victorian gardens) gets its common name from a chance remark made back in 1850?  Sir Willaim Molesworth, the proud owner of a young specimen at Pencarrow garden near Bodmin, Cornwall, was showing it to a group of friends, when one of them (the noted barrister Charles Austin), remarked, “It would puzzle a monkey to climb that”. As the species had no existing popular name, first “monkey puzzler”, then “monkey puzzle” stuck!

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Araucaria araucana- the ‘Monkey Puzzle’ tree

Though I haven’t yet had another go at that shredder, it has at least been a month of some progress in Old School Garden and beyond. I must quicken the pace to make sure all those late autumn/early winter jobs are completed soon, before the weather finally breaks..or will it be early autumn well into November?

Old School Gardener

To Walter de Grasse

Dear Walter,

So, autumn is upon us! It’s been an interesting gardening month for me here in Norfolk, though I have to say spending rather more time on gardens and gardening projects away from Old School Garden.

That of course has made me feel a bit guilty, and with the damage done to the grass (I’ve given up calling them ‘lawns’) by the new brood of young moles, also rather dejected and overwhelmed with all that needs doing.

I have at least continued to harvest fruit and veg from the garden; the apples and pears are especially pleasing, and the cucumbers are beginning to overwhelm us! Still it’s that time of year when things tend to wind down as far as growing is concerned, and attention turns to selective tidying up and repair jobs. So, I’ve emptied the shed in preparation for constructing it’s replacement, replaced a wooden fence post, cut a shed full of firewood, cut the grass and cleared away the first leaf fall, and watched the autumn colours appear- especially from Asters and Sedums.

I also had a frustrating morning trying to get my new shredder working. You may recall that a kindly neighbour gave me this petrol driven machine, which after servicing I was eager to try out. Well, to cut a long story short, whilst I managed to get it going a few times, it kept cutting out on me and on one or two occasions stalled from too much damp, leafy material being fed to it. I gave up in the end and still have the aching elbow joint to prove how many times I yanked the starting cord, to no avail!

Away from home there’s been some interesting developments. I visited a social enterprise project called ‘The Grow Organisation’ on the outskirts of Norwich. They provide home garden maintenance services (providing employment opportunities to people who might otherwise find employment difficult) and are hoping to develop the surroundings of their impressive community hub building to provide gardens where people who have a variety of health issues can spend time using ‘gardening as therapy’ ; including a ‘Sensory Garden’ for those suffering from dementia. The project sounds great and having spoken with their Director, I’ve agreed to help them with some design ideas for these outside spaces.

The second project is one I’ve already mentioned in my blog- the Allotment Project at our local High School in Reepham. Here teacher Matt Willer has created a wonderful outdoor classroom using materials and other resources either borrowed, donated or upcycled. He’s also used a great deal of ingenuity to overcome some issues such as the lack of a pumped water supply by devising a system for harvesting rainwater and created a well for storing this.

The other big story is the success of the Harvest Festival event at our local church, St. Peter’s, where having cleared up the churchyard the week before, around 150 people fo all ages came to see the end of a vintage tractor run, listen to the Aylsham Band, sing some old favourite harvest hymns and take par tin various activities such as making bread and butter, sowing seeds, learning about compost, making their own ‘scrap’ tractors and tucking into some scrumptious tea and cakes. ‘Haveringland Groundforce Day #2’ is now planned for next week, where I hope that we can finish off getting the churchyard set up to become a properly managed conservation area which is accessible and provides a place to reflect and enjoy nature as well as visiting the graves of the recently departed.

So, a month of limited activity, and reflecting on my hopes from last month, I can’t claim to be a ‘gold medal’ performance. Still, satisfying to a degree. I’ll have another go at that shredder, I promise…

Old School Gardener

To Walter de Grasse

WP_20160731_09_32_56_ProDear Walter,

Well, old friend I have to begin this letter with many congratulations on the success of your eldest, Andre, at Rio!! Three medals for Canada (2 bronze, one silver) is a fantastic achievement that you and Ferdy Lise must be very proud of. Especially as you also are no stranger to Olympic glory yourself, getting that gold for Pigeon Racing back at the 1948 games. Please pass on our congratulations and very best wishes to Andre. (You may have noticed that I retained the hanging baskets as the headline photo in this post; red and white to celebrate Canada’s and your son’s wonderful achievement.)

Andre De Grasse- known to his freinds as 'Please', as in 'Please don't walk Andre de Grasse'

Andre De Grasse- known to his friends as ‘Please’, as in ‘Please don’t walk Andre de Grasse’

Well, after many late nights watching the action from Rio, and of course very proud of Team GB’s amazing achievements (we had the Union Jacks flying over the hanging baskets during the games), the gardening has been rather low-key during August. Some selective weeding, grass cutting and watering have been the main tasks, leaving time to sit and enjoy the warm weather. I did spend about 4 hours the other day trimming back all the hedges. Much tidier, but I have the cuttings to clear, not one of my favourite jobs.

On the ornamental side the pond garden is filling up very well with a nice range of floral and foliage- and wildlife, including frogs and dragon flies. I’m also rather pleased with a couple of Cannas that are flowering superbly at present.

In the Kitchen Garden the bounty continues, though the tomatoes have pretty well finished. cucumbers and peppers are coming thick and fast from the greenhouse, and the salad bar is flourishing. We also have plenty of runner beans, courgettes and carrots. Cauliflower (if I can stop the caterpillars) red cabbage, chard, more carrots, parsnips and summer squash are on the way. The winter leeks are in and doing well, and there’s a good crop of apples and pears on the way from the orchard as well as the ‘super columns’ in the kitchen garden (some of these are so laden with fruit they are bending over- I think I’ll have to put some mopre substantial supports in over the close season). Deborah has also bottled up around a dozen beetroot which should keep her going for a few months…

Son-in-Law Diego has continued to be really helpful in the garden, giving the new shed another coat of ‘Creocote’ and helping me clear up after cutting the hedges back. I’m pleased to report that both he and our daughter Madeleine have secured jobs in or near to Cambridge and we heard the other day that they have a nice little terraced house near the centre of Newmarket to move into in the next week or two, so soon we’ll be helping them with their garden!

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It’s a few days until our first ‘Haveringland Groundforce Day’- our attempt to get to grips with the churchyard over the fields from us, in order to manage it into a wildlife paradise with mown paths and spaces to sit and reflect. I’m hopeful that we’ll get enough support and equipment to do a good job strimming and raking off, weeding, pruning back ivy and cutting back saplings and more mature trees. It will also hopefully set out a scene for the Harvest Festival event being held there on 11th September, which will feature a vintage tractor run from nearby Cawston, children’s activities, standing steam engines, refreshments and an informal service with music supplied by the Aylsham Town Band. We’re looking forward to seeing you and Ferdy here for the weekend, which will also see the Norfolk Churches Trust cycle ride visiting the church.

The view to St. Peter's...

The view to St. Peter’s…

So,a warm, peaceful and enjoyable time in then garden this month but I’m already lining up some major things for September; building a new potting shed, weeding and bulb planting, among other things…hopefully a ‘gold medal’ performance!

Old School Gardener

WP_20160619_15_40_15_ProBack in June, we took the opportunity of a visit to this garden as it was open under the National Gardens Scheme. Located near to Fakenham, in north Norfolk it is a large garden (10 acres) with a lake, mature yew hedging and a sunken garden originally laid out by Gertrude Jeykll.

There’s also a swimming pool garden, shrub borders, a lovely kitchen garden with herbaceous borders, fruit cage, cutting garden and bog garden. A relative of one of the former staff at the Hall lives in an adjoining country cottage which has a delightful old-fashioned cottage garden packed full of wonderful plants and very productive on the food front too.

I loved the display of Candelabra Primroses by the Lake- something I hope to emulate as I have a lot of seedlings growing on at Old School Garden.I hope that you enjoy the gallery of pictures.  

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Old School Gardener

I’m pleased to share part of an article featuring a gardening project at my local High School, where I helped with an initial gardening group some years ago. This article, from Permaculture Magazine, decribes how Matt Willer has used ingenuity and ‘scroungeabilty’ to establish a thriving school allotment…to read the full article you need to subscribe to the magazine, which I’ve just done. It’s a great read!

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Old School Gardener

 

 

 

WP_20160714_15_36_50_ProJuly in the Garden- by volunteer Sue Prutton

‘Yesterday was an oh so special day for me in that while I was wandering round the garden without a tour (the school summer holidays have begun and the customer-base has changed) I was overwhelmed with a wave of nostalgia. That perfume, redolent of romantic holidays in France, really took me back some 25 years …. and all because the lime trees were in blossom. I just stood still and invited anyone and everyone who passed me on their way to the Walled Garden to pause and enjoy it. One or two could not appreciate the perfume as for some scientific reason they were unable take it on board – similar to my late husband who could never smell my favourite freesias – but by and large the universal enjoyment provided by these small flowers really made my day.

The Walled Garden continues to be a source of amazement to our visitors – some have never seen it before but increasingly we have those who are returning to see the progress being made. A few weeks ago I noticed a “Walled Garden Salad” on offer in The Stables and now outside the restaurant door there is a list of the varied produce items which have made the rapid journey from the garden to the plate and are available each day. Surplus produce is regularly on sale from a table just inside the garden doorway and last weekend I was able to enjoy broad beans the way I like them – young and tender, rather than the larger, coarser version the supermarkets offer. I see that runner beans are coming on too, so I hope to be able to indulge in some of those soon.

On the far side of the garden, beyond the second greenhouse, the whole bed alongside the wall is devoted to dahlias. An excellent show is getting underway and is well worth investigating as it is not immediately visible from the entrance. So much has been achieved in less than two years but there is a great deal more still to come in the shape of the apple and pear trees now in place and which are destined to line the paths. It is lovely to see the visitors as they enjoy wandering up and down, their attention drawn to several varieties of lettuce, the chard and beetroot area, the courgettes and squash plants, the soft fruits and the many flowering plants. The new bothy is well used as it is quite a walk to and from the old one beside the double borders. As well as secure lockers for valuables there is a microwave and a dishwasher (no more excuses for grimy mugs, mercifully) and also a substantial set of tables and chairs so that the room could double up for meetings and similar. Back in the main garden a great deal of hard work is under way to re-take control of the boundary hedges in the ha-ha.

Elsewhere everything is at full peak blossom-wise. Five Tuesday evenings were set aside at the end of June and the start of July for “late night opening” when it was hoped that, weather permitting, families would bring picnics and enjoy a peaceful end to the working day. The weather did not always cooperate but on the evenings that it did, particularly on the final one which came at the end of an extremely hot day, it was lovely to see friends and families kick off their shoes, lounge in our deckchairs (we could do with a few more) and sip something cool and bubbly.

I had to smile a few weeks ago: in spite of the huge lake at their disposal I came across a pair of ducks giving their five well-grown offspring a swimming lesson in the Shell Fountain. I stood and watched as they calmly climbed out and waddled off back to the far larger “pool” which is always available for them. They had come on quite a stroll for their swimming lesson!’

ducks

WP_20160525_12_17_11_ProOn a recent trip to Devon, we stopped off en route to visit this Neo Gothic ‘pile’ in Somerset, former home of the Gibbs family, who made a ‘pile’ of their own, trading in a rather large ‘pile’ of Guano, or South American bird excrement, favoured for its value as a fertiliser in 19th century Britain.

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Making our way from the impressively equipped visitor reception and restaurant we passed by a delightful formal parterre garden set some way away from the house, and then toured this amazing mansion, with its glorious colourful decor and richly carved woodwork. Much of the house is in need of renovation, but the National Trust has made great progress in restoring some of the most important rooms.

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‘… An ordinary man with an extraordinary fortune, a man of vast riches but simple pleasures. Antony was the second generation of the Gibbs family to live at Tyntesfield. He epitomised the Victorian age, fascinated by art, technology and travel….After buying Tyntes Place for his growing family in 1843, William Gibbs went about making it his own. He remodelled the exterior of the simple regency house into the Gothic extravaganza we see today….Four generations of family life, a love of beautiful things and the accumulation of useful bits and bobs made Tyntesfield a treasure trove of objects. Almost  60,000 objects have been catalogued including everything from priceless paintings and ornate furnishings to ice skates and picnic sets. It is the largest recorded collection owned by the National Trust and tells the story of a wealthy family’s life over four generations….’

From here we made our way through some lovely formal gardens near to the house and then to the Walled Garden, where some gardener must have been a little the worst for wear when he/she planted the lettuces…

WP_20160525_13_32_54_ProSeriously, this series of wobbly lines was done as a bit of light relief in what might otherwise be the normal regimented lines of fruit and veg; I loved it.

And the rest of the garden was interesting, too, though I thought it lacked some variations in height to give it structure.nearby was a rather nice play area with lots of carved and country-themed play features; I especially liked the large slug (which doubles as a nice seat).

There was also a stall selling fresh veg and bulbs so I spent a little on buying some orange Tulips for next year…now where have I put them?

Further information: National Trust website

Old School Gardener

 

To Walter Degrasse

WP_20160731_09_32_56_ProDear Walter,

Summer finally arrived! It’s been a warm few weeks after a cloudy and wet June.  Wa + We= G (where Wa is warmth, We is Wetness and G is growth) just about sums it up.

The growth has on the whole been a victory for wanted plants rather than weeds, though I’ve still been ‘speed weeding’ in the more prominent areas of the garden- mainly bindweed.

It’s been a month of change; our daughter and her husband have returned from living in Portugal and are currently living with us pending settling jobs and a permanent place to live. It’s great having them around, and our son-in-law, Diego has been especially helpful in the garden and more generally; he’s done a great job repainting a lot of the woodwork in the kitchen garden and helping tidy things up. They also brought their two cats with them and one of the most important jobs earlier in the month was finishing off their new home- the ‘Cat Cave’.

At this time of year many of the floral treats of high summer are coming into their own, so here’s a pictorial round up of Old School Garden today…

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After the first flush of produce from the kitchen garden, things have slowed a little, though we have a good store of potatoes, onions and garlic. The strawberries were very disappointing, a combination of poor weather and the early shoots being nibbled by deer. We now have a rather untidy bed with corn growing out of the straw I put round the strawberry plants- a job next week will be removing this and perhaps using some of the spare ground for planting out leeks or carrots.We’ve had and continue to get a good supply of tomatoes, and other things are well on the way, such as some newly planted leeks and red cabbage…

Another important achievement has been finishing off the path next to the ‘Fruit Fence’; I decided to board the edges and cover it with landscape fabric and gravel. It certainly tidies that area up. I’m now starting to contemplate the next big thing, my DIY shed. I’ll turn my attention in the coming weeks to finalising the design and then getting hold of the timber for its framework.

WP_20160731_09_40_44_ProYou may recall a couple of years ago I was involved in tidy up at the local churchyard, and promised the then vicar that I’d produce a Management Plan for this? Well, two years on and with a new vicar in place, who’s keen to get the church up and running as a community venue as well as a place of religion, we are working together to set up a ‘Friends’ Group, part of whose role will be to look after the churchyard. I’ve drafted a management plan for this (see the visual plan below), which features a mix of close mown paths and areas of recent burial, with blocks of ‘meadow’ like habitat. The local Wildlife Trust is interested in helping us and have already completed a survey of the churchyard, which has a good range of wild flowers

st. peters planJuly is also a good time to take semi-ripe cuttings, so I’ve taken around 60 pieces from the lavender in the front garden  (‘Imperial Gem’) with a view to replacing this in a couple of years time, as the plants are now getting rather woody.

WP_20160731_09_39_41_ProI’ve also recently purchased a few ‘bargain’ plants to replace the early flowering Sweet Williams (having collected seed from them) and Violas.

The pond garden continues to fill out and I was pleased to spot a Frog and Dragon Fly there the other day and the host of insects continues to expand. The Water Lily I thought had died off, appears to have revived (the warmer weather is probably the key).

WP_20160731_10_06_24_ProOh, and I also got some free plants courtesy of Blickling the other day, some Ricinus communis. Though a bit ‘leggy’ they have fitted into my exotic front circular bed well, and having added some Scabious (‘Nana’) and Marigolds, as well as a Tithonia, I’m looking forward to this bed producing a bold ‘splodge’ of vibrant colour in the next month or two.

I hope that your own garden is looking splendid and that your new gardener is continuing to impress you with her skills and ideas. she certainly sounds to have been a find and with my recent experience of extra help, makes me think about getting in some extra help here…especially with the prospect fo so much weeding to be done in the autumn…I rather like the idea of being a ‘Head Gardener’!

Old School Gardener

WP_20160629_18_44_36_ProTo Walter Degrasse

Dear Walter,

I’m feeling pleased. After some despondency at how the ‘garden has got away from me’ this year, I’m finally getting a grip of things…I think. I guess you’ve had lots of rain and not very high temperatures in June, like us? Well the rain has certainly led to luscious growth just about everywhere.

I think my more positive outlook is partly down to being a little creative in Old School Garden. In my new Pond Garden – where the planting is starting to take hold very nicely- I’ve added some touches of ‘artwork’ which I hope add to the rustic, slightly oriental feel of this sunken space, and have also added more planting- e.g. some clumps of Camomile in between the flag stones (added to the Thyme I put in last month) , plus some plants I purchased down in Devon at the Tavistock Garden Festival (more on that experience in a later post).

The artwork consists of some red-painted items, plus a ‘sheaf’ of Cornus stalks, which were red when cut (the variety is ‘Sibirica’), but have turned jet black as they dry out. I hope these new additions will pick up the red paint on the bench and will also link to some red and black planting in one corner. The red items are all recycled; an old metal bed head (found in the garden) similar to those I’ve painted black and placed above the entrances to the Courtyard, a broken metal wheel that looks like it might have come off of a hen house (also found in the garden), and some curtain poles and finials which I’ve collected from various places over the years. Here they are- what do you think?

Elsewhere in the other ornamental parts of the garden I’ve resorted to some more ‘speed weeding’ along with cutting the edges fo the lawns- it’s always surprising how much better the borders look after this treatment. Fortunately I’ve been able to catch major weeds before they flower and set seed. On a more positive note the Philadelphus (‘Belle Etoile’) I grew from a cutting I took at Peckover House in Wisbech when I was working there has produced a lovely shower of white flowers.

Philadelphus 'Belle Etoile'

Philadelphus ‘Belle Etoile’

The main borders have also filled out and crowded out many, if not all of the weeds. I’ve also put out my hanging baskets on the front porch (a red, white and black colour theme), and these are looking good. In the same area, you remember I reported our plan to have the old paint removed from the two storey end of the house? Well it’s been done and the result is excellent, tying the old flintwork once more into the rest of the house. Below there’s a picture of the company during the work, which involved using a fine glass to blast off the paint. Some of the mortar has come away, but it should be possible to repair this with an appropriate mixture of lime and sand…though matching in the colour of the new with the old mortar will be tricky. I’ve started to set out the border in front of this wall, albeit ona temporary basis for now-a mixture of marigolds and Echeveria will provide some summer interest, whilst some English Lavender I recently bought and have potted on, will provide the long-term planting here; hopefully we’ll have a bushy, fragrant low hedge right under the bedroom windows!

I’ve also been creative in the Kitchen Garden where having reorientated the compost area, I’ve now refurbished the bins so that I have removable slats on the fronts, which should make turning and removal a lot easier. I’ve also begun to put in some proper steps to give access to the Fruit Screen to the rear of the garden, where, incidentally, the Sweet Williams I sowed en masse last year are starting to put on a glorious show- as are those plants I left in from last year! These steps will lead up toa new path which I think will be pea shingle on a landscape membrane. I may try out using the large supply of old roofing tiles I have available as edging to this.

We’ve had our first New Potatoes- the variety ‘Rocket’. Though delicious I’ve been a little disappointed with the productivity so far, possibly down to later than usual planting and not wonderfully warm weather. I’ve also been enjoying some broad beans. Though Wimbledon is traditionally the time for strawberries, the crop to date is disappointing in fact I haven’t yet picked one! As I mentioned in an earlier letter, the Deer have been in and nibbled off the tender new growth, which seems to have reduced drastically the number of flowers, and again the weather hasn’t been our side either. The first raspberries are ready to pick and I plan to use these in a dessert on Friday, when we have some friends over for dinner.

Tomatoes are also just about coming forward, though we could do with some heat to ripen these off, the peppers and cucumber have also finally gone into the greenhouse and I can see some cucumbers starting to form.

Good sized tomatoes...come on, ripen!

Good sized tomatoes…come on, ripen!

Other things well on the way include Calabrese, Cauliflower, Garlic, Onions, Shallots and of course the rest of the early potatoes (‘Charlotte’ my favourite will follow on from the first earlies) . I’ve put in a few squashes, having cleared away the Purple Sprouting Broccoli from last year’s sowing, and also four courgettes, a range of different runner beans and some carrots, parsnips and beetroot. I have some leeks on the way for planting out in a couple of weeks and some red cabbages too.

The other areas where I’ve put in some time are the Terrace and courtyard and connecting pathways, where the pointing was in a serious state of disrepair. I’m pleased with the repointing, though all the wet weather we’ve had finally took its toll on two wooden planters I’d made out of decking and other wood. The wood finally collapsed, rotten and I’ve therefore had a rearrangement of the layout in the courtyard, still trying to retain a sense of enclosure around the table and chairs the Hostas are into their stride here and make a wonderful display- what do you think of the new layout?

On the propagation front I’m pleased with the results of my seed sowing so far, including an interesting mix of marginal plants sourced from the RHS and other places; I’m looking forward to a super display of Candelabra Primula, amongst others, in due course.

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So, hopefully you can see I’ve been busy! Today I’ll be cutting the grass (on a dryish day). Oh and that’s something else I’ve done- used our inherited Scarifier to rake out dead material and moss from the more formal lawn areas and afterwards fed the grass. This is starting to look lusher that it has for a long time- witness the pictures below. Well, old friend, time to be off to begin the day’s work…hopefully we’ll see you and Ferdy Lise soon!

Old School Gardener

WP_20160523_20_06_08_ProTo Walter Degrasse

Dear Walter,

Or perhaps, this month it should be ‘Deer’ Walter-  the tender tips of my raspberries and strawberries have been nibbled away! I suspect a Muntjac deer to be the culprit, though it could be rabbits. The netting has been duly placed over the strawberry patch!

It’s been a challenging, but productive month, old friend. Being away in Scotland for 10 days, and this week in Devon for 7 more (plus other, new commitments) have left me short of gardening time. So, apologies that my blogging has lapsed a little too of late. However, I can, happily report that the majority of the work to create the new pond garden is complete!

Continuing my ‘evolutionary’ approach to its design, I’ve added in some features and planting which help to continue the ‘crescent’ theme and start to soften the harsher edges of the water and landscaping. I’ve had a few problems with the stepping stones (I didn’t provide a wide enough base) and edging paving- the slabs were pretty heavy!

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However, I’m very pleased with the result, and its wonderful to discover some ‘happy accidents’ such as how the late afternoon sun lights up the steep border with its vibrant yellow planting and how the plants are really taking quite quickly. I’ve divided some Hostas from the Courtyard Garden, where the old metal planters have rusted through. After repotting some of these in other containers I’ve used others in the pond garden which has helped to start a really lush, leafy environment in the latter. Hopefully now the planting will really take hold and the wildlife will move in- I’ve already noticed some insect life in the form of Pond Skaters.

Alas, the time I’ve spent on this big project has meant that the weeding has taken a back seat. I’m not sure, but this year the Ground Elder seems to really have taken hold (maybe the mild, wet winter?), and though I’ve managed to dig out a lot, there are some areas where it’s too entangled with the planting, so it’s a case of ‘speed weeding’- deadheading and pulling up – and then ‘looking forward’ to digging out complete borders in the Autumn…JOY!

My catchup has continued with the Kitchen  Garden, too, where the early potatoes have started to poke through, and the onions I planted last autumn are looking very good. I’ve planted out some early Leeks and Calabrese and recently sown my first parsnips and carrots too. The ‘cut and come again’ lettuce is also starting to bulk up and the first, sweet rhubarb has been followed by a good stand of stalks, some of which have been grabbed for a few of this week’s desserts. I’ve also got the greenhouse set for its season of tomatoes, cucumber and pepper growing, though I’m still waiting to collect the latter two plants from my friend Steve, who is my regular supplier of these, hopefully along with a set of Courgette plants. Other things sown and growing so far include runner beans, squash, cauliflower, red cabbage, beetroot and basil. Having just potted most of these up, they should be ready to go out on my return from Devon.

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My other big project- sorting out the shed area and compost bays, has also seen some progress. The base for the new shed has been been put into place (it needs levelling) and I’ve reorientated the compost bays to provide more circulation space all round- the slabs in front of this still need to be firmed in.

Some of the ornamental areas look good- following a great show of Camassias with Tulip ‘Ballerina’, the Alliums are now into their stride, and these look great with the Lilac and Rhododendrons.

The mole problem in the grass continues, though the device my neighbour gave me which emits a regular pulse of sound, seems to have some effect- I’ve moved it to the latest popular spot for the moles! I haven’t yet got round to using the scarifier I was given by my mother-in-law; a job for when I get back. Oh, and remember I was given that petrol-powered shredder? Well it’s been serviced and I’ve started it up…it has yet to be used in anger, though…watch this space.

I’ve got to finalise my plans for my new ‘mound’ overlooking the church, but in the mean time have scattered a wild flower mix along the sunniest edge to give a bit of summer interest. I’ve also grass seeded the area in front of the machine shed, so this will hopefully look a little tidier. I’ve planted up two big hanging baskets for the front entrance- these are currently getting going in the greenhouse and will be put outside after ‘hardening off’ in the next week or two.

Our trip to Scotland- specifically the Isle of Skye and Glasgow –  was fantastic, blessed as we were with sunny, warm weather for almost the entire time. We managed to visit some wonderful places, including some interesting houses and gardens, and I’ll put the photos and information from these up on the blog in the next week or so.

So, in spite of lack of time, I seem to have achieved quite a lot, but as you know, we gardeners never have nothing to do…in my case its a return to the weeding at every opportunity! I hope that you and Lise are managing to cope with your own plot at one of the busiest times of the year.

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