Sunday, December 31, 2023
Thursday, December 28, 2023
I'm on TV
It's always nice to see one of my garden or plant images used. It's even nicer to see one on TV. So, watching on catchup earlier this evening the latest Gardeners World Winter Special episode, I suddenly had the feeling I'd seen this image before:
Wednesday, December 27, 2023
I like big leaves
This form is growing well at The Garden House, surviving quite harsh frosts and snow in it's site at Buckland Monachorum on the edge of Dartmoor. When it flowers in late autumn it's then that you see the big difference between the two species.
Sunday, December 24, 2023
Thursday, December 21, 2023
Hedychiums
Clearing the now frost touched stems of my ginger lilies this morning made me realise how much I enjoy these very tropical looking perennials. Even in their now brownish state they still look quite interesting.
Rhizomatous perennials from eastern Asia, I only grow a few of the hardier species and varieties. I'd grow more if I had the room but, alas, space is lacking. Although their footprint is reasonably compact the tall summer stems, clad with large, undivided leaves, can easily reach 6ft / 180cm or more in the taller varieties. Related to bananas and true gingers, the stems are formed by the overlapping leaf bases, with new foliage emerging from the centre of the elongating stem until, finally, the flower heads emerge.
With me, the earliest to flower is Hedychium 'Stephen', usually by early August. I actually photographed this clump in my garden in 2012. 13 years later the clump is still extant though the rhizomes have wandered around a bit, been divided (best left till spring), suffered quite heavy frost at times but are still going well.
The individual flowers are faintly scented, don't last long, but progressively open up the elongated flower head. Expect about five days flowering per stem, with individual stems maturing at slightly different rates to prolong the season.
Hedychium 'Tara' is, arguably, even more attractive, with big heads of orange flowers above even taller stems. A statement plant even before it flowers, it's more reliably clump forming than 'Stephen'.
Again, the individual flowers don't last that long, but a decent sized clump can be in flower for a fortnight, usually by early September in my garden.
The final Hedychium I currently grow is H.greenii. I've written about this one before so I won't go into detail - but here's a picture from the garden taken late September. It's another late flowering one.
Monday, December 18, 2023
The invasiveness of Gunnera
Every exotic or larger scale water gardener loves the massive leaves and structure of the Brazilian perennial sold as Gunnera manicata. Hardly surprising, as a clump by the waterside, or in a wet area of a garden, adds a true tropical touch to any planting.
Now it appears we've all been getting it wrong. According to recent research by the Royal Horticultural Society what's been widely sold as G.manicata is in fact a hybrid between G.manicata and the invasive G.tinctoria, banned fom sale or cultivation in the UK since 2017. This hybrid, G. x cryptica, has now been found to be equally invasive and will now also be banned from sale and new cultivation.
The research that led to the desicion can be found here, in the journal Sibbaldia.
What this means for gardeners is yet to be seen. After all, clumps of Gunnera are everywhere. Will we now be forever denied the sight of sunlight spearing through the massive leaves?
Time will tell, but, if we lose this plant our gardens will be the poorer for it.
It doesn't affect me personally - I simply don't have the room for another plant this size. But it does affect The Garden House, with a large clump by the arboretum lake, a lake that is fed by and returns into a local Dartmoor stream that eventually feeds the Tamar. Will we have to remove it? I don't know - but I'll find out. I'd miss this view:
Friday, December 15, 2023
A favourite view at The Garden House
I've been a volunteer at The Garden House since 2016 and have generated thousands of images in that time. But there are always a few that stand out in the memory as capturing some of the essence and ethos of this remarkable garden.
This is one:
Taken from a vantage point on the south side of the garden it looks over the bank of the quarry garden and across the cottage garden to the taller growth beyond. Standing sentinal at the edge of cottage garden is a fine example of a triple trunked Betula pendula 'Tristis', a columnar weeping birch just coming into autumn colour. The planting is soft and flowing, a blending of numerous species and varieties of plants, combined to form a tapestry of interest during this late September period. The softer autumn light certainly helps to make the photo stand out but the garden is the star. I can take the same shot at different times of the year and with each one revealing a different pattern of colour and interest. To me, that is the mark of a great garden.
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
Winter's bark
Currently recovering from the effects of whichever bug laid both me and Maria down over the last few weeks a walk round the rather hilly ten acre site of The Garden House made me realise three things.
Firstly, at 73, I don't recover as quickly as I used to. A mere couple of hours walk was exhausting. Secondly, even the best of gardens can be bleak in December. Pregnant with possibility, and an enjoyable walk, but stll bleak. Thirdly, never underestimate the attraction of colourful bark to provide some winter cheer.
Birches offered a good number of variations, starting with the red-brown peeling bark of Betula utilis subsp. albosinensis 'China Rose'...
Saturday, December 9, 2023
Cycas revoluta
I took this photo in 2006, at Lamorran House, St Mawes, Cornwall, during my early stages of infatuation with exotic gardening. On a plinth in a gravel circle was a beautiful potted sago palm, Cycas revoluta, with Butia capitata in the background.
Come the summer it moves around the garden, though I don't change the position during the flushing phase to avoid twisted fronds. Tough plants, they just need regular watering and feeding during the summer growing season, and that little bit of winter protection to survive my Plymouth climate.
Thursday, December 7, 2023
Wintergreen foliage
December can be bleak in English gardens, even ones in the relatively mild maritime climate of the South West. We may have missed the worst of the recent harsh frosts and snow, though it fell, was fleeting and mostly confined to Dartmoor, but it's still a bit dreary and drab at this time of year.
Yet there is still promise and interest for even the smallest plot. One such delight lies in brightly patterned wintergreen foliage, produced by perennials that, in the wild, take advantage of leafless winter canopies to bask in what little sun there is before going dormant during the darker months of woodland summers.
Plants such as Cyclamen. C. hederifolium may have flowered back in September but the often ornately patterned leaves persist till spring. Variation is rife - and certainly adds to winter interest..
Tuesday, December 5, 2023
The snowdrop season has already begun
The Garden House, at Buckland Monachorum, Devon, UK, houses an ever increasing collection of snowdrop species and cultivars. I'm a volunteer there, helping to document the 10 acre garden as the seasons come and go, and one of the later autumn to early spring joys is getting down to (usually wet) ground level to photograph the 350+ collection of species and cultivars. Getting down is fairly easy - getting up again can, at 73, be more problematic. But the results are worthwhile.
A fair number of cultivars of the glaucous foliaged Galanthus elwesii flower in November and December. I don't claim to be a snowdrop specialist but it's always enjoyable to see vigorous clumps of, for example, 'Huggett's Round' in full flower among the last of the autumn display'
Monday, December 4, 2023
Hippeastrum papilio
Big and blowsy, the florist's Amaryllis are highly bred cultivars of South American Hippeastrum bulbs. Definitely decorative as house and greenhouse plants and easy to prepare and flower for Christmas or the early new year they are very popular at this time of year. But they do lack a little elegance.
Enter the butterfly Amaryllis, Hippeastrum papilio.
Heavily marked with red streaks and flashes against a green and cream base, it lacks the flamboyance of its blowsier cousins but more than makes up for it in elegance.
I bought my plant a couple of years ago as a potful of small bulbs from Plant World, Devon. It's taken a little while to build up to flowering size but the end result has been well worthwhile.
Care and maintenance has been surprisingly simple. Unlike it's larger cousins it's almost evergreen and doesn't need a dormant period in autumn to trigger flowering. Mine goes outside for the warmer months and onto a sunny windowsill for the colder months. A regular feeding regime - I use a high potash liquid tomato fertiliser - keeps the plant in good health. Offset bulbs are regularly produced to generate a thicket of strap like leaves outwith the flowering period. A decent size pot is needed to accomodate it's offset producing habit - but not too big, the roots do need some restriction.
Endangered in the wild, but readily available in cultivation, it's definitely worth the time and effort to grow. The results are their own reward.