Saturday, January 31, 2004

Hellebores at Ashwood

What a great day out, I went with Nanny up to Ashwood Nurseries and met Grannie & Grandad up there for the open day. We had a tour of the nursery, we tried unsuccsesfully to smuggle one of their breeding plants out - they were huge - and then had a look in the polytunnels with all their for sale hellebores. Grannie spent over £400 but she got some amazing plants a load of doubles which she hadn't seen before, she was after the elusive apricot hellebore, but the closest we could get was one of the pink and yellow crosses which looks apricot (a bit). She also got a black star shaped double flower which she has left me in her will, and I can have some babies next year from the plant if it produces them.
I got a white picotee and primrose picotee and a black, I think my favorite this year is the picotee they are just so different. I took one of the flowers into college and performed crossing acts with the hellebores in the walled garden.

Friday, January 30, 2004

What snow, where?

click here for a larger imageWet and cold today, I love going out into the garden to see what is new, the snowdrops don't seem to have been affected by the cold and the piddly bit of snowy stuff we had here. My poor hellebores still seem droopy, they may pick up if the temp rises. Last year at this time the garden looked very bare, but there are a few more evergreens this year, I decided to increase the winter garden with my bargin buys.


click here for a larger imageThe shape of all the beds is well defined in the winter - could be all the manure- I must remember this autumn to give the grass a weed and feed, apparantly it's more important that the spring one. Will probably do both for an excellent lawn next year. Note - the base of the summerhouse is resting on the surface - hopefully m'spouse will survive without breaking yet another shoulder (he nearly went flying on a huge puddle of ice in town today) and be able to finish before the garden club come on their visit.


click here for a larger imageThe Henry Moore statue (a present for t'spouse at Christmas)surrounded by helleborus niger(christmas rose) well in flower at the begining of December this year. This is placed at the end of the long grass avenue as an obligatory 'focal point', most people don't notice it until they're on top of it though.


click here for a larger imageA lovely group of Galanthus, don't know which one I relocated several from the river bank opposite the other year and they seem to be multiplying very well. At Bridgemere the other week I did buy a couple of posh ones and put them in the dolphin bed.



Wednesday, January 28, 2004

No Snow!

click here for a larger imageI've been waiting to take some photos of the garden covered in the 5 inches of snow we have been promised all week, but the nearest we got was this slight covering in the distance on the slopes of the Sugar Loaf.


click here for a larger imageAs you can see the garden is quite bare at the moment but I daren't take any close-up pictures in case I inadvertantly show you any weeds Elaine is trying to hide, so you will have to make do with this longshot from the house. This picture highlights my next job, which is to build a support for climbing plants along the top of the far wall, in order to hide the road, at least from the garden if not from this angle.


click here for a larger imageMost of the limited time I have spent in the garden this week has been spent here, sawing and chopping wood in preparation for the big freeze. You may have noticed that one of my other outstanding jobs is to finish painting the shed.


click here for a larger imageWhen we first got here we arbitrarily divided up the garden, Elaine got the front and you can see how much she has already done there, I got the back (for the time being) and this picture shows that instead of gardening I spend most of my time nurturing websites, pinball machines, and children (in that order).


click here for a larger imageAbout the nearest thing to gardening I have done in the back garden is the erection of the decking and polytunnel around the above-ground swimming pool. Mind you, I think the only thing preventing Elaine from filling the tunnel with seedlings is the possibility of chlorine damage to the plants. If this clear bright weather continues for much longer I shall have to hoover out the pool ready for the kids to use. Last year they were sunbathing in the polytunnel at the beginning of March.


Monday, January 12, 2004

Competition Entry

click here for a larger imageclick here for a larger imageThis is part of my recent entry for the Anthony Nolan Trust Garden at this years RHS Show at Hampton Court. Hopefully I will at least win a Blue Peter Badge.