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Garden thread 2014

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

SuffolkVera

SuffolkVera Report 14 Apr 2016 16:29

It was the same here Ann. Lovely sunny morning when we had to go in to town and be indoors most of the time, came home and got a sandwich and then, just as we were going into the garden, the thunder started. It seemed to be right overhead and went on for quite a while though there wasn't a lot of rain. It has brightened up again now so OH is outside spraying the weeds that are coming up between all the paving.

Yesterday was a beautiful day and himself split my big hostas for me. As well as a few in the garden I've got 9 in very big terracotta pots that sit on a long path down the side of the house, but they had got enormous and I couldn't move them. I thought we might have to break the pots but OH managed to get 8 of them out without any damage though he did crack the 9th pot. He split them up and put bits back in fresh compost so that job won't need doing again for 2 or 3 years. The leftover bits were potted up and are being given away to various friends and neighbours.

Everything is beginning to grow now and various shrubs are blossoming or are about to bloom. I love this time of year. All the new growth looks so fresh and bright that it makes you feel brighter yourself :-D

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 14 Apr 2016 16:05

Well, we had a busy morning then a hair appointment at 1pm so after that came back and put a wash load on aiming to go out in the garden for an hour. and it suddenly (after a dry warm morning) chucked it down with thunder. So that was that idea! :-( Still we have got the garden more or less ready to be left for a couple of weeks.

kandj

kandj Report 13 Apr 2016 22:20

Nice and sunny today and so I am continuing daily to weed the back garden border.
Can't really see where I have been, although the green dustbin is half full.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 10 Apr 2016 21:08

Love Pieris Kandj, we lost ours a few tears back when it caught the frost.

You need to put some rocks along the verge Maryanna that would stop the parking.
That was a big job you did with the top soil, I hope all that effort pays off.

kandj

kandj Report 8 Apr 2016 11:28

That sounds like hard work Maryanna but a good ongoing project in retirement.

I am sat with a cup of coffee looking at the Pieris Japonica Forest Flame in the front garden which is a mass of new red leaves each Springtime. Absolutely beautiful and admired by all who walk down the street.

Maryanna

Maryanna Report 5 Apr 2016 23:57

We shifted two tons of topsoil today. It has gone to make a nice new border along the new fence along the front . Our side, so we can see it.

I have planted it up with some new plants in blues and pinks. It is a nice long bed, around 75 - 80 feet so I have had to put lots more new plants in !!!! Delphiniums, Lupins, Campanulas, Lavenders, Geraniums, Veronicas, Foxgloves,Roses, Nepeta, Holyhocks and Clematis to name a few.

It's the best bit of soil in the entire garden so I hope they do well.

I also got loads of daffodils in flower in Homebase really cheap so have put them in the grass with the others to boost the display a bit. It's good at this time of the year as you can see where they are planted already and you don't chop them in half when you dig the holes to put the new ones in.

The grass seed on the verge is coming up nicely too, except some idiot in a van felt it necessary to park on it yesterday morning.

The back garden now looks a right old mess ...............

M.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 4 Apr 2016 17:44

Thanks Vera that is a help, I am pleased that there are a lot of those lightweight cotton trousers around this year. Ideal, I think for the evenings. Shorts or crops in the day. Tee sirts and a few long sleeve light weight tops with a cardigan or two should do it.


Not seen any ladybirds so far though. :-)

SuffolkVera

SuffolkVera Report 4 Apr 2016 16:55

It should be fairly warm Ann, but not over hot, somewhere between 17 and 20 degrees. The temperature only drops a bit at night so even at the end of February I got by with just a warm cardi in the evening. One of the reasons I like Madeira is that it never seems to get really cold or too hot.

Changing the subject, has anyone noticed how many ladybirds there are around this year? We seem to have loads in the garden at the moment.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 3 Apr 2016 20:11

Vera, just having a slight moment of panic. When we get back from here we have7 days to get ready for Madeira and not a clue what clothes to take. Any tips? :-D

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 3 Apr 2016 16:42

We actually have a helebore that is almost black. It was out the front and got too big so OH split it and gave a small part to our neighbour. The bigger piece heput in the back garden, neighbours is lovely, our is not good at all and this is three years on.

kandj

kandj Report 3 Apr 2016 16:22

We haven't had any that colour Vera, ours were mostly pastel colours.

The green leaves that I thought might be bluebells have actually flowered and
they are grape hyacinths...... silly me, I had forgotten all about them.

There are several clumps of darker, broader green leaves and so these
must be the bluebells??........ time will tell.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 3 Apr 2016 09:40

Pretty Vera we have lots snd like that colour.

SuffolkVera

SuffolkVera Report 2 Apr 2016 19:53

The asters we've got are meant to be perennials. I've looked at lots of websites about them but none seem to say whether they are meant to die back completely or when the shoots are supposed to reappear.

It's been a lovely day here again. We had to go out this morning but managed to get an hour or two in the garden this afternoon and got quite a lot done. We planted out four beautiful big hellebores OH had bought for me. They have been in their pots since he brought them home about six weeks ago and they are still in full bloom.

As the frog was AWOL we took the opportunity to clean the "pond" together. That means I got my hands in and pulled out all the dead leaves, muck and gunge, then I cleared out all the dirty water and wiped round the bowl. Himself then levelled it a bit where it had sunk further into the ground on one side and refilled it with water. Fair division of labour? Huh!

We also did a general tidy up of several plants. So the whole garden is looking a bit better.

Yesterday we had a visit from a friend who hasn't been since just after we moved in and couldn't believe how much bigger the garden looks compared to how it was. It's amazing what you can do with a better layout :-D

EDIT: a piece broke off one of the hellebores so I put a picture on to show you how well they are blooming. Unfortunately I am not a good photographer and it is a small picture :-(. This one is a beautiful deep purple red.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 2 Apr 2016 09:55

I don't know anything about Asters Vera so sounds as if it is wait and see. I sort of thought they were annuals or biennials.


Madeira we go to in two weeks Vera :-)

kandj

kandj Report 2 Apr 2016 09:21

Raining heavily throughout the night and still raining now. Forecast to be a wet few days here in Yorkshire, so no chance of continuing weeding the back garden border.

Vera, it is very many years since we grew asters, a good variety of colour and good cut flowers to have indoors. I'm sure others will answer your question though.

SuffolkVera

SuffolkVera Report 1 Apr 2016 20:28

It's been a beautiful day here though it was a bit nippy in the wind. I would have liked to get some gardening done but had other commitments today. I did manage to take the dead flowers off the daffodils. An osmanthus is just coming into bloom and the garden generally looks as though it is beginning to wake up a bit after the winter. OH even thinks he can see some shoots that might, just might, be the anemones coming through at last.

My only worry is the asters we put in as plants in flower in September. They were OK but not brilliant and they have looked very dead all winter. I know they should shoot afresh this year but does anyone have an idea of when they are likely to show a bit of green? Other plants that died back are beginning to show little green shoots or leaves at the base, but the asters just look dead. All advice welcome please.

Ann, I know you are off to Madeira some time this month so I hope you have a good journey and a great time while you are there. I'm sure you'll enjoy all the plants and flowers.

kandj

kandj Report 31 Mar 2016 12:15

I do take it easy Ann. I have no choice to be honest as I have little energy these days.

It is looking pretty with all the Spring bulbs I planted last Autumn. They cheer us up.

The tulips are almost in bloom and some Daffodils in a shady spot are also about to flower too. The strong wind and rain has battered and flattened the dwarf narcissus that are in the side border. I need to cut them all and bring them inside now.

There are several clumps of bluebells (I think), lots of dark green leaves but little else.
All very interesting. Isn't nature wonderful? Especially on a sunny day like today.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 29 Mar 2016 11:12

Hopefully the rain will have loosened the weeds Kandj. Good luck with that and take it easy.

kandj

kandj Report 28 Mar 2016 11:47

Began the mission of attacking and digging out the back garden border yesterday but got rained of with a heavy downpour. Hey ho. It has been raining all morning with a
strong wind. It is meant to be fine later and so I hope to begin the mammoth weeding
then. A little each day or I will just made my self exhausted.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 26 Mar 2016 12:23

Yes, windy here and had a few light showers so far. Been to the Range to buy bark and OH has spread that in the front garden to keep the cats off. It was very heavy to lift but he managed it although I was a bit concerned. Luckily he has a trolley to transport the second bag down the end of the back garden. :-)