Monthly Archives: October 2009

On the allotment: October 2009

On the allotment: A good bit of rain is making it a bit easier for Andrew to get to grips with the weed-infested area that he is preparing for more fruit trees and bushes.

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In the garden: October 2009

In the garden: The main action at the moment seems to be the spiders – I’ve lost count of the number of times that I’ve walked face first into a web. The new raised beds are nearly complete.

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In the greenhouse: October 2009

In the greenhouse: I’ve started sowing home-harvested hardy annuals. The calendula have wasted no time germinating and there are signs of life from the cornflowers and the poppies. The sweetpeas are in their Rootrainers but haven’t emerged as yet. Visit Root Trainers.

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Memories are Made of This

I was asked recently which plants mean the most to me and I realised that it wasn’t a particular genus, but rather it was plants that have memories attached to them: a memorable place where I bought a plant or first saw it, a gift from a friend or another gardener who I hold in high esteem, or a particular taste or fragrance. Walking round my garden brings it all back to me. There’s the Stachyrus praecox I bought after seeing it in Leiden, the olive tree I brought back from Tuscany, the Strawberry Grape that takes me back to the first time I tasted it in Nice, the Cape Gooseberries of my childhood and the intensely fragrant Rose de Rescht which followed my round in a pot for years before, like me, finding its perfect home right here.

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Where Have all the Flowers Gone

Yesterday I interviewed the wonderfully enthusiastic holder of the National Clematis Montana Collection, Val le May Neville Parry. It was a delightful experience, including the slightly bonkers element of the two of us happily touring the garden discussing the relative merits of plants that had all flowered earlier in the year. By now, most Clematis montana have become fairly straggly climbers with little to differentiate one from another except how high they have climbed and varying crops of fluffy seedheads.

Moulliere’

Nonetheless, I could tell that the garden must be spectacular in the spring and I have put a note in my diary to go back then, when her garden, ‘By the Way’, is open by appointment. For more details go to Clematis montana.

Moulliere’
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