Tag Archives: Plants

Great Dixter Plant Fair

Derry at Dixter

For the second year running this fair snuck up on me, but at least this time I knew before rather than after the event.  It was an absolutely glorious hot autumnal day with many wonderful plants, bulbs and seeds for sale.  I resisted most because of the building work creating chaos in the garden – but I did succumb to a purple leaved Silk Tree Albizia ‘Summer Chocolate’ which will go in the bed which is due to be totally replanted.

Hart Cannas

 

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Going Undercover

Aeonium in its winter quarters

Aeonium in its winter quarters

With the sudden onslaught of cold weather I enlisted help and got most of my tender plants into the (unheated but sheltered) conservatory for the winter.  The citrus trees got upgraded though and will spend a comfortable winter  on the kitchen windowsill where we can occasionally (and a touch smugly) pick a lemon or two.

Safe from frost

Safe from frost

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Other things that caught my Eye Part 1

Other things that caught my eye? Well I had planned to buy an old dolly tub to use as a water container in my greenhouse, but prices have soared (apparently the Dutch are buying them all to make tables). When I saw a galvanised dustbin being used as a waterbutt in Sadolin’s Nature to Nurture garden I realised this was the economical solution.

Best Gardens

Galvanised Dustbinused as a Waterbutt

Hardware store here I come (and the lid will keep the mosquitoes at bay). This garden also had some of the prettiest planting courtesy of Philippa Pearson www.philippapearson.co.uk who can offer a postal design service.

Best Gardens

Prettiest Planting by Philippa Pearson

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July Offers

Lakeland is offering up to 50% off in its summer sale. Garden bargains include Seeds of Italy’s Franchi Classic Salad Seed Collection reduced from £7.99 to £3.99 and a wooden ‘paper potter’ that allows you to make biodegradable pots from strips of old newspaper for £4.99 instead of £9.95

Crocus has lots of special offers running at the moment, including the opportunity to buy some of the plants that you saw and loved at Chelsea and there are also a couple of plants that are star performers in my garden at present. Clematis ‘Princess Diana’ (£10.99) and Geranium maderense (£5.99).

Click here to Buy Clematis “Princess Diana” Now or click here to Buy the Geranium Maderense.

July Offers   |   Allium Christophi

Clematis "Princess Diana (£10.99) | Geranium Maderense (£5.99)

Please click below to browse through the Laurent Perrier Garden, Which was planted out by Crocus for The Chelsea Flower Show 2009. This is an Interactive Photo Gallery, so hover over a section in the image that your interested in, and click to get a closer look…

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Ideas to Steal from Chelsea

So, the Chelsea Flower Show is over half way through and I’ve had time to digest what I saw when I visited the show on Monday. It’s definitely not been a vintage year.
By the time the recession hit last autumn, most of the Chelsea gardens were well underway offsite, plants were growing and materials ordered. Some of the designers pulled out due to lack of sponsorship and among those that remained there was evidence of slashed budgets.

I suspect that next year will be much more interesting, as everyone adjusts to the new economic conditions. This year’s gardens weren’t designed with recession in mind – next year’s will be. I’m hoping that this will mean a lot of creative use of materials rather than the indulgence of well-nigh unlimited budgets.

So, despite my reservations, what caught my eye? Plants that appeared in several gardens included the lovely big seed heads of Angelica, lots of aquilegias and rich blue iris sibirica. Despite the best efforts of the designers to keep their choices secret, it does seem that certain plants pop up everywhere.

It was the small gardens where there was most inspiration – the ideas that anyone can take home and use. Each year I take photos of details that appeal to me – it might be a plant combination (although you need to bear in mind that not everything you see planted together will flower simultaneously in your own garden), a bit of hard landscaping or a plant support. Over the years I have used lots of these ideas in my own garden. I expect that the Hampton Court Show in July will provide similar inspiration.

Photo by Michelle Garrett

The gardens that really appeal to me are the ones that confound my prejudices, that make me reconsider a particular material or planting style. The Fenchurch Garden designed by Paul Hensey certainly made me look at concrete in an entirely new way. The curvaceous pillars intersected by wall planting (another popular theme) were so tactile that I longed to run my hands over them. I also loved the way that the planting ran up the wall from the herbaceous beds. Lots of inspiration there for a small walled garden.

I thought the log wall in the 1984 garden designed by Chris Gutteridge, Antony Cox and Jon Owens would be an inexpensive way to make a blank wall look interesting, while also providing habitats for insects and nesting places for birds.

One of the problems in a small garden is to find a nice place to sit without sacrificing planting areas. Designers Angus Thompson and Jane Brockbank resolved this problem in the Nature Ascending garden by laying the deck around a tree. So often the ground beneath a tree is poor and plants are difficult to establish, so this seems a really good solution.

It is rare to see paving that outshines the surrounding planting, but in Sarah Eberle’s Artist’s Garden, the path was a remarkable tapestry of buildings created by filling metal grids with different colour gravels. This was a garden that acknowledged the credit crunch and showed that with time and imagination the cheapest materials can be transformed into something very beautiful.

It was interesting how masculine many of the large gardens were – they had structure, restraint and cool, restricted palettes. I could admire them, but I certainly didn’t love them. The exception was Tom Hoblyn’s garden with waves of redwood undulating into a dark pool of water from a large deck – all surrounded by grasses interplanted with lime green pitcher plants and terracotta aquilegias. It had real soul.

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