Tag Archives: tulip tree

National Nest Box Week

It’s National Nest Box Week from the 14th-21st of February, so if you haven’t got any (or would like more) this is the time to find a spot for one. It will give the birds a chance to become familiar with the box before the breeding season starts. We have a pair of Tree Creepers who weave their way up and down the Tulip Tree so I’m going to buy Andrew (don’t tell him) a Tree Creeper nest box as a Valentine’s present. He’ll like it, believe me. Nest boxes of all shapes and sizes are available from wigglywigglers and birdfood.co.uk

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Things that go Bump in the Night

The shed branch fell in such a way it did no damage

A close-up view of one of the flowers of the tulip tree

Our usually sheltered garden took a bit of a bashing the other night with a loud crash heralding the fact that our tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera) had shed a branch. Sheer good luck meant it fell in such a way that it did very little damage, and at least it gave us the opportunity to admire the flowers close up.  Rather than consigning them to the compost heap, I cut all the flowering stems and gave them to our lovely local florist Mao of Shimizu Flowers where they have been causing a sensation.  So many people have tried to buy them that I’ve promised Mao that when the tree surgeon comes here later in the week, I’ll get him to cut some twigs that she can sell.  I’ve also given her information about the tree so that she can show this to anyone who is interested – especially the fact that it grows to 30 metres in case they are tempted to plant one in a small garden.

Tulip tree flowers in the window of Shimizu Flowers

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A year in the garden

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Looking Good in the Garden This Week

The tulip tree is covered in thousands of flowers right now. To appreciate their full beauty it is best to pick one and examine it closely. With each flower measuring about 8cm across, the tree s quite a spectacle.
Having bided their time while most of the other alliums flowered early, Allium christophii blooms are exploding from the surrounding foliage in the borders, their shooting-star flowerheads making the wait worthwhile.

Tulip Tree   |   Allium Christophi

Tulip Tree | Allium Christophi

Fox & Cubs is the common name for a rather glamorous weed Hieracium aurantiacum. A hawkweed, it was originally a garden escape, but has now naturalised in the wild. It is easy to grow from seed and will grow readily on a dry bank.

The tomatoes in the green house are now up to their third flower trusses. The jury is still out on the spiral ‘Veggie Cages’ – it will be easier to tell how effective they are once the fruit sets.

Fox & Cubs   |   Tomatoes in the Greenhouse

Fox & Cubs | Tomatoes in the Greenhouse

The strawberries are cropping prolifically. The early varieties are coming to an end but Mara de Bois is beginning to ripen. This is a cross between the wild strawberry and its cultivated cousins with good size very intensely flavoured fruit.

Strawberries

Strawberries

The Texas Rose Rustlers

I first heard about this wonderfully eccentric organisation when I read one of my favourite gardening books ever ‘People with Dirty Hands’ by Robin Chotzinoff (available from Amazon). In it she writes about Americans with a passion for gardening that goes way beyond enthusiasm. The rose rustlers are a group of Texan women who visit old graveyards, abandoned gardens or country lanes looking for old-fashioned roses that may no longer be commercially available – and then propagate them. To find out more about them go to www.texasroserustlers.com . I have followed their fine example and successfully taken cuttings from our local churchyard –with the vicar’s permission!

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