Category Archives: plants

Who needs flowers…

when you can have fabulous colour from foliage? Young leaves especially can be quite bright, but don’t forget the stem colours and buds too. My little Acer shirasawanum ‘Auereum’ has fabulous pink and green colouration when the leaves first burst through, which turn bright golden/lime green later, and the dark green nettles behind provides a good contrast. The Acer palmatum ‘Dissectum Garnet’ has beautifully dark garnet foliage, and when planted next to Thymus lanuginosus (which has lovely deep pink bud and tiny hairy leaves), Saxifraga umbrosa (with it’s succulent bright green leaves, pink stems and pale pink flowers) that not only contrasts the colours but also the textures and leaf shapes. The golden oregano is looking splendid just now and the leaves of the Pieris Japonica ‘Forest flame’ have now faded from bright orange/red to golden. The young foliage on some roses can look very pretty too.  ‘The Generous gardener’  has very bright young red/bronze leaves, while the red flowered rose (could be ‘Erotica’) has deep purple leaves.  Astilbe ‘Fanal’ red has bright red stems, some green leaves and some bronze/purple leaves just before the red flower spikes appear. The Hebe’Pink paradise’ picks up the purple colour of the Heuchera (Rachel) in it’s stems and the pinks buds go well with it too. Another combination that I love for both colour and texture is in the corner by my ramp: The huge bronze leaves of the Rogersia podophylla along with young bronze of it’s neighbour, Osmunda regalis ‘Purpurascens’, and the green of the Polygonataum multiflorum. The pond too has a variety of leaf colours and forms. I would have liked to show you my Cotinus ‘Royal purple’ and Brunnera macrophylla ‘Jack frost’ but they have only just been planted and they don’t look great yet. I would have loved to show you the ferny bronze foliage of my Foeniculum vulgare ‘Purpureum’ (bronze fennel, but something has been eating it!! I have never had this problem before but this year the fronds have not been allowed to grow bigger than an inch or two (showing my age now). Snails, slugs, mice, I don’t know but I have been getting rid of all slugs that I find on my morning slug patrols, and the black birds and thrushes are dealing with the snails.  Do mice like fennel?

plants, foliage,
Acer in bud
plants,foliage,
Acer in leaf
plants,foliage
Golden oregano
plants,foliage,
Pieris faded
plants,foliage,
Garnet acer with thyme and saxifrage (and self seeded aquilegia)
plants,foliage,
Astilbe Fanal
plants,foliage,
The Generous gardener young leaves
plants,foliage,
Rose unknown young leaves
plants,foliage,
Hebe and heuchera
plants,foliage,
water hawthorn and lily leaves (and others)
plants,foliage
Rogersia,  fern and polygonatum
plants,foliage,
poor old bronze fennel
 

 

In flower now..

are a few more of the late spring, early summer flowers.  The Veronica  gentionoides ‘Blue streak’, the speedwell (another veronica species), Erica arborea (the tree heath), Galium odoratum (sweet woodruff), Circium rivulare Atropurpureum, Silene dioica (red campion) and a few others.  Some you really do have to look for, like the Arisarum proboscideum (mouse plant) as the funny little flowers (that look like mice with  long tails) are hidden under the leaves.

plants, flowers,
Circium rivulare atropurpureum
plants,flowers,
Erica arborea
plants,flowers,
Galium odoratum
plants,flowers,
peony (unknown)
plants,flowers,
Silene dioica
plants,flowers,
speedwell on a mossy log
plants,flowers,
Veronica gentionoides Blue streak
plants,flowers,
Arisarum proboscideum
plants,flowers,
Arisarum proboscideum

Aquilegias …

everywhere.  I adore Aquilegias (columbines or granny’s bonnets).  They are so pretty and quite a feminine looking plant with tall slender stalks and dainty flowers.  Even the buds look pretty.  I did buy certain named types years ago but I just let them self seed where they wish.  I have just posted the photos under their colours in case I name they incorrectly. Some are just in bud whilst others are in full flower. I do have other colours: pink, purple, pink and white, and a lovely pale blue pom pom type so I will update this page when I get some reasonable photos of them.  I recently read an article about Aquilegia downy mildew here and I really hope I don’t get it here.  The article is a few years old now, so far so good.

plants,flowers,aquilegia,
Aquilegia ruby
plants,flowers,aquilegia,
Aquilegia in bud
plants,flowers,aquilegia,
Aquilegia dark purple
plants,flowers,Aquilegia,
Aquilegia deep maroon
plants,flowers,Aquilegia,
Aquilegia pale peach
plants,flowers,Aquilegia,
Aquilegia purple and white
plants,flowers,Aquilegia,
Aquilegia white
plants,flowers,Aquilegia,
Aquilegia white and lilac

Fabulous ferns…

unfurling throughout the garden.  I have ferns for a variety of sites in the garden as some like it cool and damp whereas others may prefer shady and dry etc. and at this time of year I love seeing the fronds uncurling.  I chop back the deciduous ferns in winter, and do the same with the evergreen ones in the spring if they look a bit manky and bedraggled.  The trouble is, I have got my labels all muddled up and I am now finding it very difficult to identify some of them.  Over the years I have split some and planted the bit somewhere else or I have moved them from one position to another if they weren’t looking happy.  Here is a list of what I think I have in the garden, conservatory and patio:
Adiantum aleuticum
‘Japonicum’
Adiantum fragrans
Adiantum pedatum
Adiantum venustum
Asplenium scolop. ‘Cristata’
Asplenium trichomanes
Blechnum spicant
Davallia canariensis
Hare’s foot fern
Didymochlaena
Dicksonia antartica  in conservatory
Didymochlaena cloak fern
Dryopteris crispa congesta
Dryopteris erythrosa
Japanese Rosy Buckler fern
Dryopteris filixmas
‘Linearis’
Matteuccia struthiopteris Ostrich feather fern
Osmunda regalis Royal fern
Osmunda regalis
‘Purpurascens’
Pellaea rotundifolia
Button fern
Phyllitis scolopendrium Hart’tongue
fern
Pteris tricolor was in conservatory may have died
Polypodium mantoniae
cornubiense
Polypodium vulgare ‘Bifido
grandiceps’
Polystichum braunii

Polystichum polyblepharum
Polystichum setiferum ‘Plumoso multilobum’
Polystichum vulgare ‘Bitido-grandiceps’


And a few photos (I won’t photograph each one but here are my favorites).  I have tried my best to identify them but I may be wrong.

plants, ferns,
Adiantum venustum  (creeping maidenhair)
plants, ferns,
Asplenium scolopendrium cristata
plants, ferns,
Asplenium trichomanes (maidenhair spleenwort)
plants,ferns,
Osmunda regalis Purpurascens (Royal fern purple)
plants,ferns,
Polypodium vulgare ?
plants,ferns,
Polystichum setiferum ‘cristato Pinnulum’
plants,ferns
Polystichum setiferum plumoso multilobum (densum?)
plants,ferns,
rhyzomes of a polypodum? creeping along the wall of raised bed
plants,ferns,
Dicksonia antartica (tree fern)
plants,ferns,
Pellaea rotundifolia (button fern)
plants,ferns,
Davallia canariensis (Hare’s foot fern)

Poor old clematis…

has had to go.  I loved my Clematis montana alba, especially when it was over-grown and would hang down over the door in the back wall where it made it look like there was a secret garden behind the wall. Trouble was that nobody could get through the doorway easily so I had to keep it a little clipped.  Sadly, it succumbed to some bacterial or fungal infection and died. Possibly clematis slime flux? no idea but it didn’t look good so I whipped it out, added some new soil and planted a  pink climbing rose (Generous gardener) which I hope will be able to cope with the conditions.  It will get some sunshine for a few hours per day, but it is in dry shade so I will have to keep it well fed and watered.
My cherry tree (Prunus Shirotae Mount Fugi) is in a half barrel on the patio and it has had gorgeous blooms over the years but has started to die back and is therefore shrinking in size so this autumn it will have to come out and have it’s roots trimmed, then get re-potted into a slightly bigger half barrel and hopefully recover to bloom for a few more years.

plants, flowers,
Clematis montana alba
plants,
Clematis slime flux?
plants,flowers,
Prunus Shirotae Mount Fugi
flowers, wildlife,plants,
Prunus and bee

Warming up now…

so the garden is starting to get some lush green (and bronze/purple) foliage to cover up the bare soil.  More spring plants are blooming while some of the early ones are over already.  The corydalis, erythroniums, and some primroses are over but still have their leaves.  The tulips, epimediums, brunnera, myosotis, pulmonaria, dicenrta, vinca, fritilari, oxalis, erica, viola, some narcissus are in flower.  The anemone blanda white put on a great show last year but was a bit lacking in flower this year.  The lilac drumstick primula and primula veris are still flowering but the primula vulgaris has stopped flowering.  The hellibores are still flowering away.  The vinca makes great ground cover and I have the major and minor ones (violet, deep purple and white varieties).  The dicentra gives great cover under the rhododendron.  I had been waiting for my epimedium grandiflorum Rose Queen to flower so I could get a good picture of it along side the tulips Mystic Van Eijk but it is flowering quite late this year.  I do have blossom on the viburnum (bodnantense dawn) but it had quite a severe prune last year I will need to wait till next year for a better show. Same goes for the Osmanthus burkwoodii.

plants,
Tulips Budlight and some larger tulips (unkown)
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Tulips Mystic Van Eijk
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Epimedium grandifolium Rose Queen
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Epimedium grandifolium Rose Queen
plants,
Brunnera macrophylla
Oxalis acetosella (woodsorrel)
Pulmonaria Lewis Palmer

Plant sale…

Saturday 5th May 2018 at the Duddingston Kirk halls 10.30 till 12.00 (Duddingston Kirk Garden Club).  Due to the lateness of spring this year  some of our suppliers don’t have the plants we were after so I have divided some of my perennials and pot them up to help the sales along.  They are all good-dooers in the garden and I have never had problems with. They include: Heucheras, Tierellas, Corydalis, Heather, Carex, Chiastophyllum, Narcissus, and possibly an Arisarum if it has leaves by then.

plants,
plants for sale

Decisions, decisions …

oh what to do?  For a few years now the ivy has been growing over the walls and trellis, which at least give us something green to look at during the winter and not just bare walls, but the garden has been getting increasing shadier with the surrounding trees of our neighbours and golf course.  So in order to get a bit more light in he garden we have decided to just have the ivy grow up the walls and chop it back from the trellis.  When we moved in, we planted a Chamaecyparis lawsoniana Columnaris Glauca in the top right hand corner but has outgrown the space and has been pushing the shrubs at either side over.  It was not only blocking out a lot of light but sucking up a lot of water which was also detrimental to the shrubs.  At first we tried to raise the skirt (crown lifting) to see if that would help overcome these problems a little but last year we decided to remove it completely.  It is quite sad because I loved the tree, especially when it was covered in tiny red  male globose cones.  Now this has left the corner looking very bare, the rhododendron completely one sided, the pieris lopsided and tall and straggly, and the spirea lopsided. Even the ivy is struggling to cover the walls.  How do I prune the shrubs to get them looking good again?  Or do I just wait for a couple of years and see what happens?  Maybe shortening the pieris will encourage more side shoots – but it is getting a few new side shoots already?  What can I do with that space now – maybe put in a corner seat which would be nice in the shade?  Maybe a statue?  At the moment I have just planted some Brunera macrophylla Jack frost and Aster divaricatus between the rhododendron and pieris and I will have another think.

plants,
Chamaecyparis lawsoniana Columnaris Glauca
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Pieris japonica Forest flame
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bunched up shrubs
corner top right
corner top right

Warm at last…

finally a warm day to loiter in the garden.  Lots of things are coming up now but only in little clumps and they haven’t quite spread out as much as I would have liked, but then I am quite impatient in the garden.  I have a few Fritillaria meleagris (snakes head) in various places but they look a bit sparse so I may have to splash out more money and buy a few more to put on a bit more of a show.  I do have some white ones but they are not quite in full bloom yet.  The Caltha palustris (marsh marigold) is looking nice and bright and it is always the first thing in my pond to flower.   I just love my mossy-grassy logs in the stumpery and I do have a favourite one right now.  It is a shame that it will just rot away so I will just have to take lots of photos of it to stick in my scrapbook.

plants,
Fritillaria meleagris
plants, pond,
Calthea palustris
Mossy-grassy log
plants, stumpery, moss,
Mossy-grassy log
plants, stumpery, moss,
Mossy-grassy log

Rain, rain, rain…

sleet, and then more rain!  My goodness when will we ever get into spring proper?  I am not venturing out over the grass in the garden as it is like a very soggy sponge at the moment but there is a bit of sunshine and some sturdy plants flowering.  Before the Acer  (palmatum dissectum Garnet) are clothed in leaves, creating dense shade, there are a few Chionodoxia in bloom but they are taking a very long time to naturalize so are looking a bit sparse at the moment.
I moved the Dens-canis (Erythronium) from the raised bed to the stumpery area as the large fern in the raised bed completely smothered them.  They look really pretty in front of the drumstick primula and I hope they will make a nice clump fairly soon.
I am trying to dig out all of the Ornithogalum out of the small bed out the front where my lavender is as the leaves have a similar habit to bluebells , where they fall to the sides and cover up anything under them and, as they go over and turn brown, look very tatty coming through the woody stems of the lavender.  So I potted them up in the conservatory for the time being just to make sure all the little bulbs were indeed Ornithogalum and not mixed together with snowdrops.  They were sold to me as nutans but I think they may actually be umbellatum instead.

flowers, raised bed,plants,
Chionodoxa luciliae
flowers, plants, stumpery,
Dens-canis snowflake and Primula denticulata
plants, flowers, conservatory,
Orinithogalum umbellatum and violas