Archive for the ‘Garden’ category

Some Favourite Spring Bulbs for the Garden and Home

January 18th, 2012

In the midst of winter when the garden is looking at its most sparse the gardener starts to look carefully for signs that spring bulbs are beginning to poke through the soil, giving a promise of colourful flowers to come. Here are a few of my favourite spring bulbs, some of which can be brought indoors at this time of year to provide an early glimpse of spring to come and offer a bit of winter cheer.

Bulbs for rockeries or naturalising areas

For a jewel-like spring show you can’t beat a colourful display of crocuses. These tiny spring flowers can be grown in rockeries, naturalised in grass or sown in clumps at the base of trees or large shrubs. More a more natural look, scatter a handful and plant where they fall. Buy a mixed variety of colours or stick to a particular favourite. Mine is Crocus sieberi subsp. sublimis ‘Tricolor’ a superb violet with a white and yellow centre.

The English bluebell is also a favourite spring flower. It is always lovely to see them naturalised in woodland, but I grow them in my own garden in my rockery and borders and wouldn’t be without these fragrant blue spring flowers. Try to stick to the native English variety. You can tell them by their bent stem with flowers all on the one side. Hybrids tend to be more upright and have flowers both sides of the stem.

If there is one flower that heralds the start of spring it is the narcissus or daffodil. There are many varieties to choose from. Some of the smaller varieties suitable for rockeries, under smaller shrubs, naturalised in grass or grown in garden planters include narcissus ‘New Baby’. Another smaller variety is ‘Rip van Winkle’ whose multi-petalled flowers give it a ragged appearance. Narcissus Tete-a-tete is probably the best known of the dwarf hybrids. It flowers very early and is long-lasting. Why not grow some early tete-a-tete in a pot inside and then plant out once they have finished flowering. I plant a lot of my dwarf narcissus this way, thereby getting some winter colour followed by an early show of flowers the following year.

Snakeshead fritillary have delicate nodding blooms which vary from speckled purple to creamy white. They flower in April and May and look best naturalised under trees or in long grass.

A slightly later flowering but no less worthy bulb is lily of the valley. With its very fragrant white bell shaped flowers on bright green foliage, it flowers in May and June. A delicate picked bunch in a vase will fill your house with the scent of spring.

Bulbs for borders and planters

One of my favourite late spring bulbs has to be the allium. Great for mixing into borders, these globe shaped clusters of star-shaped flowers grow on an upright stem. Varieties come both short and tall, in colours from deep purple to pinks and white.

Another bulb synonymous with spring has to be the tulip. I am a big fan of tulips. I love to grow them in my borders and also in garden planters on my patio and outside my greenhouse. My favourite varieties for a border include ‘Queen of the night’ which is a rich dark purple/black, ‘Spring green’ which bears green-feathered, ivory white flowers, and ‘Greenland’ which has pale pink flowers with a green stripe on each petal. Favourites for garden planters include ‘Burnished bronze’ with its double feathers blooms of a delicate bronze colour and Tulipa syvestris, an old woodland variety with pointy yellow petals and a lovely scent. Many people still lift tulip bulbs once they have flowered, but I prefer to leave mine in the grown to fend for themselves.

Although I have to admit to not being a big fan of hyacinths in the garden, I do love the heady scent of them indoors at this time of year. I do have one clump of white hyacinth in one of my borders which I inherited and have actually grown to admire for its purity of colour and which brightens up the flower border in early spring. Other interesting varieties include ‘Midnight mystique’ heralded as the first truly black hyacinth and ‘Prince of love’ which is a lovely delicate pale pink in colour.

Winter flowering bulbs

If you really can’t wait until spring, here are a few winter flowering bulbs your garden really shouldn’t be without. Winter aconites will carpet the area under a tree with their glossy green leaves and sunshine yellow flowers in January and March. Galanthus Nivalis or common single snowdrop flowers February to March. Plant them in the green for best results the following year.

Garden Planters source unusual outdoor and indoor planters, and other garden related gifts – whatever your taste, be it traditional, modern or just a bit quirky, we will have something for you. Run by two qualified and creative gardeners, Garden Planters will also plant up your chosen planter with an arrangement of your choice. We believe garden planters are an integral part of any garden – they enhance the overall design and say a little something about the person to whom the garden belongs.

Instant Organic Garden

January 17th, 2012

Can you really have an instant organic garden? It seems some people want the results of an organic garden and great food, but they do not want to do all that back breaking work to get the veggies they like.

Can you garden without all that work? That depends on what you call work. Sometimes that is translated as time. You don’t mind the labor it is just the fact that there is little time with the job and kids.

Let’s make gardening fun with little work and involve the kids, too.

I have never tried this, but believe it could work, buy bags of top soil, mix in a little compost and set out your plants. The bags of soil are punched with holes on the back side and slit open on the top side. Now, the bags can be placed on the patio or out in the grass in a sunny location.

Make sure you keep a close watch on the amount of water the plants receive. If it is very rainy they need to be able to drain well and if it doesn’t rain they can dry out very quickly. Other than that, they are almost maintenance free. This can be a great way to get an instant garden. Be sure to stake any tall plants like tomatoes and peppers.

If you are interested in a little larger garden consider building a raised bed. A raised bed is made by making a wood box out of 1 inch X 12 inch lumber. The lumber should be either cedar or pine. It is best not to use treated wood because of the chemicals used in preserving the wood. Cedar will last longer than pine, but it costs more and a 12 inch board in cedar is sometimes hard to find. You will be surprised how long a plan wood board will last. When it rots, just tear it out and build a new one.

Make your box about 3 foot wide and 8 foot long. It usually last longer if it is screwed together, but nails will do. Now, set your box in a sunny location and fill with topsoil. Mix a little compost in the top inch of the soil and start planting.

You can put a trellis on the back side, the one away from the sun, so it will not shade the smaller plants, and start planting. Most any vegetable will grow in your raised bed, but a large plant will take up a lot of your room, of course you can build more beds after you get started.

Again, water is a factor, because a bed will drain quickly. During periods with little rain you will need to check the bed often and water when necessary.

There you have two ideas for a very quick garden. You really have no excuse for not getting started. Just decide which method you are going to use and make it a weekend project. Let the kids help and they will enjoy the garden, too.