Garden plants

We’ve had a lovely musical weekend away with the Cobweb Orchestra in Sedbergh, a school village which is overlooked by the Howgill fells in North Yorkshire, and have come home tired but very happy!   While there quite a few of my friends commented on the blog and were very encouraging for me to keep at it…

Before we went away, I uploaded a lot of pictures of plants that have grown in our garden and some of them are even still there….  Once upon a time when I worked at Bradley Gardens in Wylam I learnt all the latin names for my plants.  Unfortunately, over the last few years, I have forgotten them.  So, if anyone sees a plant that I haven’t labelled,  and they know what it is, please do let me know.

Here is the link:

https://pygardens.co.uk/plants-in-the-garden/

Today is lovely and sunny although there appears to be quite a breeze in the garden.  I am going to send my son John out to take some photos.  He is very good with a camera, so I am hoping to get some good shots to post.

Mark is back at work after the Easter holidays, so gardening will be slowing down for a while, although Mark is keen to get out for an hour each day when he comes home.   He still has some cutting back to do in the left hand bed and we need to think about our next make-over under the silver birch.  We have Euphorbia griffithii ‘Fireglow’ growing there, but have discovered it is really quite rampant once established.  It has taken over quite a large area.  I’d like to keep some of it and plant some into a different area, and see how it does there.  So, we will have some fun shopping in the Tyne Valley Garden Centre, which is just a couple of miles from our home.  We need to buy some shrub fertilizer as well……

I need some inspiration as to what low growing shrubs we can plant.  Any suggestions?  The bed is south facing, sloping down from the East to West  and  is dry – as it is under the mature Silver Birch.  The existing plants in the bed seem to grow well, so I am confident that we can establish some new plants successfully.  We will mulch with wood chippings, which seem to have worked well in the other overhauled bed.

We also need to tackle all our patio pots as well.  These are a mixture of plants bought especially for the pots (ie spring flowering rockery plants) or plants and shrubs that have been taken out of the beds – for example, we have an azalea which had been planted in the lower bed on the right, but the colour clashed with the new plants.  So I need to decide where to relocate that.  On the other hand, maybe I should just keep it potted, but get a nice pottery pot, rather than the plastic green pot it is in at the moment!

I will talk about my bamboos and grasses another time, but they are, in my opinion, wonderful plants.

I also love herbs and keep trying lavenders – some very successfully, others less so.  I try to prevent them becoming leggy, by careful pruning, but after a few years they are mostly past their best.  However, I have a successful box of small lavender which we cut like a small hedge and that flowers well and has been in situ for a fair while.  All my Rosemary plants died a couple of winters ago, which was very sad.  Not as sad as when the Ceanothus went though.  I think I will plant a Ceanothus in my new bed……

I have a shelf full of gardening books, and I think it is time to take another look at them.   I could just research on the internet, but I do have some lovely books just waiting to be opened up once more……

Here is the link to the plant pictures once more

https://pygardens.co.uk/plants-in-the-garden/

Posted in cutting back, Flowering plants, patio, Plants, Shrubs, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Is supervision needed?!

Well, Mark has put a good couple of hours into the garden, and has been taking all the cutting back very seriously indeed. He came in to get the camera as we have lots of frog spawn in the pond (finally). He took a fair number of photos of the beds he’s been working on. Anyway, I had a shock when I saw that he has cut back a beautiful variegated weigela, with deep red flowers and a golden mock orange (philadelphus), which has scented white flowers in the summer.   Oh dear!  And I thought it was safe to leave him to it!  Mark says to mention to Simon that he was wrong about Mark’s gardening knowledge!!      All in all though, he doing a really thorough job on his hands and knees a lot of the time. Maybe it will give the shrubs an encouragement to grow back  vigorously. We need to get some fertilizer that is suitable for shrubs in particular. Any suggestions very welcome.  We will also spread some of our home-grown compost around in the large gaps where Mark has weeded and cut-back.  Only the summer will tell us just quite how effectively Mark has tidied up!!!

Here are a few photos

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Last week’s work in the garden

Well, apart from building the new compost boxes, and spreading the old compost onto the vegetable beds (soon to be filled with potatoes), Mark did some other garden work – and we have photos to prove it too!

He swept and washed the bottom patio and path area outside kitchen and patio doors and put out the small table and chairs in anticipation of some much-desired sunshine.   He did some weeding and cutting back of the bottom and right-side garden beds and tidied up the summer jasmine which grows in a box outside the utility door.  We have a box of lavender which we cut back at this time of year too and Mark has done the same to our small purple hebes which we put into our ‘municipal bed’ as we lovingly call it, at the lower end of the right border.  Photos to follow.  I will also try and take some photos of our garden lights, which we had fitted by an electrician – basically several lights leading from the bottom patio, right up the side path and finishing with a floodlight fitted to the summer house which lights up the zig zag path.

He also tackled some of the cutting back, but I am a little worried that some of the geraniums have been ripped out as well, unless they haven’t even started to come through at all yet.  Time will tell – if I end up posting photos of empty soil, you will be able to guess the reason!

Someone else seems to be gardening, as the bonfire smoke is somewhat infusing into the house – quick, John, shut the windows…..

 

Posted in compost heap, cutting back, patio, Uncategorized | Comments Off on Last week’s work in the garden

cutting back in the garden

Northumberland2013_24summer house finished resized pi

Mark and I in the summer house

 

Cutting back……..No, not in the financial sense….

We didn’t cut back all the old growth from our herbaceous perennials and grasses in the autumn and so have that job to do as spring approaches (albeit very slowly).  Mark has been let loose and has cut back quite a bit in the lower right border.  I worry that any new shoots, or plants that get mistaken for weeds will be destroyed/damaged, but last year the plants seemed to survive a little trampling from a pair of size ten wellies.

We have a red stemmed cornus (dogwood) which we may cut back in the early summer, in order to stimulate some stronger red stems for our winter edification.  We could leave it – not quite sure which to do. It looks so striking next to a bamboo which is bright green.  Its leaves are variegated which are also quite striking.  It is a plant that is used in municipal planting quite a lot.  There is a nice stretch of it on the Prudhoe bypass with red and green stems in blocks.  Very effective.

The new composting area is nearly  finished.  Mark is putting a front to the boxes to contain the compost.   Then it just   needs to be filled!   John our son put in a good few hours helping and advising Mark as to how to build it….

My sister Jenny took a lot of photos when she was up at Easter, so I have added some of those to the existing photos related to composting.  Jenny has found me a tool that re-sizes images with a right click which is fabulous, as it will save me a lot of time, and it does more than one photo at a time.   She has also enabled short captions to be read when the photos are hovered over or during the slide show.

It is a beautiful day – the sun is shining and although there is a bit of breeze, Mark is down to cycling vest with no sleeves – brrrrr.

I’m not ‘allowed’ to walk up the garden on my own, as I tripped and fell on one of the steps.  Therefore I am at the mercy of Mark to either accompany me up to the top of the garden, or to take photos for me.  I expect, today, I will give Mark my iphone to take photos and I’ll upload them (the easier bit).

Whether Mark will have time to do any cutting back today is questionable….we’ll have to see how tired he is.  He informs me not!

I will post a link when I have more photos uploaded.   Here it is https://pygardens.co.uk/garden-projects/compost-heaps/136-2/

Posted in compost, compost heap, cutting back, Grasses, Plants, Spring, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

building a new compost heap

It appears that I haven’t even said who I am in my blog!  My name is Helen and I am a retired nurse – I took early retirement due to ill-health.

Enough said about that.  One of the most important things in our garden is our composting.  Over the years we have produced some excellent compost, although it must be admitted that it is full of seeds etc!  We don’t use a hot composting method – ours just sits and rots down over a few seasons until we investigate and find some beautiful compost at the bottom of the pile.

We have two composting areas and both are needing renovation.  Today Mark is working on the top compost heap.  He took all the wood and materials up the garden yesterday.  Work begins in earnest today.  Photos will be taken and shown!!

We also have a wormery, which we neglect terribly, yet it seems to go on year after year reducing our kitchen waste into a rich worm-castings compost and lots of liquid manure too.  At first we molly-coddled it, but not any more.  Photos of it might be less than edifying as it does cause some people to recoil when they see all those worms in action!  However, it doesn’t smell, and the worst we get from it is a lot of tiny fruit flies in the summer.

Here are some photos of our compost heaps – more to come

https://pygardens.co.uk/garden-projects/compost-heaps/

and here is a link to the latest edifice – the new compost boxes built by Mark and John.

https://pygardens.co.uk/garden-projects/compost-heaps/136-2/

Posted in Building in the garden, compost heap, Spring, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

the zig zag garden path

Well today I have managed to upload another slide show of seven photos showing the zig zag path being built.  Our garden is very steep and I am less able these days to get about and so Mark and John came up with the wonderful idea of making a longer, but less-steep path.  There is a seat to rest on half-way if necessary, which was built out of garden bricks which were lying around and an old garden swing chair seat.  The path is quite narrow, but it would have taken a lot more time and effort to double the width, and we’d not be trying to push a wheelchair up there anyway.

You can view the pictures by following this link:

https://pygardens.co.uk/garden-projects/zig-zag-path/

My sister Jenny has been very busy and put a weather link up on my home page and it is certainly interesting to see the temperature rising.  As I write this, I am lying in bed with a view up the garden and the sun is shining, and Mark is hauling wood and other materials up the garden as he is re-building one of our compost heaps.  We have two areas that we compost material at the moment, but one of the constructions is about to fall apart, and the top heap has disintegrated completely (after Mark accidentally caught it on fire with hot ashes from the bonfire).  Luckily it didn’t burn down our next door neighbour’s (Graham and Clare) lovely barbeque hut which sits at about the same altitude as our summer house!

I will send the camera up the garden to get some shots of the newly built compost heap and post them as and when.  Mark has had to spend a lot of money on the treated wood to make two compost areas.  It now needs carting all the way up the garden – shame I can’t help……..

bottom compost heap dilapidated top compost heap area

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Putting up a slide show

Well, I had better start writing something, hadn’t I?
Mark and I have loved our garden from the word go…..It was terribly overgrown when we moved in and it has had several make-overs in the last 15 years.  I intend to gradually up-load photos showing it as it was and as it is now.
I am not in good health, therefore I am having to entrust my hubby Mark with all the work – he’s always been keen to cut the grass and the hedges as they involve dangerous toys with engines and blades.  Indeed, he nearly cut off the tip of a finger whilst using the hedge cutters (but that is another story).
Now he is having to learn about ‘cutting back’ before the herbacious perennials and grasses come back to life. Lots of supervision will be required.  I’ll do it from the realm of a garden chair placed so I can see and nag appropriately!
My first web-site project is up-loading a slide-show of the summerhouse being built.  I have tediously re-sized all the photos and zipped them up ready to go.  I’m at the mercy of Jenny, my sister, as to how to do this.  Indeed, this very blog would not exist if she hadn’t set it up for me.
Wouldn’t it be great if I could have a weather link and a facebook link – I am sure it is do-able – another question for my sister!

You can see the slide show here:

https://pygardens.co.uk/garden-projects/summer-house/

Posted in Building in the garden, Greeting, Summer House | 2 Comments

Hello

Welcome to my blog.

 

Posted in Greeting | 5 Comments