Thursday, 5 April 2012

Let's Not Forget The Hyacinths - honest(l)y.


So these pictures are mid to late March:


First (in February) the hyacinths came out in pots on the windowsill, filling me up with their sublime fragrance. Then they came out on the East facing side of the house and then bit they blossomed around the other two sides (North is next door's semi-detachedness). The grape hyacinths (below) came with the house. I dig them  up and move them around but they multiply relentlessly. They don't smell at all.


Natural primroses are out of fashion; it's all fancy primulas - but you can't beat the colour of a real primrose, or - again - its scent; most of the 'primroses' they sell in garden centres don't have it. But smell a bank of fresh, wild primroses and you'll see what I mean.


Now, Honesty grows in the hedgerows, but I've cultivated it for three years now and gladly too. Yes, the leaves and shape are a bit nettle-like, but the attractive early pink flowers (and there are white ones too) are just half the deal: the rest is that when they seed, these beautiful flaky golden oval pods decorate the border like jewels. The twist is they take two years to flower, so you always have to plan ahead; the good news is that the seeds are incredibly easy to grow. Can't go wrong. 




Wait for late summer to see pics of the seeds!


Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Tulips

Tulips are wonderful.
I don't really record the types of bulbs I plant; I just get a handful I like and plop them in the ground. Then I leave them in all year (quite a few in pots, so I don't dig them up by mistake) and just enjoy them when they come up.
When the sun is low in the sky and shines through the petals, making the colours blend and clash; that's when they're best. These pictures come from the last week of March.








Taken for granted - end of March

Skimmia japonica 'Fragrans' (male):
It's small and doesn't really grab you; just sits there, being yellowy green in leaves all winter, providing a bit of a reminder that there's green in the world, like all evergreens. Then clusters of small buds appear; they don't seem worth paying much attention to, and then they turn into flowers, similarly unprepossessing. But give them a close up and they repay you.
I've made the picture small to replicate the experience - not worth looking at? Left click the picture... it is...


Forsythias are everywhere this time of year, with their daffodil yellow brightness lighting up hedges. The flowers don't last forever, but our bushes grow pretty vigorously, and you can see the ruthless chopping back last year in the picture. We have a couple in the hedge we inherited, so no idea of exact type, but it's one of those plants that you overlook because they're everywhere, but if there was only one in the world, you'd want it badly...

Happy hellebores

As these have grown this year, so they have got higher with more blooms: the higher ones are much less shy than the early ones and you can see the detail of the flower without lifting them up. The great benefit of hellebores is that the flowers last for a very long time - from before the tulips bloomed, right out past their going over...



Flowering Currant in March





Ribes sanguineum (Flowering Currant or Red-flowering Currant) - doesn't have any berries, but grows pretty vigorously and has really pretty coloured flowers in Spring. These pictures are from mid-March.


And by the end of March:



March Anemonies

These have given a lovely splash of colour in and around the tulips and daffodils and hyacinths. Lovely light green leaves that ants apparently like climbing over! These are second half of March pictures.

Anemone Coronaria Bicolour:

Anemone Coronaria The Bride:
And this is the end of March:

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Late February Happenings

It's been colder on some days than January but often mild too.
Here is morning water on Hypericum (Rose of Sharon), Mahonia Japonica, and the first daffodils to show - on the sunny, East-facing side of the garden - all taken in the last week of February:




Crocuses continued to flower, especially in the lovely moments of bright sunshine. But I only have a handful and really you need a carpet of hundreds to impress, as they're very small! Unless, of course, you do clever close-up pictures:



Some primroses and primulas have started showing, ladybirds have been about, a couple of the Dwarf Irises (Katharine Hodgkin) I planted in tubs have flowered, and there's been loads of lovely, curly pale green foliage from the Anemone Coronaria bulbs also in pots:




But the best thing of all is that three or four years after I started the world's smallest pond, which has always attracted a couple of visiting frogs and newts, we have got our very own frogspawn! Woo-hoo!