News Tagged ‘Watering’

Indecent exposure.

Monday, March 29th, 2010

All gardens are subject to exposure from the elements, but for some this is their single most defining feature, the thing that determines what can be grown or even if anything much can be grown at all.

Rooftop gardens must contend with both exposure and potentially unstable containers.

It might be assumed that exposure in a garden is always due to its elevation – be it on a hill-top, near the coast or on a high roof or balcony – but it can equally be about location. The funnelling effects of valleys, woodlands and (particularly in towns) buildings can mean that gardens that might at first sight appear to be fairly sheltered are actually subjected to serious battering.

In some locations exposure is seasonal or determined by the direction of the prevailing weather fronts. Our Devon valley garden is a good example of this. Surrounded on three sides by woodland, but in a westerly facing valley, for much of the time things are pretty calm and sheltered, but when the weather shifts to the west, straight off the Atlantic, then the wind is concentrated by the valley and funnelled by the surrounding woods to create powerful gusts that have uprooted some medium sized trees and smashed the tops from others.

This happens here pretty much every Autumn, so it’s a seasonally exposed location, but of course others suffer that kind of effect all year round and the common factor that has to be addressed in all cases is the wind.

Bamboo used as a windbreak.

Wind in a garden can cause damage in a variety of ways. Structural damage can occur to garden features and buildings (greenhouses, sheds etc.) as well as to plants.

Trees and shrubs in full leaf have a huge “sail effect” and can be seriously damaged or even killed outright by strong gusts, whilst herbaceous beds can be flattened in a matter of moments with often heartbreaking results. Exposure is also a particular problem for fruit and vegetable plants. Flowers can easily be damaged, burned or torn right away before they’ve been pollinated so no fruit can form.

Wind breaks.

Wind permeable fence.

Solid fences may seem like the first solution to keeping wind out of a garden (particularly a small-ish one) but actually all that they do it to funnel and concentrate the wind, sometimes making a bad problem even worse. A better solution is to filter the wind to dissipate its destructive energy before it can reach your precious plants.

Where space allows trees and evergreen bushes planted at the garden margins and in staggered succession (rather than in large solid blocks) are the very best solution. We use large bamboos that grow quickly and are infinitely flexible, allowing them to easily absorb all the energy without risk of being damaged themselves. In smaller spaces open slat fences and permeable plastic mesh  netting can perform exactly the same job.

Planting care.

Low staking to stabilise a young tree.

Wind rock – where trees and shrubs are moved at the base of the trunk and at the root – can case major long-term damage, and often death of a plant. Trunks are weakened, roots torn away and large, drying air pockets formed underground, all pretty serious. It’s crucial to stake plants adequately when planting to prevent the process of wind rock from ever starting.

Stakes should always be low or the stem/trunk will fail to thicken up properly, causing further long-term weakness and lack of stability. Soil should be well firmed in, although take care not to compress and solidify, particularly with clay soils. Roots need access to air and water rather than being entombed into a giant brick. Containers should be very substantial and/or secured to surrounding fencing, wells etc.

Don’t neglect watering, not just at planting time, but for a good period (generally 2 to 3 years) afterwards too. Exposed gardens are subject to huge evaporation and water loss comes from plant leaves as well as from the soil, so it will be up to you to compensate. Installing an automatic plant watering system might be a useful option too.

Finally, you can expand the selection of plants that will succeed with some judicious pruning. Obviously taller plants will be subject to more exposure and damage, so, where appropriate for the plant, it makes sense to keep things low and compact.

Plant choices.

Although there are various strategies for dealing with exposure, and improving your site to widen the scope of plants that you can grow, it’s equally important to come to terms with your gardens limitations.

A highly exposed, but highly attractive coastal garden.

There aren’t many natural environments that plants haven’t successfully colonised, and by drawing inspiration from nature you can create wonderfully rich and abundant gardens full of plants that have evolved to thrive under the very conditions that would otherwise be struggling with.

The first port of call is the coast, where plants cope with maximum exposure all year round. Plants that naturally occur in coastal situations will always work well in any exposed spot, but it’s also well worth visiting coastal gardens to check out what is already succeeding for others.  Many Mediterranean plants also work well as they have evolved all sorts of strategies to minimise water loss, including small, silvery, waxy or furry leaves and compact growth for instance.

As with any garden, it’s always better to grow plants that are actually naturally happy to be in your type of location rather than choose those that will struggle to survive and create a succession of cultivation problems for you.


Job for today

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

A job I felt I must get out and do today was to cut down the dogwoods in the garden.  These plants give such vibrant winter colour and if they are cut down around now bright fresh new growth will be assured for next year.  I also popped a few of the prunings into an out of the way place in the garden to let them take root and make new plants.  As I was walking around the garden I noticed how dry the pots were so I spent a very happy half an hour watering  pots and dead heading the  early spring flowers. I am pleased at the way the water spikes are working in the green house and I haven’t had to do much other than fill them up occasionally. While wandering around the garden I also found a big hole coming under our fence and realised that the badger has found a new way into the garden.  This could be a problem in the future when the vegetable garden gets going because  he has started to dig some of the borders. Although thankfully there is not too much damage, he has actually helped a bit by unearthing the ground elder roots and making it easier for me to weed them out.  I know this weed is prevalent in this garden and I am going to have to keep on top of it if I don’t want it to take over any more than it has already.  I think that I heard you could eat it, so any recipes would be gratefully received.

A bunch of Dogwood stems

A bunch of Dogwood stems


Veg garden update

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

The vegetable garden is beginning to take shape.  We had some spare  time today in the sun shine to mark out  the beds and pathways with wood edges and move some more of the rubble and rubbish out of the way.  We also have to keep watering the new hedge as it has been so dry this week.  Hopefully we will get some more time during this week to carry on the good work as I can’t wait to get planting.

The new veg garden

The new veg garden


Garden Tips

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Snowdrops are nodding cheerfully in the chilly wind and this week there has even been enough sun to entice the little golden crocuses in my lawn open their throats to the sky.

March is very definitely re-bonding time:  Key implements for a lengthy garden clean-up session are a decent kneeler, thermal gardening gloves, a slim-tined shrub rake for grubbing out the remains of last autumn’s leaves from under shrubs and in lawn gullies, a receptacle of some sort to collect the bits for composting and a hand fork to gently loosen compacted soil.  Clearing and tidying yard by yard can be addictive, and the results are invariably satisfying, reminding us, too, of the existence of all manner of just-emerging plants assumed to have been clobbered by the frost – or just plain forgotten-about.   The next job is to get cracking with slug and snail defences (a wide blanket of grit worked well round my delphiniums last year, while the copper tape stuck around the hosta pots is still clinging on for another year).  It is also a good time to cast chicken manure pellets (a more or less balanced fertilizer) around border plants and to mulch and feed roses and other flowering shrubs – proprietary rose food does them all a power of good.  And just because the worst of the weather is behind us, don’t stop feeding the garden birds.  While they are queuing up for a space on the seed-feeders, they will happily snack on the growing population of insect pests on your garden plants.


Improving your soil.

Monday, March 1st, 2010

A few days ago I blogged about the importance of getting to know your soil, but, as vital as this knowledge is, it’s what you do next that really counts.  Once armed with the basics of your soil type and it’s strengths and weaknesses you can then set about planning how best to make improvements.

Loam - the dream soil for any gardener.

You can think of garden soils as being like the scoring areas of a dartboard, with bands and boxes of possible scores representing all the different varieties of soil. Some will deliver a higher “score” than others, allowing you to grow a wider and richer variety of garden plants, but the ultimate goal has to be the bull’s-eye, which, in the case of garden soils, is a rich, crumbly, open, humus-rich loam – think of worm-casts.

The big difference between your garden and a dartboard, though, is that with a little help from you, the trusty gardener, your soil score can be shifted around and boosted in all sorts of ways, and eventually land right on that bull’s-eye.

The general catch-all advice to apply compost whenever you plant anything and to mulch everything once a year is certainly a good start, but it’s by no means the end of the soil improvement story.

Improving soil structure.

The most common soil type is clay based and they tend to be sticky, dense and poorly drained, in extreme cases plants can essentially drown over winter with the roots rotting of into a big wet mush. Improving a clay soil means breaking up that dense structure by creating micro air pockets throughout, which will automatically improve drainage.

Adding compost to clay might help initially, but within a matter of months that organic material will have been thoroughly assimilated and broken down by bacteria and you’re back to square one.

Pea shingle - the number 1 remedy for opening up a heavy clay soil.

The longer-term solution is to add in large quantities of inert, non-organic, (i.e. non break-down-able) material to open the structure and keep the clay particles apart permanently.

Grit and/or pea shingle are what is needed, the exact quantities being dependant on just how much clay there is present in the soil.

A general incorporation of any of these materials every time you dig, plant or work the soil will slowly improve conditions both for plants as well as for worms and other essential soil fauna.

Composted bark.

Beware of adding sand to a clay soil, the particles simply aren’t large enough to open up the dense clay and you’ll likely end up making a kind of home-grown garden cement mix instead.

The next phase in all about keeping a good supply of coarse (and it must be coarse) organic mulch on the soil surface, ideally in bi-annual applications.

Chunky composted bark is pretty much ideal for the task, as is semi-composted leaf mould.

The aim here is not to feed the soil directly – clay soils are already naturally full of nutrition – but instead to feed those worms and myriad soil critters & micro-organisms who will then repay you by working, digging, digesting and opening up the soil 365 days a year.

Improving soil moisture levels.

Light soils – typically sand or chalk based – suffer from the opposite problem to clay soils. They drain beautifully, so nothing’s ever likely to drown, but they are very bad at retaining moisture and gardeners are likely to be forever watering and feeding to keep their plants looking spruce.

Here the non-organic, inert parts of the ideal soil are already present, and you’ll certainly never have to add shingle to a sandy soil, but often the organic elements are sorely lacking.

Humus is organic material that has been digested, and processed by soil bacteria until it has reached the point of stability – in other words it won’t break down any further, but neither will it disappear from the soil. With light soils the aim is always to increase the humus content, which in turn makes for a more porous, sponge-like soil that will retain water through dry spells, but still drain well in the wet.

Leafmould - the most natural of all soil conditioners.

Bulky, organic materials are the solution and your own garden compost is likely to be as good as anything, as well as being chemically harmonious with your garden (since all the leaves and garden debris originated from there in the first place!)

Well-rotted farmyard manure and leaf mould also work well, and other options include old mushroom compost (which is very alkaline) and composted paper, spent brewery hops or seaweed.

All of these should be added as a mulch, where, once again, the worms will do the rest for you.

Mulching has the added benefit of insulating the soil from evaporation and should be considered pretty essential to help conserve moisture levels in lighter soils.

Adding nutrition.

Nutrition is not the same as structural bulk in a soil, although the most useful materials can certainly supply both. Most mulches, though, are not going to do anything for your soil nutrition levels, in fact they may even end up depleting nutrition as bacteria use up nitrogen to break down bulky material like wood and bark chips.

The decomposition of organic matter – be it compost from your garden or manure from a farm – involves several phases, and it’s only during the final phase (when things are pretty much well and truly rotted) that nutrients are released back into the soil in a balanced and useful way.

Horse Manure - well composted and ready for garden action.

Quick fix plant feeds (be they liquid or solid, such as pelleted chicken manure) may feed individual plants but will generally leach away almost immediately and are of no lasting benefit to the general soil. The old maxim of “feed the soil not the plant” is definitely one to keep in mind.

Well-rotted manure (preferably horse, though any large-ish herbivore that you happen to have handy will also supply the goods) is certainly the number one choice for adding slow release nutrition – principally nitrogen – into the soil. Bonemeal is also slow to break down and releases phosphorus as it decays, and wood ash (which like mushroom compost is strongly alkaline) will provide potassium.

Together these are the three main elements for plant growth and will provide the recipe for effective and long-term soil nutrition.


Getting to know your soil.

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Selecting and arranging plants in the garden is probably one of the most rewarding tasks for any gardener, and one that many of us devote lots of time and thought too, but how many of us can say the same for the soil in which those same plants will have to grow?

Good old garden soil isn’t as pretty, glamorous or tasty(?!) as the flowers, trees and veg that it supports, but getting to knowing your soil, it’s limitations and benefits, must be one of the most useful things you can do in any plot. It will allow you to determine the range of plants best suited for success in your particular garden, and so minimise disappointments, and will also let you figure out the best methods to improve the soil you already have.

There are five different types of soil found in British gardens. Any given site can, of course, have a combination of several of these types, and there are also gradations between types, as well as extremes of each, where the gardening is at it’s most challenging. Being able to recognise your particular soil types is probably the best place to start in any garden.

Clay.

A pure clay lump - typical of subsoil that has been brought to the surface.

All soil types are, to a large extent, determined by particle size and clay soils have the smallest particles of all. Pure clay – which makes up much of the British subsoil – is just like modelling clay, the sort of thing you’d expect to find spinning round on a potters wheel. Put a glob between your fingers at it will feel smooth and putty-like.

Most clay garden soils aren’t quite as extreme as that – although individual, fist-sized balls of pure clay are not uncommon even in topsoil, and are typical of new gardens where the subsoil has been disturbed and brought up to the surface by building work.

The great benefit of a clay based soil is that it is extremely nutrient rich and capable of supporting a very wide range of plants. The downsides are all to do with that tiny particle size. When wet the soil is extremely heavy and frustratingly difficult to dig and work with. It can also be easily compacted, driving all of the air out and forming a dense, thick layer that roots can find all but impenetrable. Although clay soils are naturally very moisture retentive – which can be handy in a dry summer – when they do dry out they bake into an extremely hard, cracked surface pan which is, once again, completely unworkable.

Sand.

Sandy soil - open and free running.

A sandy soil is one with a very small percentage of clay particles, where the large bulk is instead made up of much more coarse quartz and silica originating from weathered rock. Take a chunk of this between your fingers and it will always feel gritty and loose. Unlike a clay soil, sand-based soils will never “clump” and will always be more-or-less free running when you dig through them.

Sandy soils can make for fantastic cultivation options; they warm up very easily in the spring and so promote a long growing season, they will never be water-logged and are easily worked at any time of the year. The major downsides are to do with fertility and water-retention, which are both pretty poor, or in extreme cases, non-existent. A wide array of drought tolerant, generally surface rooting plants have evolved to specialise in sandy soils, but unless you are happy to stick with these, a sandy soil will require ongoing maintenance to allow for a wide community of plants to flourish.

Loam.

Lovely loam - nutrient rich and easily worked.

Loam is a kind of generic term given to the ideal garden soil that consists of a roughly equal mixture of clay and sand, and which brings the benefits of both soil types with few if any of the disadvantages.

Loam soils are open, and easily worked but full of nutrients. They are moisture retentive in summer but free draining in winter.

There is no doubt that a loam based soil will support the widest range of garden plants with the least amount of alteration and soil maintenance. Very few “wild” soils are naturally loamy – river basins and flood plains with millennia of silt deposits are perhaps the main exception – although having a loam garden soil is, understandably, an ongoing holy grail for most gardeners. Continued cultivation and improvement will gradually move any soil towards a loamy condition.

Chalk.

Chalk soil - typically very shallow and stony.

Certain localised regions of Britain have naturally calcareous or chalk-based soils, all of which are derived from weather limestone, which is itself the result of deposition in ancient, long-since-disappeared oceans.

Chalk soils are identifiable by their light colour. They are generally very stony too, with pieces of pure calcium chalk in the mix. They can be wet and difficult to work in winter but bone dry and rock-like in summer, and their overall nutrient level is low.

Again, a specialised wild flora has evolved to thrive on chalk soils, but many cultivated plants will find conditions much tougher. Most garden plants require acidic to neutral soils in order to be able to access the full range of nutrients that they need. Chalk soils, though, are inherently alkaline in nature and, unless you plan on replacing the entire top soil, that’s not something that can be fundamentally changed.

Peat.

A very pure, black-peat soil.

The other localised soil type, and at the other extreme from the chalk soils, are the peat-based soils. All of these soils occur in regions that were once marshland, and the peat is the result of many millennia of rotting plants all deposited and compacted.

Peat-based soils are, of course, naturally acidic, and very dark in colour ranging from dark brown to pure black bog peats. This dark colour ensures that  the soils warm rapidly in spring and like loam soils, provide for a long growing season. They are also recognisable for being very light and crumbly in texture but having a poor range of nutrients naturally available.

Depending on where they are located peat soils may either be very wet and still marsh-like year round or, where the geology has displaced and raised the ground level, seasonally dry and easily cultivated. Again, a range of plants have evolved to specialise in peat-soils, and so long as the area isn’t water-logged, the gardening possibilities are rich and extensive.


Border patrol.

Monday, January 25th, 2010

As the very first signs of new garden life are beginning to push into growth in the form of Snowdrops and Witch Hazels, now seems like the ideal time to consider the borders. If yours were disappointing last year, or maybe had a quick blast of wow-zinginess before rapidly fading to bare earth and leafless branches, then some of these ideas might help spruce things up in the coming season and beyond…and since everyone loves a top 10 list, here are my tips on maximising a borders potential.

1. Seasons

The traditional English border was very much a summer fancy, and typically lay dormant or even completely empty for almost half of the year. That’s all very well if you garden on a country-estate, but most gardeners should want their border to provide year round interest. Try to incorporate at least one or two flowering elements for each season, and for trees and shrubs try to choose from those that give the most bang for their buck – not just seasonal flowers but colourful bark, attractive, possibly evergreen foliage, fruit and berries. Smaller herbaceous plants can be multi-season too, with seed heads following flowers and evergreen grasses looking more dramatic when frosted in winter than they do glinting in the summer sun.

2. Wildlife

Sedum - one of the ultimate bee attracting plants.

As I’ve mentioned on my last blog entry, bringing wildlife into a garden adds a whole new dimension of interest, and it’s a year-round thing too. From butterflies, bees and the like in summer, to flocks of feeding birds in winter, they’re all out there waiting for an invitation, you just have to send the right garden signals. Having a garden attractive to wildlife doesn’t mean that you have to have borders filled with nettles and brambles, there are a huge array of highly ornamental plants which will do the job just as well. Top herbaceous bee attracting plants include the likes of Sedum, Ajuga, Echium, & Verbena bonariensis. Butterflies thrive on Lavender, Lunaria annua (Honesty), Hesperis matronalis (Sweet Rocket), Centranthus ruber (Valerian) and of course Buddleja, to name just a few. Birds will initially be attracted into gardens that provide them with shelter, from which they can scope out potential meals. Good seed and fruit bearing plants for birds include Blueberry, Elderberry, Crabapple, and Cotoneaster.

3. Soil

There’s a lot of truth in the maxim that you only get out what you put in, and nowhere more so than in the garden. Borders tend to have a pretty high appetite, and with a mass of plants competing for food and water resources the soil can quickly become leached of nutrients, particularly in gardens where fallen leaves and general garden debris are tidied away. To keep plants performing well for you year in year out it’s crucial to give them something they can sink their roots into. By far the best way to do this is by mulching to a minimum depth of 3 to 4 inches throughout the entire border, ideally in late autumn or early winter. This will provide food and structure to the soil, as well as help reduce watering, and the microbes and worms will do the rest for you.

4. Arrangements

If your border is to have long-lasting and season-round appeal then you’re going to need several different elements. There needs to be a permanent skeleton – these would be the trees and shrubs – some of which should ideally either be evergreen or at least have year-round interest. The smaller growing plants, be they woody or herbaceous, perennials or bulbs, then form the flesh on the bones. Although it’s appealing to buy 1 of everything to try to grow as many different plants as your space allows, this never makes for a very good border arrangement. Much better to plant in 3’s 5’s or 7’s and to plant the groups together rather than spread them around, this way you mimic how plants would be found in the wild, as well as create much a stronger visual impact.

5. Colours

Yellow & purple complimenting one another.

It really is a good idea to have a colour scheme in mind, if not for the whole border then at least for sub-sections of it. Planting a whole variety of colours together can lead to some nasty combinations that do nobody any favours; a little forward planning will see harmony restored. If you do want lots of different colours, or want to grow particular plants that would clash with one another, then use foliage plants in between them to give a green breathing space. Think of the border – including all the foliage – as being like a giant flower arrangement.

It’s often best to go with two or three colours and plant accordingly. These can be contrasting and opposites – orange and blue, yellow and purple etc. – or harmonious – blue and white, yellow, orange and red, and so on. It’s fun to find as many different plants as you can that fit into your colour scheme and then play around with them in your space

6. Hights

The “normal” way to plant a border is to arrange the larger plants at the back, perhaps with a fence or hedge as a backdrop, have the medium sized in the middle and the low growers in the foreground. Personally, I’m not crazy about this arrangement if it’s applied too rigidly; it all looks a bit too much like a still life for my liking. Whilst it’s true that low growing plants do need to be near the front of a border if they’re going to be seen and receive enough light, the same doesn’t apply to other sizes, and it’s much more fun – not to mention more naturalistic – to mix and match. A few tall plants near the front of a border can provide a great foil for ground-huggers beneath them, and tall growing seasonal bulbs like lilies can also work well near the front, particularly if they are scented.

7. Spacings

It’s important to consider the ultimate size of trees and shrubs before using them in the border, something that, in my experience, very few gardeners ever do! These larger beasts of the border need to be arranged to allow room for growth and for their companion plants not to be blocked from view or shaded from light. I’ve come across many older borders where all you can see is a wall of shrubby foliage right at the front, whilst the back is hidden and bare. Perennials, though, should be planted closely to minimise the amount of bare soil on view. This not only looks more attractive, but also helps to reduce evaporation (and so watering) as well as helping to prevent weeds from taking hold. In new borders wildflower seeds can be scattered amongst the plantings to create a quick seasonal fill-in, far better than rows of disposable garden-centre annuals.

8. Senses

Miscanthus for movement, texture and colour, here paired with Asters.

It’s a common mistake when planting a border to think primarily in one dimension, and focus entirely on the visual, or even just on the colours. Consider instead how much richer a border can be if you also plant for your nose – fragrant flowers and leaves too; for your ears – grasses, bamboos and other plants that rustle in the breeze; and for your touch – all manner of different textures can be selected, from shiny bark to velvety leaves.

9. Contrasts

The best borders are full of little tensions and visual contrasts. Large leaves look best beside smaller, delicate cut leaves, rather than next to other large leaves, for example, and tall works best against low, rounded beside spiky and lance-shaped etc. Follow this principle and you’ll find that plants compliment one another rather than compete for attention. You can go one step further in you incorporate colour, by having plants with contrasting shapes and textures but with similar colours. Bold, bronzy red foliage can be mirrored by small flowers that draw from the same palette, and the same goes for silver, white, green, and yellow, even blue.

10. Features

Even after you’ve carefully planned your plantings for height, colour and space you might find that there’s a lack of focal point in the border. This is particularly common in cottage garden type plantings, where the emphasis is generally on non-structural herbaceous plants. This doesn’t mean to say that you have to stick an evergreen shrub in the middle of your wallflowers and roses, all sorts of objects can provide a focal feature to draw the eye. Options might include a small pergola or climbing frame, a bird-bath or feeding station, or any wooden/metal/stone object that takes your fancy and around which you can plant. Reclamation yards are great for finding all sorts of inspiration.


Maintaining indoor plants through winter.

Monday, January 11th, 2010

When it’s snowing or hailing or pouring with rain, or just plain dark-all-the-time, it’s easy to forget all about the garden and be cut off from the green world altogether, but it doesn’t have to be that way.

Many folks are tempted into buying an endless succession of cut flowers or disposable instant-bloom pot-plants to bring a splash of colour to their homes in winter. Neither of these options last long, though, and the air miles and carbon food-print of most cut flowers is pretty tough to justify for such an ephemeral display. Much better to grow “real” indoor plants, and then, even if you can’t quite manage make it out to the garden very often, you can still get a dose of leafy therapy.

Phalaenopsis - one of the most popular indoor plants.

Indoor plants can roughly be divided into two types, and, through winter at least, each needs somewhat different treatment. First off are your traditional house plants. These are, for the most part tropical imports that hail from the dark understories of forests. For many the big leafy Cheese Plants and Philodendrons are forever linked with the ‘70’s and it’s actually quite tough to find them for sale these days. Moth Orchids – Phalaenopsis – on the other hand, are deemed essential indoor accessories and pop up just about everywhere. Various bromeliads and carnivorous exotica like pitcher plants are also super fashionable right now, whilst old favourites like Christmas Cactus and African Violets are also offered for their seasonal blooms

All of these house plants grow successfully in our homes because the warmth and relatively low light levels mimic what they would have in the wild. Trouble is they are also used to close to 100% humidity in their native habitats, and when the central heating goes on in winter the air in our homes dries out to a potential dangerous extent.

Another big issue they face is sudden changes in temperature, and in particular cold drafts, something that no rainforest dweller would ever be exposed to. Just like their outdoor cousins house plants do have winter a dormant period too. Although they may not look much different to the casual glance they do (or at least they should) stop growing and take up far less water and almost no nutrients.

So, if these are the problems, what are the solutions? First off think of where your  plants are positioned in your home. Can you give them more light without exposing them to drafts? A west or south facing window can be are ideal, but keep house plants away from the glass itself where temps can plunge at night, and definitely well away from the icy blasts of doors.

Automatic plant watering system.

Keep watering to an absolute minimum. House plants should never be allowed to sit in water over winter and should be kept on the dry side all season, so no daily hovering with a watering can. An automatic plant watering system is an ideal way to provide just the right amount of moisture to the roots. No feed should be given either – you don’t want to suddenly wake them into growth when the light levels are too low to support new shoots. Equally important, though, is humidity at the leaves. Bathrooms and kitchens – the steamier rooms of the house – can provide better winter quarters for house plants, but only if they’re also light enough. Daily spraying of leaves (ideally with rain water) works well, as does placing the pot in a tray filled with pebbles and water, and letting natural evaporation do the rest.

The second group of winter indoor plants are actually hardy garden plants. Your job is to fool them into thinking that it’s already spring. If you succeed – and frankly, it’s not that hard – then they’ll reward you with a display of flowers, foliage or edible shoots that should definitely put a zing back into the dark months.

Helleborus niger makes a great seasonal houseplant.

The two keys to growing Spring flowering garden plants indoors are light and heat.  You need to find as bright a position as possible, but also one that’s relatively cool. All you’re trying to do is nudge the plants forward a month or two, not plunge them into a balmy August. Feed and water well, and success should be yours.

Shorter growing plants work best as taller specimens can easily get drawn and leggy in the low winter light. One of the best to try is Helleborus niger, the so-called Christmas Rose, actually a buttercup relative that flowers outdoors from late Feb, but delivers the goods indoors during December. Evergreen Azaleas, which these days come in a dazzling array of colours, and all manner of Spring flowering bulbs also work well. Narcissus, Hyacinths, Crocus, Chionodoxa, Iris, Muscari  and, for the more ambitious, smaller species and varieties of Lilium can all be readily forced, i.e. encouraged to flower early indoors.

Indoor herbs grown from seed.

Finally one of the most fashionable, not to say useful groups of winter indoor plants are the herbs. These can prove more challenging since they are essentially Mediterranean natives that prefer basking in sunshine, so lots of light, together with a decent feeding and watering regimen is the order of the day. Basil, Chervil, Dill, Coriander and Parsley can all be grown from seeds on a south-facing windowsill, whilst plants of Bay, Oregano, Tarragon & Thyme can be transferred from the garden or bought in specially. Give them a few weeks in a transition zone – an unheated porch for example – before moving plants into their heated quarters, and they’ll provide winter-long tasty results direct into the kitchen.

The big advantage of all of these outdoor/indoor plants is that, once they’ve finished doing their thing indoors they can take up permanent residence in your garden, in effect giving you two uses from one plant – who could ask for more!?


Winter garden wonders.

Monday, January 4th, 2010

In times gone by the deepest darkest months of Winter were seen by gardeners as fit only for leafing through catalogues of seeds, preferably by some form of open fire, whilst green fingered urges were met by watering the house plants and admiring seasonal indoor plants. These days, though, most folks want their gardens to deliver for them all year round, and whole plots and entire books are devoted to groups of garden plants that are at their prime in January and February.

Hamamelis - Witch hazel flowers open even when encrusted with ice and snow.

You certainly don’t have to go as far as dedicating all of your growing space to a single season to reap the rewards of winter gardening. There’s definitely a special kind of satisfaction that comes from seeing a blazing red Witch Hazel bursting improbably through snow and ice, or from having the heady perfume of a Viburnum waft gently through the air. What’s more, the addition of a few select seasonal gems into a garden will encourage you off the Christmas sofa to get out and about to investigate their progress.

There aren’t too many pollinating insects around in January so a common feature of lots of winter flowering shrubs is small flowers with a powerful perfume to entice those bees brave enough to take to the wing. Low-growing Sarcococca (Christmas Box) is so non-descript in flower you might well tread on it were it not for the knock-your-socks-off fragrance that demands your attention. Lonicera x purpusii ‘Winter Beauty’ is a  popular shrubby Honeysuckle with small white flowers that also pack a powerful scent and is pretty much foolproof to grow in almost any situation.

Chimonanthus praecox - a sublime gem for the winter garden.

With it’s pretty lantern-like hanging flowers of primrose and burgundy the medium-sized shrubby Magnolia relative Chimonanthus praecox (Wintersweet) is rather more sophisticated and also provides a delicious perfume. Although it’s not often seen outside of big gardens it’s readily available and should be grown far more often than it is.

The image of Mahonias has become a bit tarnished lately, mainly due to their use in virtually every municipal park planting throughout the northern hemisphere. Still, there’s a good reason why they are so widely grown – dramatic, large, spiky, evergreen foliage, a tolerance for shade and the production of large racemes of very fragrant, canary-yellow flowers in Winter. In many ways these are the perfect shrubs for town gardens.  Viburnums are almost as popular, and the best of the winter flowering varieties, such as V. farreri, and V.x bodnantense ‘Dawn’ never fail to please with their clusters of pinky-white fragrant flowers.

If you have a wall that you’d like to see come alive in winter then Clematis cirrhosa is probably the number one choice. This moderately strong climber has delicate, fern-like evergreen foliage and really pretty, cream-coloured bell-shaped flowers that have a delicate scent. A number of forms are widely available, I particularly like ‘Freckles’ which has petals splashed with crimson on their inner surface.

Daphne mezereum - one of the finest native wild flowers for fragrance.

One of our more unusual wild flowers, Daphne mezereum is a British that thrives on chalky soils. This is one small shrub that delivers big time in winter with beautiful flowers of purple or pure white that have the most intoxicating fragrance.

Possibly my personal favourite winter shrub of all though is a Daphne relative from China – Edgeworthia chrysantha, the Paper Bush. The flexible bark of this beauty was traditionally made into bank notes, but unless you’re planning your own small-scale printing operation, you, like me, will be more drawn to the tubular, fragrant flowers of pale yellow. The form ‘Red Dragon’, if you can find it, is even more beautiful with impossibly exotic bright red flowers that, on a sunny winters day (and possibly depending on what you’ve been drinking the night before) might just convince you that you’re in the Caribbean.

Hamamelis (Witch Hazels) are firm favourites that can be found in most larger gardens. The old hybrid ‘Pallida’ is still hard to beat on the scent front, but there are a range of new-ish hybrids arriving from breeders in Belgium that deliver much larger flowers with the same awesome perfume. Colours vary from pale yellow through copper orange to blood red. ‘Nina’ is the finest of all the yellows and I particularly love the dramatic, large burnt orange flowers of recently introduced ‘Aurora’ and ‘Aphrodite.’

All of these shrubs work hard to drive away the winter cold and also serve as handy a reminder that Spring is just around the corner, but some trees are also at their best at this time of year. Birches can be rather understated small trees for much of the year but the best of them really come alive in winter. Then, with the leaves long since disappeared, the colours and textures of their often-fabulous bark are fully revealed. I’ve become a huge fan of Betula albosinensis, in particular, and seeing the low winter sun illuminate the peeling deep scarlet and bright pinky-orange bark of the many different forms is without doubt the highlight of my own garden in winter.

Betula albosinensis - a great centrepiece for any winter garden.

Of course none of these winter wonders should be planted in winter itself, but by checking out what’s looking good now it’s easy to plan ahead for a Spring planting. Unless your soil is truly dismal, then the best advice for planting all trees and large shrubs is simple: the only garden supplies you need are a spade, a fork, a short sturdy stake + tie, if your plant is tall or top heavy, and a willing digger-of the-soil…that would be you or a trusty assistant.

All of your planting time and efforts should be focussed on making a wide planting hole and breaking all of the soil into small, crumbly pieces, this way your new plantings will be able to get their roots out into the soil easily and will establish quickly.  DO NOT add compost into the hole, this damages the natural bacterial balance and can easily lead to root rot, as well as slowing down the progress of the plant into the soil where it will, after all, be spending the rest of it’s life. Instead mulch well on top of the planting, but don’t cover the stem of the plant, and the worms will do the rest.


Notes of what to do!

Sunday, December 20th, 2009

have been in active for the last two weeks.  This is due to tearing a calf muscle while clearing leaves. It was such a lovely day with bright blue sky and I had a million and one things to do indoors but I just had to get outside.

It was the third wheelbarrow of leaves that did it.  I pushed the wheelbarrow full of leaves to the appointed leaf drop position and ping.  I heard a sound like an elastic band breaking and felt like I had been shot in the back of the leg. As I tried to put my foot down a dreadful pain shot through my leg and I realised that something was very wrong.  I was up a slight slope and on the lane outside my garden so I hopped 200m to the house in order to get my husband to help. He sat me down found me an ice pack and we decided to visit casualty.

The upshot is that I am now on crutches and having physio.  It is very difficult and tiring trying to walk let alone garden on crutches, although I have managed to reach the green house and pot up some spring bulbs that were buried under some fleece in the potting shed.  I have become quite inventive in the ways that I have transported things around when no one is there to help.  A small rucksack is a must to carry everyday bits that you might need mobile phone, pad and pencil, tissues, lip salve and the must have these days glasses!

The other must is somewhere that you can plonk yourself when your arms tire. My family have been positioning chairs and stalls for me all over the place and they have been very good at looking after me but I am not a good patient!

Anyway….

On the gardening front I have made copious notes about what I need to do A) when I can move unaided and B) the weather brightens up. Here they are:-

Green House:

Remember to open on brighter days for ventilation and to close in case of a frost.

Pick off dying leaves to prevent mould.

Take out old tomato plants and compost.

Keep checking for slugs and snails and other undesirable bugs.

Water plants.

Vegetable garden:

Clear up the soggy Rhubarb leaves and Borage plants.

Bring in some leeks and the last of the carrots (family to pick).

Continue to harvest kale and cabbage (again remind family).

Collect leaves (putting them into jute sacks) and lift the boards I walk on.

Tidy beetroot plants and cover to enable me to harvest baby beetroot leaves for salads.

Flower garden:

Pick up fallen branches from silver birch and keep for supports.

Re-tie in climbing roses and other climbers that have been battered by the strong winds.

Cover the pots I have missed with potato sacks or move into the potting shed.

Continue to dead head flowers that won’t stop flowering, great for the bees that I have still seen in the garden.