This post is one where I note six things from the garden, and like others link this to Jim's anchoring post. Last week Jim posted some 'then and now views of his garden plants' and as I was looking through and trying to delete old pictures I came across a couple of interesting ones. For the 2026 picture of the Chamaecyparis, I had to go out in the pouring rain this morning! It has been the wettest of weeks, with just one day of a few hours without heavy rain.
1. This lovely golden evergreen started off as a very small specimen when I bought it in May 2019, three years later it had already been potted up twice.
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Chamaecyparis pisifera var. filifera early 2021
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Now it is a fine specimen and the pot is almost too large for me to move. Had I room in the garden it would probably have been planted out. However in the pot it does look good standing on the pebbled area.
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| Chamaecyparis pisifera var. filifera 2026 |
2. I took cuttings from a friend's shrub in Kenwilworth, and since then have taken even more cuttings. One of them was planted by the bird bath.
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| Lonicera 'Baggesen's Gold' Feb 2023 |
In the Summer of 2024, I had one of those frequent urges to do a little prunning and turned the Lonicera into a pompom topiary. This is how it is looking this week.
3. We had one day of glorious sunshine, sufficient to warm the cockles of one's heart, and in the garden there was the sound of bees and a huge bumble bee, and flowers were opening.
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| Crocus chrysanthus 'Romance' |
4. I often prune the rose bushes around mid February, but all the mild weather has led to earlier growth. It doesn't take me long to prune the several bushes, rambler and the other climbers, all were pruned this first week of February.
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| Ghislaine de Feligonde new shoots |
5. I like little plants and this week two of my smallest snowdrops are in full fligh in the Conservatory bed. One which is slowing increasing is Galanthus Margaret Billington (Formerly Quadripetala) . With small upright stems as the blooms open the call me to check the number of petals, snowdrops usually have three outer segments, but this one varies from three to five outer segments.
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| Galanthus Margaret Billington |
Whether the it is the same bulb that grows more segments as it matures I am unsure. When I attend the Snowdrop festival in Shepton in a couple of weeks time, I shall try and ask the growers. I bought this one early in 2023 when we visited Jenny and Mike Spiller at Elworthy Cottage, and since they will be at the festival they will be the best to ask. The second little snowdrop closeby is Galanthus nivalis Charlotte. Last year I divided the small clump, and I am delighted that the small bulbs survived this.
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| Galanthus nivalis 'Charlotte' |
6. In mid January I showed the northern end of the Conservatory bed with the darker cyclamen coum, the flowers are still growing strong and may actually be more floriferous, here is the bed a little further along, where the paler cyclamen coum are making their mark. I've mentioned before that I am aiming for the Millefleur effect in the spring for this border and it certainly is close to achieving this. Yet to come out are the primulas and corydalis. Starting in January, growing through February, and into March, this little bed is one of my garden's delights at this time of the year.
Because I left the top of a bag of compost open last week, I now have a bag of 'compost soup'! And speaking of love: I have a pair of robins what come to check if I have anything for them, but they are still very shy. Here is one the cock I think on the wall.
So many lovely blooms! Your crocuses are beautiful, and so are the cyclamen and snowdrops. The Charlotte variety looks sweet - I'll try and remember the name and look out for it.
ReplyDeleteLove your front garden border, so pretty, just like a tapestry! Also like your snowdrops, they are all looking good at the moment, I think they have liked all the rain! I'm inspired by your lonicera, my gardener cut mine into a blobby shape even after I drew out the shape I wanted, maybe I will have to do it myself!
ReplyDeleteYou're right, I'll have to start pruning the roses because there are so many new shoots. Nice crocuses, and you're lucky to have had some sunshine to photograph them in full bloom.
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