The garden feels to me as if it is in the doldrums, and maybe I am too. August is not the best month in my garden, the roses are over but waiting for their next flush, I haven't grown any traditional annuals the real autumn beauties are yet to shine, but the vegetables such as they are in my tiny veg patch are doing well. There will probably be far more positiveness over on Jim's post where others gather too to chew of the cud of what six things they want to talk about concerning their gardens.
1. Clematis 'Purpurea Plena Elegans' is finally reaching its purpose of clothing the bay tree with it beautiful many petalled purple flowers.
Talking of repotting, I decided that watering and looking after the individual pots of geraniums was getting a pain, and earlier I potted similar colours together in larger pots and hope with with fresh soil around the roots, they will fare a little better in the hotter weather to come.
3. Crepis incana is looking good. This Greek perennial plant has pink flowers borne on branched stems which rise up from soft grey green lobed leaves. I had grown this a few years ago and then lost the plant, this one was obtained and is its third year in the garden. It is like a many branched many petalled pink dandelion. It is quite rare as the flowers do not seem to be fertile or need many plants in order for the cross pollination to work. However, having said that, we have plenty of bumble bees around, and I may let a stem set seed and have a go, why not?
5. Today I cut down all the ripe pods of the self sown poppies. I like to harvest the seed to use in my baking.
Good luck with the Crepis incana experiment. I hope it works. I've collected seed from Crepis rubra in the past. Crepis incana looks lovely with its yellow centres. I've been walking into no end of cobwebs in the garden lately - and the car's wingmirrors are festooned with them every morning!
ReplyDeleteAt least being perennial the Crepis incana returns each year. I quite like the foliage too. I am on the look out for different spiders in the garden.
DeleteHi, I thought I'd pop over from Jim's blog to check out other gardeners from around the world. Gardening is my passion. It is surprising how many plants we all have in common. I think the dill plant is stunning. IT grows wild here. I tried growing some from packet seed once without success.
ReplyDeleteMy front garden is quite honestly looking like a dried out slope along the Portugese coast, as we have not had any good gardening rain for a long time. I think this is a culinary strain and really I ought not to have let it go to seed, but I do like the seed and when it has matured will use it in the kitchen and keep some to sow next year.
DeletePS, I can't see a subscribe by email
ReplyDeleteI don't think that is set up, but if you go right down to the bottom there is a followers, and maybe adding that will send you alerts. Otherwise I post most weeks, and you are most welcome to view previous posts, sometimes using the search right at the top will find the posts for you.
Delete