Our current leader for this weekly six things from our gardens was on Gardeners' World yesterday and everyone who watched the programme saw the Camelia specialist Jim. This morning as we come together for our weekly chinwag, we know he will still be the kind and generous host that he has been. So I shall be linking this post to his.
1. Last year I bought these lovely tulips as plants rather than bulbs just for their lovely rich golden yellow form, planted them and didn't expect them to come up another year and yet they have. I didn't even show them last year or noted their name. However they may well be Tulip Praestans Shogun. Later I shall scrabble through the bed and check to see if there are any labels. Yes it was T Praestans and I did write about it last year!
2. Not all bulbs do well or shall I say they may not have been planted in the right place or given the correct attention. Out of the beautiful White Thalia daffodil bulbs just this one remains.
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| White Thalia daffodil |
It still has thoroughly charmed me, and having read a little further about it, I have a little planting combination ideas and hope to set that up for next spring.
3. A short distance from Thalia in the shady border and some seedling of the original white Dicentra Spectabilis trying to grow through the Fatsia japonica Spiders Web. When I planted out the Dicentra the Fatsia was smaller. The Fatsia will continue to grow so this is another moment when I need to think of when and where I shall move the Dicentra to: a problem of gardeners of small gardens who have too many plants!
4. A star on the far edge of the gravel garden is this Ipheion 'Alberto Castillo' planted a few months ago. It is bigger and brighter than the others in the garden,
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| Ipheion 'Alberto Castillo' |
6. I have a number of violas in the garden and as they self seed, I tend to leave some to see what form the flower will take. This garden hybrid resulting from insect pollination is a little gem in the gravel garden. I can see a cross perhaps between Viola 'Bowles Black' and Viola Corsica.







Loads of gorgeous flowers this week but I especially love the dicentra/fatsia combination.
ReplyDeleteThanks Helen I just want to move the dicentra just to one side or else I can start to lift the lower part of the fatsia and that way not disturb the dicentra.
DeleteI love that yellow tulip, what a beauty! The little viola is a gem. Most of all I like the halo. What I wonder is, what didn't you buy that you wish you had. Have a lovely week, Sis x
ReplyDeleteSeveral things, but best I keep those to myself! There will be other Fairs and other times, and I still have lots to sow for this summer, and dreams of combinations to firm up before buying more. Thalia for sure for next spring for example, I will arrange a combo with Brunnera Jack Frost which I have already and which could do with dividing.
DeleteBeautiful spring showing!
ReplyDeleteI love that self-seeded Viola hybrid... and the halo. I wonder if the ground staff/gardeners wonder what's going on with the twig messages/symbols?!
ReplyDeleteWhite Thalia is indeed different from the one I presented, which, according to Jude, coult be 'Mount Hood'
ReplyDeleteThe F. 'Spider web' will grow, but not as much as the common fatsia, which here reaches 2m+.But you're right to move the dicentra
Those are really lovely tulips! Such a beautiful shape and colour. The Ipheion is also very attractive - we'll need to get some more varieties of those next year.
ReplyDeleteAll lovely. The white dicentra looks great with 'Spider's Web'. I grew this fatsia once but it just looked diseased, yours is a much clearer white. Do your dicentras do well? Mine get smaller every year, I don't know whether this is drought. Alberto Castillo on the other hand, spreads quickly into big clumps. Persicaria campanula is lovely; I hope you have lots of room.
ReplyDeleteThanks Chloris. The dicentra that do well, do well, but I have grown several others that don't seem to thrive. These white dicentra I grew from seed from the other which I had some time ago. Beth Evans does very well for me, and I have split the rhizomes several times, and I have also grown the little white Corydalis Malkensis from seed, which needs to be sown very fresh. Do you have that one? I also have Pseudofumaria alba – Corydalis ochroleuca, which seeds itself nicely and is easily removed.
DeleteI've planted the Persicaria, and should it outgrow its allotted space, it will be removed!
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