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General gardening tips and hints

Chionodoxa – Glory of The Snow

Chionodoxa – Glory of The Snow

Chindoxia

Chionodoxa are beautiful, hardy spring flowering bulbs that are easy to grow. They grow 6inches tall from small bulbs and have pretty star-shaped flowers with long narrow leaves. (Also spelled Chinodoxa and common name Glory of the Snow). The blossom has a central line on each of 6 petals.

Cultivation 0f Chionodoxa

They do well in most garden soil. Plant 2-3″ deep.
Chinodoxa are most effective when planted in clumps and allowed to naturalise.
Suitable for rockeries and growing in pots.
Flowers lasts for 3-4 weeks, after which both the flowers and the foliage die back.

Chinodoxa Varieties

Chinodoxa Lucilliae is widely available and flowers bright blue
Chinodoxa Luciliae Alba is a clear white with star shaped flowers in March.
Chinodoxa  Forbesii Pink Giant produces a wealth of pink flowers.
Chinodoxa Forbesii is bright blue with a white centre.

Chinodoxia Alba

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Windswept Gardening Plant Selections

Windswept Gardening Plant Selections

Are you a windswept gardener who suffers from prevailing and random wind (in the garden I mean). Well here are some tips and plant selections to help make the most of your conditions. Your other suggestions would be welcome.

Initial Thoughts of the Windswept
(move home)

  • Screen a windy site with Trees and Shrubs then fill in with sturdy perennials.
  • Think of wind breaks when locating garden furniture or planning a new hedge.
  • Seaside gardens hint at some of the great garden features that you can incorporate into your windy garden.
  • Drought or water shortage often goes with a windswept garden so select plants that are also drought tolerant.
  • After planting give new additions some protection until they are established and water regularly until the roots grow. I put large pots, fleece barriers and even temporary trellis near new plants.

Selection of Trees

Free Plants from Layering, Cuttings and Division

Free Plants from Layering, Cuttings and Division

It can be very satisfying to grow more plants for free. There are several ways including layering and cuttings than can help you increase your stock of plants. Then you can give them away, plant them, resell or just use them to protect against losses of your favourites.

layering basic

Layering

As shown above layering involves little trauma to the parent plant and works particularly well for plants with a single tap root.
A low stem or branch is bent into contact with the soil and pegged down to the soil. I put more soil or a stone over it to keep it down. Encourage the end to poke vertically out of the soil and tie it too a cane if it needs support. Try layering on Rhododendrons or Daphnes but not annuals.
For woody plants it will take some time for new roots to form before the new plant can be cut from the parent. To speed up the process cut the stem half-way through and make a small slit. This will form a tongue where the new roots can start to grow.
You can make your own pins to hold plants down by bending a 6 inch piece of firm wire a couple of inches from the end.
For some plants like violas, primulas and heathers, it is enough to cover the stems from the crown with new compost and in a few months new roots will have formed making pre-rooted cuttings.

Pink Grans Favourite
Pinks and Carnations are popular plants to propagate from layering.
Hardwood Cuttings

Take a long cutting of ripened wood. Trim below a node and remove lower leaves. Remove a one inch long, thin strip of bark at the base of the cutting. Dip in hormone rooting compound and plant two-thirds into soil and firm down. Semi-ripened wood works better for some plants like Ericaceas.
Roses can be increased this way but success is not 100%.
All such cuttings should grow true to the original plant.

Other Cuttings

Young growth 1-3 inches long should be cut from side shoots or stem of the parent plant. Trim below a node (leaf joint) and remove any leaves that will be below soil level. Dip in hormone rooting powder or liquid.
Put several cuttings around the edge of a pot and water the soil from the bottom. A base heater will speed up root growth but any light place out of direct sun will suffice. Cover the pot with a plastic bag or the top of an old pop bottle to retain moisture until new growth is noticed. This method is good for Dahlias, Lupins and Delphiniums amongst other herbaceous plants.
I often just push prunings (of Box and Flowering Currant) back into the soil.
Most of my Pelargoniums are now generations old from numerous cuttings.
Pelargonium

Rosettes

Some plants grow off-shoots or extra rosettes.
These can be potted up and treated like cuttings by putting them in gritty compost to avoid rotting. As with all propagation use clean, sharp tools and fresh materials.

Division and Root Cuttings

Hebaceous plants like Hostas, Phlox, Day Lilies, Campanulas, Michaelmas daisies and Ferns can be increased by division of the root. Take the edge of a clump with some root and replant. Alternatively dig up the plant and chop the root into large pieces discarding any poor material from the center of the plant. Replant the new pieces and you will have new rejuvenated plants next year.

Be on the look out in your garden for suckers that can be grown on to form new plants.
Loganberries and Blackberries may have rooted them selves from the tips of stems that touched the soil.
Self sown seedlings or collected seed is one of the most popular way of acquiring more plants.
Good luck with finding and creating your own Free Plants.

Growing Aeonium Succulents

Growing Aeonium Succulents

This fine specimen Aeonium arboreum is growing outside in an area sheltered from wind  rain and frost. The variety is Schwarzkopf in honour of the deep purple leaves that look almost black. Others varieties of ‘Tree Aeoniums’ include Atropurpureum a dark red and Variegatum a creamy white with green is an indoor plant nicknamed ‘Youth and Old Age’.

Aeonium arboreum is a bushy perennial with stems crowned by a rosette 6-8″ across. It bears golden flowers in spring on 3 year old stems that then die. It can be grown in a large pot and brought into a conservatory during a hard winter.  Aeonium arboreum need a mineral rich soil so a mix of clay and sand is often used. Keep the plants on the dry side during winter and away from frost. Propagate by removing small rosettes with a piece of stem and potting up in sandy soil. Keep shaded whilst rooting.

They are also sold as houseplants and need a bright airy window sill where they will form a neat compact plant. For the rock garden you may want to try Aeonium haworthii ‘Pinwheel’ which bears rosettes of blueish green with red tinged edges. This grows 2′ high and spreads 3′ with freely branching stems.

 

It is March and my Aeoniums have survived the winter so far but snow is forecast! I left them outside in a home made cold frame to protect from the wet but now I am panicing.

Flowers Attracting Insects

Flowers Attracting Insects

Images to get your thoughts and garden buzzing.

The wasp has the right colouring  to act as camouflage on this Tagetee.  For a small flower, little bigger than a 5p piece, the tagetee is punching above it’s weight for insect pulling power. Caught late in the day when the shadows are beginning to lengthen there is always something to spot in a well planted garden.

Tagetees are used in the green house to attract white fly away from Tomatoes or better still deter them in the first place.

My old favourite the Cystus is flowering again after its earlier summer performance. Not as much blossom but all the more welcome for this second flush and a chance for insects to stock up on more nectar.

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Improved Clay Soil

Improved Clay Soil

Mulch mulch and more mulch is a must for getting humus into clay soil.

HC 057

Does your soil sticks to your shoes and garden tools like glue? Is your soil slow to warm up in the spring and hard to manage? If your soil is slow draining, forms big clods, crusts over and cracks in dry weather then you have clay or even heavy clay soil.
Clay soil is made up from very fine particles that make pure clay good for potters but not plant roots. One redeeming feature is that clay soil is generally rich in nutrients.

Improving Clay Soil

  • If gritty sandy soil is the opposite of clay soil it follows that mixing the two may get the best of both worlds. Add copious quantities of grit or gritty sand to your clay soil to open it up. Do not use builders sand as it is very alkaline or fine sand that will set like concrete.
  • Add even more copious quantities, 6 ” plus, of organic matter such as compost. I have tried wood chippings, spent mushroom compost, old feathers, composted bark and various other items to open up the texture. Dig it well in to the top 10″ as you not only incorporate the organic matter but you add air to the soil and help drainage.
  • Mulch with compost as often as possible and let worms drag it down into the soil.
  • Earthworms thrive on humus and breed rapidly if the conditions are right. You only need a handful or two to get things going so put a few on the soil when incorporating the compost.
  • Improving your clay soil will take time and patience.

Plants for Clay Soil.

  • Special seed mixes of wild flowers are available from Amazon

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Healing Plants and Treatments

Healing Plants and Treatments

Book Cover

 There are many plants and ways of using them to boost your health and help with healing. Herbalists since the 17th century like Nicholas Culpeper have recorded some of the best garden plants for healing.

Treatment Methods

  • Eating herbs and plants both raw and cooked is so natural we sometimes do not think about foods healing properties.
  • ‘Decoctions’ are created by boiling a plant whilst ‘Infusions’ or ‘Teas’ have water poured on them and brewed. A ‘Syrup’ is one of the former that has had sugar added and reduced to a syrup.
  • ‘Oils’ are produced when herbs are infused in vegetable oil and a small amount of vinegar.’ Tinctures’ are extracts preserved in alcohol.
  • ‘Cold Compresses’ are used externally and ‘Poultices’ are commonly applied warm or hot.
  • ‘Ointments’ are either mixed with petroleum jelly or the term can apply to the sap of plants used directly.

10 Top Treatments

  • Aloe Vera often called the first aid plant. Use the sap for minor cuts, bruises and burns applied  directly on to the wound.
  • Chew a Parsley leaf as a breath freshener.
  • Calendula or Pot Marigold flowers can be infused and used for dry skin or internally as a digestive aid
  • Lavender for scenting linen, making sleep pillows or just sprinkling in a bath.
  • Sempervivum sap can take the sting out of insect bites and Dock leaves from nettle stings.
  • Rosemary or Camomile teas are used as a hair rinse to make your hair shine
  • Thyme or Verbascum leaves infused as a tea becomes a treatment for sore throats
  • A handful of fresh herb leaves including Bay dropped into a bath can stimulate the senses. You can use the leaves to make bouquet garni for cooking.
  • Onion as a soup especially with sage is great for treating coughs and colds.

Book Cover
Book Cover

The Healing Garden Eden Project by Sue Minter

Grow Your Own Pharmacy by Linda Gray

Grow Your Own Drugs by James Wong

Tips to Increase Greenhouse Capacity

Tips to Increase Greenhouse Capacity

Grow with the flow and in early spring that flow is in the greenhouse

Greenhouse

Acclimatised to Global Warming?
Easter snow flurries and April frosts have hampered planting so far this year, but gardeners will be hoping that the May bank holiday weekend offers some respite from the unseasonable cold and rain. Gardens will catch up from the colder than average start to spring. In fact we have been getting ahead of ourselves in recent years with earlier and earlier starts to the year and warmer than average spells in May and June.

To coin or corrupt an old phrase ‘Ne’re plant out till May is out’. Or if in doubt protect young seedlings from cold and frosty weather. I am referring to the month of May not May blossom the flower of the Hawthorn (Crataegus Monogyna) which is often used to celebrate May Day.

Temporary Greenhouse Capacity

Greenhouses will be full to bursting before it is safe to plant out so consider other temporary protection. First though make sure you use staging and shelves to optimise your main greenhouse. Don’t forget to water plants left under staging. You can hang some plants from the roof of many greenhouses.

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Cultivating Japanese Maples -Acer

Cultivating Japanese Maples -Acer

Acer palmatum dissectum atropurpureum

  • Acer is the genus for a range of trees that includes the Sycamore and some of the loveliest foliage trees for your garden.
  • palmatum the species name refers to the hand shaped leaves
  • dissectum or variety name reflects how the feathery leaves are finely separated and deeply cut or fringed
  • atropurpureum is the colour of deep purple leaves that turn bright red in autumn
  • Japanese Maple is a generic name for a range of Acers which have this semblance of age and dignity even when the trees are small and relatively young.

Hints on Cultivation

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Snapdragons aka Antirrhinum majus

Snapdragons aka Antirrhinum majus

Antirrhinum

Snapdragons or better known as Antirrhinum are an easy flower to grow and they provide lots of colour with a distinctive scent. Good F1 plants can grow more than 2′ tall and if pinched out they bush out quite well.
Available in a wide range of colours I try and grow the same colours together to enhance the effect.

Where to Grow Snapdragons

These plants are good border flowers and can be planted in blocks, lines or singly.
Snapdragons do not need special soil conditions but flower best in sunshine.
Smaller varieties can be grown in containers.

How to Grow Snapdragons

I plant plug plants from the end of April to get quick flowers.
For raising Antirrhinums from seed read these tips
Pinch out the tallest growing shoot when it is about 3″ tall to encourage branching and thus more flowers.
Feed with a tomato fertilizer if you want extra blooms.
Water early in the day, plants should not be left wet overnight – distorted growth can result.

Snapdragons as Cut Flowers

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