Growing Hardy Perennial Geraniums

Growing Hardy Perennial Geraniums

Great plants for the herbaceous border, these hardy Geraniums are top notch plants that are easy to grow and cultivate.

Growing Characteristics

  • Low growing plants seldom higher than 12″. Geraniums make good plants for the front of borders.
  • Varieties exist to have flowering all through summer. Some varieties are continuous bloomers others once per season.
  • They will thrive in all types of soil and be rampant in good soil.
  • Flowering in shade, sun or partial shade makes them very acceptable additions in difficult parts of the garden.

Selected Varieties

  • Sanguineum Max Frie has a shocking pink flower.
  • Johnsons Blue, shown above, is a deep blue verging on lavender in the light used for this photo.
  • Sanguineum alba is, as you would guess, a clear white with yellow stamen.
  • Sanguineum Striatum is white with pink veins giving a stripped appearance.
  • Geranium pratense  is purple whilst Cinereum Ballerina is pink with deep pink stripped veins.
  • Geranium pratense ‘Laura’ double white with long lasting flowers
  • Hardy Geranium ‘Foundlings Friend’

Thompson Morgan supply a range of hardy geraniums in addition to their Zonal and indoor Pelargoniums which are some times called geraniums just to confuse.

Roses July Spruce Up

Roses July Spruce Up

Masquarade

It is mid July and the Roses have performed very well with an abundance of flower, scent and leaf growth. With the June flush over here are some quick tips to boost your Roses for the rest of the season.

Quick Rose Tips.

  • Water your Roses with a couple of gallons at least once a week. Do not be tempted to spread it out a pint at a time, they prefer a good long drink.
  • Mulch again after watering or rain
  • Trim over hanging plants that are robbing your roses of sunlight. More sun will equal more flowers!
  • You can give your plants a final Rose fertilizer boost. Do not leave it any later in the season as leggy and sappy growth from late fertilizer will do no one any good.
  • Deadhead all repeat flowering roses (if in doubt deadhead all those not being grown for the hips).
  • A summer tidy prune can help by trimming ungainly stems by 12-18″ to make the bush more shapely.
  • Stop deadheading in September to get the roses to think about winter.

Check out Rose Tips for June

Planting a new container grown Rose

  • Soak the container for 12 hours to give the rose chance to drink.
  • Dig an over sized hole and add some bone meal and or root grow fungi.
  • Plant the rose, teasing out the roots   and back fill with humus rich soil.
  • Water and mulch and keep watering until autumn.

garden rose

Read about Just Joey HT Rose

Top Ten Violas to Grow

Top Ten Violas to Grow

Viola self sown

Violas are more than just small pansies in fact Pansies are just over blown Violas. They are both in the family that also includes many species of Violets, Violas and Violettas.

Benefits of Violas

  • Many varieties and colours to select from without being overwhelmed by choice.
  • Masses of small flowers from spring / summer that virtually cover the plant.
  • Sweet scent on many varieties particularly the blue and purples.
  • Perennial habit on most varieties but annual varieties also set viable seed.

Viola profusion

Top Ten Viola Selection.

  1. Viola Tiger Eye with deep yellow petals and black veins radiating from the centre.
  2. Viola Scentsation lives up to it’s name with bright yellow scented flowers.
  3. Viola hybrida Rose Shades is bushy, compact and free flowering in various rose shades. Each bloom has an attractive yellow eye and darker whiskers, plus the bonus of a sweet fragrance.
  4. Viola Meteor is a compact form suitable for hanging baskets and containers.
  5. Viola Friolina will trail for up to 3 feet and is available in yellow, blue, orange, white or bi-colours.
  6. Viola x williamsiana Singing the Blues is an annual in several shades of blue.
  7. Viola Amber Kiss looks great in the catalogue but I have yet to try grow this semi double golden Viola.
  8. Viola x wittrockiana Jolly Joker with purple outer petals and orange inner petals has become a firm favourite.
  9. Viola x wittrockiana Water Colours Mixed F1 is another popular variety in pastel shades.
  10. Viola sororia ‘Albiflora’ is hard to track down but is a small white flowering species with purple whiskered petals.

Many of these seed and plant varieties are available from Thompson & Morgan Other suppliers include Gardening Direct or your local nursery.

Yellow Violas

Growing From Seed

  • Germination is not easy and some experience is useful.
  • Sow December to March or July to September on the surface of lightly firmed, moist seed compost in pots or trays.
  • Exclude light by covering with paper for 2 weeks.
  • Germinate around 65-70 °F too high a temperature prevents germination .
  • Overwinter late sowings in a coldframe then plant out the following spring.
  • Easy to grow on and care for.

Viola profusion

Pansies Violas and Violettas The Complete Guide from Amazon.

Description of Violas

  • Half-hardy annual or hardy perennial
  • Flowers in  Spring and Summer.
  • Green fleshy, leaves are heart shaped with jagged edges.
  • Ideal for  border edges, containers, patios and hanging baskets
  • Height  3-10 inches dependant on variety

Wikipedia lists over 200 species of viola for further exploration.

A Viola odorata national collection is maintained at groves Nurseries in Dorset where this cultivation guide can be found.

More pictures from Google

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Book Cover

Viola Photographs and Species

Violas and Violettas

Ilkley 002

Viola palustris
Viola palustris by pastilletes CC BY-SA 2.0

Viola riviniana
Viola riviniana by Jörg Hempel CC BY-SA 2.0

Viola uliginosa_3
Viola uliginosa_3 by amadej2008 CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 Bog Violet

Viola ocellata Western Hearts-ease
Viola ocellata Western Hearts-ease by davidhofmann08 CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Viola purpurea ssp. quercetorum Mountain Violet
Viola purpurea ssp. quercetorum Mountain Violet by davidhofmann08 CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Plants for Dry Gardens

Plants for Dry Gardens

French lavender

Hosepipe bans and talk of drought conditions turns gardeners minds to plants that can still thrive in those circumstances. I have suggested several types of plant to consider in the lists below.

Mediterranean Originated Herbs and Oil Producers

  • Lavender has pungent foliage and makes a scented oil. The dried flowers retain scent indoors.
  • Rosemary and Thyme are both herbs that will survive hot dry conditions. The sun even makes the flavour stronger.
  • Oregano or Origanum laevigatum is blooming fine in my herb bed. The deep pink flowers are a bonus to the aromatic leaves.
  • Other aromatics that will do well in dry conditions include Sage and Achillea.

Silver Leaved (sun reflecting) Plants

  • Pinks and carnations have fine thin leaves so they do not desiccate easily.
  • Santolina with fluffy yellow pompom flowers are good dry spot shrubs.
  • Cistus is a family of flowering shrubs that has developed an oily leaf to protect against water loss.
  • I like the silvery Sea Holly Eryngium giganteum which is a good doer in the dry spots.

Cistus Albidus

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Growing Inula and Inula Varieties

Growing Inula and Inula Varieties

Big, bold and brassy 3 reasons to love growing Inula

Inula

What is Inula

  • This is a yellow flowering, herbaceous, perennial that grows 3-4 feet tall in my garden. The leaves are large, gently serrated and light green.
  • The flower stalks have up to seven daisy like flowers on firm stems. Support in high winds.
  • Inula is very attractive to bees and hoverflies.
  • The flowers go brown in the centre once they have been fertilized.

Inula Varieties

  • Inula magnifica grows in most soil conditions and is good near a pond.
  • The pygmy Inula acaulis has rosettes of narrow 1.5″ leaves and golden daisies 1″ or more across.
  • Inula hookeri is a clump-forming perennial with hairy self supporting stems and large, spidery, yellow, daisy flowers.

<b>Inula

Propagation and More

Growing Juicy Red Strawberries

Growing Juicy Red Strawberries

Strawberry flowers
Strawberry plants are cheap and easy to grow. Strawberries can be picked from spring to autumn if you choose the right varieties.

Make a Strawberry Bed

  • Mark out a rectangular plot, 10 feet square will produce a reasonable crop.
  • Dig over the ground and add 2-3 buckets of organic matter per square yard.
  • Buy plants in September or April that are guaranteed disease free
  • Plant in rows 16″ apart, water and keep watered until the plants are established.
  • A board around the edge of the bed makes it look tidy.

Strawberries from florida


Growing Strawberries

  • When fruit appear put straw or black polythene under the fruit to keep slugs off and the fruit clean.
  • Birds may want to feast on your strawberries so put some string or netting across the bed.
  • Plants will crop for 3 years but start off a new bed to maintain continuity.
  • Runners should be removed or they will sap the strength from the plant resulting in less fruit.
  • To avoid disease don’t plant strawberries where peppers, tomatoes, eggplant and potatoes have been grown.

Tips. Strawberries do not need much feeding but do need plenty of water when fruiting.

strawberry blossom

Tips for Early Strawberries

  • Strawberries are symbolic of an English summer and Wimbledon in the middle of June. But, if you can grow strawberries to crop in May and late April, they will definitely be appreciated even more. They will also help avoid paying for more expensive supermarket strawberries.
  • To Grow early strawberries, the first thing is to choose the right varieties. ‘Royal Sovereign’ and Cambridge Favourite are two excellent varieties suitable for early forcing.
  • Pot the strawberry plants and bring them into a warm greenhouse. From march they will spring into growth and with sufficient light and water can be cropping from as early as late April. It is important that they are in a position to receive full sun. However, in the height of summer, plants under glass may need protection from scorching.
  • Another alternative is to place fleece over outside strawberries. This can be an easier way of forcing the flowering season.
  • Strawberries will also benefit from regular watering, good ventilation and feeding at the appropriate time.
  • As soon as the plants start to flower, cut off the runners to keep the energy focused into forming fruits.

Cultivation Tips

If you are looking forward to picking your own strawberries – congratulations. If you haven’t got around to organising a Strawberry bed but want too then here are some cultivation tips to help you.

  • Plant out healthy plants in August or September to give them chance to develop good roots and strong crowns before the soil gets cold.
  • Prepare the ground at least 2 weeks in advance removing all perennial weeds and couch grass. Incorporate well rotted compost to help retain moisture.
  • If your soil gets water logged or is heavy clay try growing Strawberries on the top of a soil ridge so the roots don’t rot.
  • If the leaves are a bit yellow it could be the sign of calcium deficiency so add a bit of lime to the soil.
  • Use plastic sheeting under the plants rather than straw to keep fruit clean and protected as it helps absorb heat and also controls weeds.
  • After 2 seasons the plants need replacing with new stock. Grow these on from runners that you have rooted yourself. Strawberries are easy to propagate this way.
  • If not rooting your own runners cut them off in May or they will sap the strength of the plant

Give it a try from purchased plants or donated runners juicy strawberries are quite easy to grow. Here are some varieties that you may wish to try.

  • Royal Sovereign can also be forced in 5” pots in a cold greenhouse for an early crop
  • Cambridge Favourite is a very good cropper
  • New varieties have been bred for the patio and hanging baskets like ‘sweet Success’
  • Flamenco will crop over a longer period
  • Any variety in a plastic strawberry barrel needs careful watering at all levels of the barrel – take care

If you want all your strawberries to be the same size and colour – If you want perfect strawberries everytime – then buy from a supermarket where they have been irradiated and homogenised.

For White Strawberries read about Pineberries an American hybrid strawberry that fruits white with red seeds.

Credit
Strawberries from florida by Dudus Maximus CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Roses Cultivation Month by Month

Roses Cultivation Month by Month

Roses a Month by Month Cultivation Guide

Just Joey

Growing good roses is not difficult and plants are reasonable and long lasting. Plant them in good soil feed and care for them and they will reward you with magnificent blooms, scent, cut flowers and a great summer show. As a guide to growing roses there is a list on monthly tips and actions to help get the best from your plants.

January
Prepare sites for new roses to be planted in spring. Double dig the ground and add organic matter, compost, humus and/or manure. Mix in bone meal.
If the soil is frozen or waterlogged and unsuitable for planting heel-in bare rooted roses and plant when conditions improve. Normally planting can take place when the roses are dormant from November to March.
Plant to the same level or depth that the rose was grown to – do not plant any grafting below the soils surface.
Check for wind damage causing plants to rock and prune back autumn planted roses if not already done so.
Spray with tar-oil wash to kill over-wintering pests.

February
If soil is still unsuitable cover bare rooted roses in frost free conditions
Firm in any rose trees loosened by gales or frost
Plant seeds from rosehips and species roses in pots in a cold greenhouse
Plant any bare rooted trees if the conditions allow, steep in water for 24 hours if the roots are dry and put banana skins and bone meal in the hole. I am happy to plant 18inches apart for most trees with a bit more or less space depending on the vigour of the type and variety.
Later in the month in sheltered gardens pruning of established plants can start. Cutting out weak stems and a third of the oldest, woodiest growth will encourage new shoots.
Thin out over grown ramblers but take care or you will loose the years flowers if they are not the repeat flowering varieties.

Rose

March
Complete the spring pruning. Cut at a 45 degree angle just above a bud.
Spray plants and surrounding soil with a fungicide to kill spores of Rust, Black spot and mildew.
Apply rose fertiliser with balanced NPK 5:5:10 and trace elements by raking in the granules
Mulch with bark or well rotted compost. Avoid grass clippings.
Prune in frost free weather. Prune climbers by halving the length of side shoots and removing weak or damaged growth. Cut out frost damaged growth to undamaged buds.

April
Complete the feeding and mulching of established roses. Good mulching will help ward off mildew in the summer.
Water recently planted roses winters can be quite dry.
Weed by hand to avoid damage to roots and encouragement of suckers.
Tie new shoots of climbers and ramblers. Keep growths as horizontal as practical to encourage flowers.
Container grown plants can be planted out in a hole twice the size of the container back filled with good soil enriched with humus and bone meal.
Container plants should be soaked a day before planting, if the root ball is planted dry it is unlikely to become wet and the plant will be stunted and sickly.

Rose

May
Spray roses with a systemic insecticide for saw flies and aphids. Pirmicarb insecticide if you can find it shouldn’t kill beneficial insects.
Spray with a systemic fungicide at the same time
Water young plants if the weather is dry
Under plant formal rose beds with annuals, herbs or violas
Plant container roses like the smaller patio varieties
Try layering to get a new plant. Take a young stem and peg it to the ground about 6 inches from its end. Nick the pegged point so roots can form and put a stone over the peg to conserve moisture.

June
Admire your first flush of flowers of the season – take time out to smell the flowers.
Water during prolonged dry spells but don’t let the soil ‘pan’ – hoe or fork the surface
Keep weeds at bay and don’t damage the rose roots.
For extra large blooms disbud hybrid tea roses by taking out all but one bud per stem to get a show stopping rose.
Deadhead any early flowering roses
Remove suckers by tearing away from the root source not cutting as this encourages twice as many. Suckers have seven leaves whilst most roses have five leaves.
Visit other gardens in bloom and make a note of favourite varieties.

Rose Plaisanterie バラ プレザントゥリ

July
Tie in vigorous shoots on climbers and ramblers- cut up tights are as good as other ties and cheaper.
Feed with a rose fertilizer NPK 5:5:10 – the extra potash is good for flowers
Ensure container grown plants do not dry out after planting
Bud new roses to grafting stock by removing a one inch bud and inserting it into a T cut at top of the root on the stock. Tie it in with raffia. In the spring cut back the grafting stock to the grafted bud.
Deadhead modern roses and climbers cutting back to a leaf joint
Deadhead old fashioned roses except those you want to display hips.
Deadheading hybrid Tea and Floribunda roses encourages a second flush of flowers in late summer.

August
Continue with the good husbandry of watering and spraying for pests and disease. Remove and burn any infected leaves and clear weeds as they start to grow.
Look out for mildew that can be worse in dry conditions so water and mulch.
Give plants a foliar feed as roses can absorb nutrients through the leaves. This may help in alkaline soils where plants find it hard to take up feed.
Continue to deadhead and remove any suckers.
Order new plants for autumn delivery.

Rose Naema バラ ナエマ

September
Apply sulphate of potash to harden new wood. Do not add other feed which encourages sappy growth that won’t survive winter.
Prune and tie up standard and half standard roses so they are not blown around in winter storms
Take 12 inch cuttings of ripe, woody shoots and plant them in a shady spot
Visit an autumn rose show at Harrogate or Malvern

October
Tidy up the rose beds, clear weeds and burn diseased leaves.
As flowers finish cut long stems back by about half to stop wind rocking the plants and damaging the rooting system during winter
Continue to take hardwood cuttings
Prepare any new bed with plenty of manure, mushroom compost or humus rich soil improvers

Rose Hip

November
When planting new rose trees trim any broken or damaged roots and prune out any weak growth.
When planting new trees, add a sprinkling of bone meal in the planting hole. Pack the soil firmly around the rose tree.
Plant climbers 15 inches away from a wall or fence and fan out the main stems

December
Transplant mature trees cutting back roots to about 12 inches. Cut growth back hard.
Sow seeds in a cold frame.
In really cold climates pile straw fir branches or soil around the plants to protect through winter.
Have a last check for ties, damage, diseased leaves and pruning needs.
Add roses or membership of the Royal National Rose Society to your Christmas wish list. http://www.rnrs.org/

Rose Inka バラ インカ


Credits
Rose by clouserw CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
Rose Plaisanterie, Rose Naema and Rose Inka バラ インカ by T.Kiya CC BY-SA 2.0

Triangular Rhubarb from Yorkshire

Triangular Rhubarb from Yorkshire

Rhubarb

Yesterday I ate a sharp, fresh Rhubarb crumble made from Rhubarb picked on my own patch and it was brilliant.

Special Tips for growing rhubarb .

Grow it in the West Riding of Yorkshire the heart of the Rhubarb triangle.
Do not pick all the stems from one crown, let some grow on and put energy back in for next year.
Do not pick late in the season for the same reason.
Water copiously in dry summers a couple of days before you pick the crop. Water even when it is raining.
Break off flowering stems as soon as you see them.
Pick and go so you eat fresh Rhubarb.

Neglected Rhubarb
I do very little to my rhubarb crowns and leave them to their own devices in a corner of the veg patch.
They produce lots of stems and deserve a good autumn feed of well rotted compost

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Growing Solanum Crispum Chile Potato Tree

Growing Solanum Crispum Chile Potato Tree

051

My Solanum Crispum is now about 8 feet high but is covered in purpley-blue blossom most of summer. I prune it to keep it at that height or it would go on to 20+ feet tall.

Plant Characteristics of Solanum Crispum

  • This shrub is related to the nightshade and potato family.
  • It is aka Chilean Potato Tree.
  • The flowers have an attractive yellow centre surrounded by blue flowers similar to potato flowers.
  • The base of the shrub becomes a bit bare after several years.
  • In mild winters, even in Yorkshire, it is evergreen.
  • It has a lax habit and I tie in some branches to a nearby hedge.

Growing Tips

  • I give it no special treatment of any sort, although it’s location is sunny.
  • Theoretically it likes alkaline soil and a high potash feed.
  • Propagate by layering, pegging a lower stem to the ground, or by semi ripe 3″ cuttings taken in late summer.
  • Despite being related to Potato all parts are all poisonous.
  • The variety ‘Glasnevin’ is the one to grow for prolific flowers.

Pruning Solanum

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