Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Visit 23/24th July 2012
35 mills in the gauge. Weather cool but reasonable. There had been a couple of very heavy frosts over the past fortnight according to neighbours. This was evident as daisies and the red hot pokers (Winter Cheer) had been severely hit. Some won't survive.


Winter irises were at their best, blue and white. Particularly pleasing was the white variety. This is the second year it has flowered and will get bigger year by year.

The hellebores are doing well. They should be blooming until October.

As indicated last visit, daffodils are later blooming this year. However they are beginning to bloom and make a show together with the Winter Joy wallfowers.
A few crocuses had sprung up in the garden on the south side. Not sure where they'd come from.



These pokers (Kniphofia sarmentosa) are about to bloom around the garden. They certainly are comfortable in the cold. 

Candytuft seedlings have sprung up around the place They should make a good show in the late Spring. I divided a campanula (white with a blue fleck) and planted one down on the back fence.
I continued the planting down at the dam, with a couple of salvias, including Bog Sage. 
I was visited by some arborists from Melton who lopped the laurel close to the house. It had been starting to grow over the roof and I was pleased to get the job done although neighbours were horrified at the price. The branches were mulched so can be used around the garden.



1 comment:

  1. There's some lovely mid-winter blooms around your garden right now. The Irises are beautiful, and those Daffs and Wallflowers make a very pretty combination. What a wonderful surprise to see Crocuses popping up as well. Of course all these are plants that can't be grown up here in the far north ... but are plants I've always wanted to grow. Salvias, on the other hand, do thrive up here and are fast becoming one of my favourite plants.

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