Looking good at the back

Clematis from original garden really good

Large flowered clematis from original garden is really good this year. I wonder what variety it is. I need to think about pruning, perhaps after first flowering.

Alliums

There are only about 3 allium plants left from the 10 pots of sprouting bulbs I planted 3 years ago, which did really well in the first year. This is partly due to other plants overwhelming them – fair enough. Also, I let the plants go to seed, because the seed heads look very attractive. A gardener at the National Botanic Garden said they will become weaker if you don’t dead head. The solution is to plant fresh each year. I’ll try planting some bulbs myself in pots or troughs this summer, and plant them out next spring.

Looking good at the front

Pruning perovskia

The National Botanic Garden prune their Perovskia really low. Nice effect

Daffodils in pots

I’ve fed these pots with tomato fertiliser. When the foliage has died down I could

  1. Lift the bulbs, dry them, and store them in the garage.
  2. Plant herbs or alpines over the bulbs and display as normal.
  3. Stack the pots with planks between the rows.

I haven’t got room to just leave them where they are.

Issues

The wisteria is producing no flowers yet, but it’s shape is much better.

The euphorbia is big, and will need to be cut back soon. See what I did last year.

The acer was the plant most affected by the recent high winds. Will it recover this year?

The bay looks much better now I’ve cut quite a bit off the top.

The cistus in F2 has flopped right over, but is flowering well.

Looking good today

The clematis montana is going up the ropes well. Rosa ‘Albertine’ shouldn’t be far behind.

The solanum will need a bit of tidying up when it’s finished flowering.

The cirsium in B2 look nice.