This is the third year they’ve flowered in their pots after being overwintered by the compost heap. They’re fed with tomato fertiliser once a week.
Back door path
Now the telescope is no longer wheeled down this path it doesn’t have to be kept wide.
Summer jasmine on N fence
The Jasminum officinale on the N fence was being held up by draping itself over the fence. When the neighbours cut the bit their side my side threatened to collapse, so I cut it right back to the rather attractive branches, which are now tied in to wires.
Hopefully it will recover. The birds were crosser than I was.
Looking good today
Only the neighbours really get to see the hydrangea, but it’s well worth going round to look.
For 11 months of the year I wonder why I keep the dianthus (carnation, pink?) in its pot. This is why.
Salvia ‘Caradonna’ is the only one I’ve tried that succeeds left in the ground.
There’s a neighbourhood cat that will destroy the nepeta if it gets the chance, but not when it’s this big, I think.
The acanthus may completely take over the NE corner, but I don’t mind.
It’s incredible how weedy the E fence fuchsia looked only a few months ago. See E fence in winter. But today I was cutting off great branches so I could get round the pond.
Lilium regale in pots
This is the second year of flowering having been left in their pots over winter. Very tall, but easily supported by wigwam of bamboos. Lily beetle irritating but not serious. Adults and larvae are quite easy to see on the very open foliage of thin leaves of regale. I go round once or twice a day squashing the adults, which I see very rarely and are extremely tough. I also squash the larvae, trying to forget what the red-brown goo they cover themselves in is.
See also earlier post.
Pond
One water soldier flower, like last year, but none the less welcome for that.
I really must clear out some bogbean and greater spearwort. You’re supposed to have 30% clear water.
Lily beetle
.c 10 larvae found on Lilium regale in pot 89 at the front, and one adult. Pot 90 at the back was completely clear.
One larva found in pot 93 of lilies from Homebase at the back. Third year of flowering. Nothing on similar pot 94 at the front.
I think this is the first time I’ve seen lily beetle in this garden.
Store pots out of the way over summer
These pots of (mainly) bulbs come again and again
Muscari | P47 | 4th year |
Snakes head fritillaries | P019 | Do much better than those in the border, but only after the first year |
Iris hollandica | P065 & P066 | Very good. Second year in 2020 |
Ficara verna ‘Brazen Hussy’ | P55 | Good. Doesn’t work in the border |
Corydalis ‘Beth Evans’ | P065 & P066 | Doesn’t really work in the border |
They’re not really in the way, and I’ve got enough pots for other things, so I suppose I might as well continue in this way.
Lifted some bulbs in pots
Lifted some bulbs from pots and put them in plastic troughs for the foliage to die off completely
Blue camassias | 3 pots | Failed this year. Too dry? Plenty of (quite small) bulbs |
Narcissus ‘Kinglet’ | P096 | Nothing above |
Narcissus ‘Lieke’ | P042 | Nothing above |
Compost some of last year’s pots
These plants, good in pots last year, are showing no new growth at all, so I put them on the compost heap:
Salvia ‘Love & Wishes’ | P170 |
Salvia ‘Kisses & Wishes’ | P201 |
Salvia convertiflora | P199 |
Rudbeckia ‘Summerina Orange’ | P192 |
Rudbeckia ‘Summerina Brown’ | P193 | Coreopsis ‘Sunstar Rose’ | P185 |