Plants in our Garden – Aquilegia
November 24, 2010 by Linda
Filed under Plants in Our Garden
There are lots of varieties of Aquilegia (or granny’s bonnet) and I have three or four in my garden but my favourite is photographed here. Unfortunately I don’t know its full name.
Aquilegia live full sun but do well in partial shade too. They are fully hardy and flower during May and June, self seeding around the garden.
The flower colours vary from dark purple, through blue, pink and white and they all have delicate, pale green foliage.
They are easy to grow and need little care except to deadhead to help prolong flowering.
Keep an eye on children near this plant as the sap may cause skin irritation.
Buy your own Aquilegias from Crocus.co.uk
The photograph above is the property of Linda Peppin and must not be copied or used in any public work without her express permission.
Our Plant of the Month – Euphorbia
May 13, 2010 by Linda
Filed under Flowers and Plants
Euphorbias are a vast genus of fully hardy perennials with about 2000 varieties.
The like full sun or partial shade in light, well-drained soil. They are fast growing and flower during April and May with insignificant flowers. It is the bracts which give the colour, ranging from limey yellow to bright orange.
Euphorbia require little care, just cut back the faded flower stems in the autumn. Take care when working with euphorbia as the milky sap is poisonous and can cause skin irritations.
The Euphorbia in our garden is Euphorbia polychroma whose dark green, lance-shaped leaves are topped with a froth of bright, acid yellow spring flowers that form a distinctive star shape. In autumn the foliage turns a lovely shade of bronze.
Below is a selection of Euphorbias on sale at Crocus.co.uk, click on the pictures for more information:
| Euphorbia griffithii ‘Fireglow’ | Euphorbia × martini | Euphorbia amygdaloides ‘Purpurea’ | Euphorbia characias Silver Swan (‘Wilcott’) |
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Questions for October 2007
Question:
Please could you tell me whether the fuchsia “Shadow Dancer” is hardy?
Answer:
Your Fuchsia “Shadow Dancer” has a hardiness rating of H3 which means that you need to give it some protection from frost. Either move it into an unheated greenhouse or cover with horticultural fleece when frost is expected.
Question:
I have bought several small cuttings today of Buxus golden dream how big can this grow in height and spread and does it grow all year round should I water and feed it in winter thank you for any advice you can give.
Answer:
Buxus ‘Golden Dream’ is a compact, evergreen shrub with dense foliage. Its colour is most pronounced in full sun, but will it will grow in either full sun or partial shade. This plant can be used for anything from a low growing hedge to a nice, neat, accent in any garden. As with most all boxwoods, it prefers slightly cooler, moist soils with good drainage. A good top dressing of mulch will do wonders to keep the soil conditions favourable. Its height and spread is 3-4 ft and it grows at a moderate rate. Although this is a hardy shrub if the cuttings are particularly small I would keep them in their pots and protect them over this winter, planting them out once the risk of frost has passed next spring. They shouldn’t need any feeding this winter but make sure they don’t dry out. When you plant them out give then a good mulch of well rotted manure.
Plant of the Month for May
May 2, 2009 by Linda
Filed under Plants in Our Garden
Dicentra spectabilis or Bleeding Heart is one of the first plants to emerge in late spring and has arching sprays of dainty, rose-pink, heart-shaped flowers above fern-like, fresh green leaves.
It is extremely easy to grow and as long as the ground is moist it will thrive in full sun or partial shade and it looks great planted in groups towards the front of a shady border or as part of a cottage garden scheme.
Dicentras are happy in any good garden soil that is fertile but not too heavy. Enrich the soil with plenty of leaf mould before planting and apply a mulch in autumn too. A light fertilising in March will also help.
Clumps of dicentra remain compact for many years and do not need dividing however they have brittle roots and so do not like disturbance – instead, try taking root cuttings in spring.
BUY NOW!
Here are a selection of Dicentra from Crocus.co.uk – click here to find out more or to go shopping
| Dicentra spectabilis | Dicentra spectabilis ‘Alba’ | Dicentra ‘Bacchanal’ | Dicentra formosa ‘Aurora’ | Dicentra ‘King of Hearts’ |
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