Showing posts with label climbing plants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climbing plants. Show all posts

Saturday, February 9

The garden

The weather is perfect for pruning
warm, dry (ish) 
I have spent most of the day and a good day last weekend back out in the garden
That first work day of the year is a momentous one for any gardener
As you see the first shoots peeking up 
the ground is warming
the garden is waking up and so to do my gardeners fingers
Have you been watching Monty Don's French gardens on BBC
Last night he was talking about secateurs and how they changed the way we garden


Invented in 1818 by a French Noble man called 
Marquis Betrand de Molleville
who fled to England during the French revolution
Secateurs gave gardeners a way to make a clean cut with less force and 
get into places that were previously unreachable
 They literally shaped they way people gardened 
and still do today 

 
While everything is looking a little bleak in the garden right now 
there is something so promising about those bright green spikes poking through the debris
and it reminds me of what I can look forward too

 foxgloves in the garden last summer

last June in the garden

Clematis  and honeysuckle


The resolve and promises that this year it will be different
I will weed once a week
I will remember to stagger my seed planting
I will clump plants together to create impact
I will clear another patch of border from the grass
I will finally get around to reclaiming the vegetable patch ...........
well, I may achieve one of these
but the great thing about gardens is 
whatever I do, whether I procrastinate or not the garden will do it's thing 
the plants are not waiting for me to make a decision 
they are getting on with the business of growing 
I look forward to june and july when I can sit and look again at a green patch bursting with life 
but for now I am content with the promise 
 

Saturday, April 14

Country Garden


When I left my garden in 2010 to go to NY, It was looking like this 

When I returned in 2011, It looked like this


Clearly things were in need of attention!
I thought a lot about what to do,
start again?..... but there were so many plants in there
dig everything out ?.... where would I put them , would they survive?
In the end I decided
to divide the bed into sections and tackle a patch at a time

So I have been using the beautiful weather we have been having in Ireland 
as the perfect opportunity to get stuck in 

Digging out the path
-above I have laid the first lot of sand over the soil 

laying the path


and more path
The paving slabs are recycled from my Mum

I also moved a lot of plants 
splitting them in half or transplanting

I acquired some new ones too

nasturtiums, Lobelia, sweet pea
waiting to be planted 


Delphiniums, Lupins, and sage all waiting to be planted

I buy most of my plants from a local gardener
he propogates everything himself....... but never knows what colour the flowers will be
So, it is a bit of a pot luck
The delphiniums he says are white to pale blue
The Lupins you can tell by their stem if they will be pale or dark
(pale having a green stem ,dark having a reddish tinge)
so It is a bit of an experiment
but that's ok
My garden will be the kind of garden that it won't matter 
I also moved things to add a little bit of formality 
like planting Alchemilla Mollis all around the edge of the path

image via Here

I want it to billow over and soften the edges 
and repeat planting the same species 
Things look better en masse 
A garden is always a work in progress
Here is some of my inspiration


 
Image via escapade


Image via house to home

Lots of colour , and variety but a little more structure 
thats the plan

This Gentleman's garden is one of my absolute favourites a real inspiration

I will show you some updates over the season
x

Thursday, March 29

Spring Flowers


Spring is bursting
Last week in Ireland temperatures were 20 centigrade
record breaking highs
 One of my favourite things to do is pick flowers from my garden
This is something I really missed while living in NYC
It is amazing how something so simple can give so much joy
Currently the House is filled with blooms 

Living Rooms


the red flowering brances are Quince and are from a friends garden

Bathrooms
This is "cooks blue" from Farrow and Ball that some of you gave me advice on 
over on Facebook
really lovely colour




Study
The purple wallflowers and red tulips are from my mothers garden


In other exciting news I think my Wisteria is going to flower this year for the first time
As it takes 4 years on average for Wisteria climbers to flower
I AM BEYOND EXCITED !

I am pretty sure these are flower buds 

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