Monday, 17 March 2014

Natural resources

I confess that I like to use natural materials sourced locally wherever I can in the garden.  Hazel is one of Hampshire's great natural resources but it is such a pity that such large areas of woodland are no longer managed properly. 


The hazel I have used to make low hurdles around the garden comes from a managed woodland south of Stockbridge.  My contact, Jonathan, coppices the hazel and the woodland he manages is beautifully cultivated and he tells me alive with many varieties of rare butterflies in Summer.  An environment managed by man but in complete harmony with nature.  What's not to like about that!


Anyway, having had my delivery of hazel rods I spent a most enjoyable afternoon on Saturday weaving a low hurdle fence to divide off the original border from the Vegetable Garden.  I am a complete amateur but even I can make a decent rustic fence!



Sunday, 9 March 2014

Time for a mulch

The weather is lovely.  The sun shining and what's not to like about this time of year with a Summer ahead and promise in every swelling bud and unfurling small leaf.


But it is also time for a good thick mulch of compost to lay across the beds and borders like a blanket of dark brown snowfall.  This will supress weeds and seal in moisture while also making the beds look neat and tidy for months to come.  It also improves the soil composition and long term that can only be good on our chalky fast draining soil.


The delivery of municipal garden waste arrived on Friday and Saturday was spent with me barrowing the compost back and forth to the beds while Vanessa spread it around amongst the newly emerging plants.


Allium leaves are now in abundance - Purple Sensation, Nigrum and Mount Everest leaves can now be seen in drifts amongst the beds.  There is a freshness in the air and a clear crisp light now and the days are lengthening. 


Spring is in the air!

Saturday, 1 February 2014

The English Garden Magazine - Garden Tour

The garden here at Ordnance House has been included on a prestigious garden tour offered by The English Garden magazine titled - 'Hampshire's Hidden Gems'.

Details of the tour can be found on page 27 of the March issue and online at:
 http://www.theenglishgarden.co.uk/home/exclusive_garden_holiday_offer_1_3256664


The tour dates are 2 to 5 June and eight gardens will be featured within the Test and Itchen Valleys.  The trip looks terrific, but I confess that it is rather daunting to be included amongst an array of such fascinating, beautiful and incredibly interesting gardens.  I only hope we come up to scratch! This is, after all, still a very new garden.  But it has a tale to tell.  Of our hard labours, our success and our failures.  At least we can provide a narrative of its conception and creation.

All gardens have a story to tell of course and I am sure that each of the lovely gardens included as part of the tour will have their own intriguing tale.



Sunday, 12 January 2014

Back to the garden!

I really do think it is time to get back out into the garden.  High winds, driving rain, flooding and all the usual Yuletide mayhem have deprived me of the time I really wanted to spend in the garden.  But I did manage to get out and divide and move some plants. I have taken out all the Nepeta 'Six Hill's Giant' from the main avenue in the back garden and replanted them up our steep bank at the front.  I replaced these with more Nepeta - 'Walkers' Low' which although similar is less sprawling. No money needed to change hands as I had enough 'Walker's Low' elsewhere in the garden to divide up and move.  I even managed some mowing as the grass has continued to grow due to the mild temperatures.  Of course having such very sharp drainage also helps and means I can actually cut the grass at this time of year, something that would have been impossible in our old garden.





This weekend was all about adding some colour which I yearn for at this time of year.  I had decided that we needed a couple of tall planters next to the front door and so purchased some inexpensive galvanised florists pots.  They were rather bright and shiny when they arrived but I managed to sand them down and coat them with toilet bowl cleaner which I left overnight and this had the effect of aging them.  Drill some drainage holes, place some crocks in the bottom, fill with potting compost and plant some cream Primroses and delicious Hellebores ('Snow Dance') - and job done! I expect we will have more bad weather this Winter but at least we are now on the way to Spring.  Days will get longer, the weather slowly milder while I will be able to spend more time in the garden.



Sunday, 17 November 2013

The garden laid bare

It is November and time for the big cut back of the herbaceous borders.  They have completed their performance and now are over.  Time to cut back, allow light in and the cold of winter to scour the ground. 

Already I can see the promise of next Spring and Summer.  Small though it may be, next year's growth is there when you look closely and that is heartening. 

The nights now are longer, the daylight hours shorter.  But the garden feels at peace and at the beginning of a slumber.  It has looked quite wonderful for so long it deserves its repose.

But what is amazing is that the beech leaves have hardly fallen at all.  Our huge trees are still clad in Autumn gold.  I contrast this is my childhood years when trees would have been naked and bare at this time of year.  Climate change?  Well it would seem the seasons have shifted for sure and what should be an early winter landscape is little more than Autumn in its gold and bronze hues.

We will cut back more borders next week and then the garden will be back to its bare bones.  Nice to see especially when frost touches the garden and nice to be outside still enjoying it.



Sunday, 20 October 2013

Autumn shades

Autumn is here.  The shades of russet and yellow, orange and brown colour the garden by numbers.  The nights are lengthening and we have cooler, showery days now.  We are gradually putting the garden to rest for Winter.  It's time to cut the long grass in the orchard, clear borders and cut back herbaceous perennials.  Slowly the outlines of the garden, its plan and underlying bone structure can begin to be seen again after months of foaming frothiness.

We still have the intense purple of Verbena Bonariensis hovering over the beds while Tithonia rotundiflora 'Torch', the Mexican Sunflower, illuminates the borders with its brilliant orange flowers.  Cosmos too shines out of the gloomy dull light with its deep reds, pale pinks and luminescent whites.

I confess I am comfortable with the change enjoying the mood swing from a Summer of intense activity to a steadier pace.  The garden feels still and intimate.  It feels restful.  But I dread the onset of Winter and all that goes with it.  I can grudgingly endure it until the first weeks of New Year, then the burden weighs heavy upon me during the long uphill trudge to Spring.

No matter, life goes on, the garden continues to develop and mature and soon fulsome fat buds will appear on stems and branches with all the promise they bring of a new Spring over the distant horizon.


Sunday, 8 September 2013

Light of the Cosmos

As Summer draws nearer to its close we are blessed with colour.  It illuminates the garden and the lower level of the sun accentuates every shade.

The stars of the show now are Cosmos.  We purchased many varieties from Sarah Raven and have grown them on all Summer.  Now their flower heads shine above their froth of green foliage.

I am pleased with our choices to.  They include a collection of different varieties from white, through pink to dark plum as well as Cosmos bipinnatus 'Dazzler' and the white 'Purity'.  I also love Cosmos sonata 'White' and Cosmos 'Antiquity' but most of all I like the way they have interspersed with Verbena Bonariensis with the colour shades working well together.

And they provide height too giving every border where they are planted a fullness and voluptuousness.

So we are in a good place for the time of year with the garden looking as beautiful as it can.  We also have a few much needed rain showers helping to freshen everything up a little after a prolonged hot and dry spell.

But next year we will certainly add Cosmos to our shopping list - lovely, quite lovely.