Discovering my other self!

Monday, September 9, 2019

One month on from our wedding it has been good to have time to visit friends, have friends visit us, go garden visiting and do some key jobs in the garden.

You might have wondered from the headline to this news item if I was going to reveal some hidden secrets about how our lives have changed since we got married. Well, we are pleased to say that our lives have gone on in the same way that they have in the last 38 years, but we do both enjoy being Mr and Mrs Brown!

The germ of the idea for the headline came from walking around the borders all over the garden and reflecting how they have advanced over the 20 years or so that they have been been planted.

Having grown up in my early gardening years with bedding plants, heathers, a few shrubs and of course vegetables I had no experience of planting up a garden the size of Cilgwyn Lodge or of how to integrate a wide range of herbaceous plants and shrubs into the attractive mixed borders I was eager to create. Visits to other gardens, books and periodicals were all part of the pathway leading to my end goal. Not to say that I ever got it right first time! The biggest influence on me were the books of Gertrude Jekyll in particular her classic "Colour Schemes for the Flower Garden". Quite old fashioned perhaps for many tastes but exactly what I was looking for at that time. The book is still available on line

 

Her mantra for border design was Flow and Harmony and colours and forms that sat comfortably together. Where the scale of a garden permitted, she also espoused the principle of double borders opposite each other, either in a contrasting style to each other or complementing each other. This matched exactly what I had planned for Cilgwyn, one border in sun and well drained soil, the other in shade with retentive soil, which gave me the chance to use a wider range of plants in each which all plants people love, affording the opportunity to acquire as many different pants as possible. 

 The 2 main borders in the garden are in the contrasting style and are 40 metres long and 7 metres wide

P1060571

 The Red Border

P1060567

The Pastels and yellow border

P1060570

For years I  adhered to the same principles but latterly as horticultural styles and tastes have changed I have begun to find my other self, not to the extent that I have been inclined to radically change the planting combinations for the sake of it. But looking to be more adventurous when planting out in established borders, newly acquired plants, and limiting the amount of staking that I do to support border plants but letting plants stand as free and naturalistic as possible.

This orange lily henryi are growing through a large hydrange Annabelle, wich for me makes a pleasing contrast. I never would have thought I would grow so fond of orange and embraced it so much all over the gardens!

P1060607

 Relaxed planting in a seed sown Wildflower type garden

P1060532

The more plants are set out close to each other the more able they seem to stand without additional support.If not a gentle stake or cane can be slipped in. Some of the smaller plants lend themselves to this more than the "jungle Giants" that are long established here and would be damaged in inclement weather without judicious use of stakes.

 

P1060425

Some strong growing perennials like acanthus are capable most of the time of supporting themselves.

P1060428

 Contrasting forms of hakanachloa macra, a superb pendant form of Japanese grass, and a yellow daisy family member, inula hookeri, in one of the smaller borders in the House Garden, and have different leaves and flowers

CP1060634

 

If you regularly read our News or have ever visited the gardens you will have no doubt formed your own opinions! In all their guises they have given us such immense pleasure over the years and hopefully they will continue to do so. 

 

Weather

After a month of drought conditions in July it was good to have some welcome rain this month although we could have done without the strong winds that often accompanied it. The streams and rivers are flowing again as are the springs of those of our neighbours who have no mains water for themselves or livestock.

 

The monthly stats show what a mixed bag of weather we had including the first thunder and lightning for some time, on 9th. Weather stats on 4 days were not recorded when we were away

Sun:- 10 days. Max 26.14 on 25th.  There were 12 days with tempertures over 20C

Rain:- 4 days Most of the rain came in spells of changeable weather and total rainfall levels measured 8.7 inches

Changeable weather:- 11 days

Remarkably for August there were numerous records of relatively low overnight temperatures with a min of 4C (no damage done!) on 14th and a total of 19 nights under 15C

 Perhaps in response to the changing weather conditions there were signs of the steady advance of autumn

P1060585

 Sorbus Olympic Flame is always one of the earliest trees in the garden to show some leaf colour but by the time of writing, September 4th, it had started to take on its fiery red suggested by the name.

P1060630

 

P1060562

Garden Update

The welcome rains have really freshened up the gardens, and the veg which we have watered regularly, have gone crazy! All the legumes at last presented us with a very large  harvest of peas, dwarf beans and runner beans, one of the best crops for many years. 

Runner bean "White Lady"

P1060537

 All time favourite pea "Hurst Green Shaft"

P1060540

 Peas and dwarf beans

P1060514

 A basket of yellow veg, some of which will be familiar, perhaps save for the yellow dwarf beans which were bred in Poland and gave it the appropriate name of "Polka"It has a lovely creamy texture and mixes well with a similar sized climbing French bean called "Cobra" and they look good together on a plate.

Courgettes of varying colours. The yellow ones are soft and mild in texture but cook just as well as the green forms

IP1060584

 Sweet corn "Swift"are really cropping well with very  large cobs that the birds are are troubling as they often do, but not as severely as usual.  The pic below  shows the damage they can do!

P1060582

 

P1060580

 Onions harvested before the worst of the rain came, drying in the large greenhouse

P1060542

 As crops finish they and are cleared, we use the space they leave behind to sow later season crops. These two rows of seedlings are carrots which I have taken a chance with much earlier than I have before, because the main crop carrots have produced a disappointing harvest this summer.

P1060539

 Some of the worst carrots! Embarassed to show you!! Hardly any carrot fly damage though.

P1060631

 No clubroot either on the brassicas this year which whatever the variety or type always come up with a fine set of roots. which has not been the case for some years.

P1060538

 

P1060601

 Always something to cut back or clear away all over the garden   and even on the wettest of days Moira plays a considerable part in this.

P1060583

With the grass wet for much of the month the rate of mowing has slowed down, and when I do mow it takes 2 cuts over several days to bring the grass down slowly otherwise it would go yellow or chew up

The ponds have filled up and the Paddock pond is much clearer now that the stream that feeds it is flowing strongly

P1060610

 

P1060611

 

P1060617

 

P1060609

The Koi pond has been a problem most of the year as the pump has been failing and the filters blocked so it needed considerable attention. The Koi too were becoming stressed especially in hot spells of weather. Our friends Tony and Sylvia, on a visit to Cilgwyn, suggested that we got to work to solve the problems. Tony had devised the pond sytems based on a model of his own at home. The problems were resolved and the fish are now looking much better. See pic above

 

What is/was looking good

August is a time when a different range of plants come into growth to add to those that have been flowering for several months. As usual pics to show the best of all these

 An interesting range of plants in this smaller border  which I have replanted over the past 5 years or so in tune with my other self!

P1060544

 Lilium speciosum rubrum

P1060574

 Lilium auratrum "Gold Band" sometimes also called called The golden rayed lily of Japan. Exquisite perfume too.

P1060613

 

Hydrangea paniculata "Vanille Fraise" which like others in this group, changes colour later in the season from white to various shades of pink. The blue of lobelia siphilitica sits well with it and a red dahlia peeps in from the nearby Red Border!

P1060623

 The same plant looking up the Paddock Garden from a different angle with other border companions. Quite clever that of me to use it twice he said modestly

P1060639 

 We have a good range of crocosmias in most shades but I have always been fond of ". Emberglow" which has a prime place in the Red Border. I had Lucifer in this border but found it too orange with the rest of the reds and has a tendancy to flop over the other plants companions

P1060563

 A recent introduction  has, for me, put all the other red forms in the shade with its deep red flowers and no trace of yellow in the eye, Some of the old me in this!! but I really do like it.

P1060564

 One of the top summer perennials for August which is a special favourite of mine, is rudbeckia var sullivantii "Goldsturm". I like it so much I chose it for the Banner Image of our website! Such a joyful riposte to the forthcoming Autumn.

P1060594

 Roscoea "Spice Isand" with fluffy pink tails of sanguisorba hakusanensis in the form collected by Crug Farm Nursery known by its collection name as B&SWJ8709

P1060589

There are other roscoeas in the gardens with an increasingly wide range to choose from. There are many hybrid forms, not always named, this one often called simply purpurea possibly originating in part from "Brown Peacock" Looking really tender but they are hardy, solid, reliable perennials for rich soil in shade or part shade

P1060591

 

 Paniculata hydrangea, an unknown form which I cut back earier in the year which has the effect of producing much larger flowers than the norm. A lovely contrast with the deep purple of monarda "Prairie Night" or "Prarienacht"

P1060628

 

Another fine  monarda is "Snow White" or Schneewittchen" which looks good even when it is aging.

P1060632

 

I hope I have got the monarda names correct! as a very good friend of ours is Carole Whittaker who is a National Plant Collection Holder of Monarda for Plant Heritage. If you are interested in this genus go to her website for information and visiting arrangements during their flowering season. www.glynbachgardens.co.uk

 

Chelone Obliqua

P1060605

The so called "turtle head" It desrves a better common name than that!. Flowers for up to 3 months from early August with a vibrant pink

P1060606

 

With so much colour elsewhere in the gardens it makes a change to have a cooling contrast. This happy combination of green umbelifers is composed of Bupleurum Fruticosum (a medium shrub) in the foreground of the pic, and green fennel at the back. The borrowed landscape adding furher tones of green.

P1060427

 Another monochrome composition formed by double gysophila and eryngium varifolium.

P1060436

 Clematis have done well and are flowering their hearts out in a wide variety This one being "Blue Belle" Remarkably large flowers for a member of the viticella group.

P1060530

 This more delicate flowered form is "Heather Herschell" Intergrifolia group

P1060527

 Up the 12 sweet pea wigwams we grow a mix of other clematis

P1060534

White phlox, a lone  lily and a fine stand of echinops ritro

P1060522

 

 

Wildlife and Countryside

The plethora of butterflies was the best we have had for years including last summer. Nothing particularly unusual but they were everywhere!

P1060333

 

P1060690

P1060578

 

P1060620

 So good to see so many Painted Ladies returning from their long journeys back from Africa

P1060598

 

P1060626

 We had to travel to the coast to see a blue butterfly that we have never seen here

P1060481 

Two bird sightings were welcome The first kingfisher for a long time over the Paddock Pond which flew straight over me! when I was clearing the pond weed.

Secondly a bird I have heard a lot over the last month and seen just twice. The green woodpecker or Yaffle in English dialect. Common in Gloucestershire where I came from, but not so much here over the last 43 years. The call of the bird is one that once heard is never forgotten.

www.british-birdsongs.uk/green-woodpecker/

On the way back home from Powis Castle there were numerous fine stands of wild chicory along the road verges often mingling attractively with other wild flowers.

P1060423

Just one feed of large field mushrooms courtesy of a local farmer friend.

 P1060521

Visits

We really made up for lost time with many more visits than in the last 4 months! 6 gardens in all, including some of our old favourites, truly exceptional gardens, especially a new one that in time, as it matures, is likely to become a legend:- Broughton Grange, Banbury, Oxfordshire.

www.broughtongrange.com

350acres of gardens including arboreta, water features, formal borders in a variety of habitats, all designed from scratch by Tom Stuart- Smith and constructed in 2001

P1060253

New twists in design appear at every time you turn around 

P1060250

 

P1060257

 

P1060266

The gardens have only relatively recently started opening to the public but there are facilities available and a refreshment marquee serving simple lunches with produce from the gardens. Very welcome on a cold wet day!

P1060259

P1060267

 

P1060263

P1060278

 

P1060293

 

 A striking and rarely encountered feature is a shade walk through banks of peat blocks with a wide range of planting combinations.

P1060298

 

P1060300

 The wider landscape on a distant ridge

P1060313

John one of our friends showed his gift for walking on the water  of one of the rills!!

P1060317

 

P1060318

 From the new to the old, and one with a modern link to Broughton Grange

Trentham Gardens Stoke on Trent www.trentham.co.uk

Records of gardens there go back to approx 1759 when they were remodelled by Capability Brown (not a close relative of mine!) There have been subsequent remodellings over the centuries including modern designers Piet Oudorf and Tom Stuart- Smith which is where the link to Broughton Grange comes in. Compare this pic, with an almost identical one from Broughton. 

P1060663

 

P1060662

 

P1060665

 Part of a very old estate there are numerous buildings and artefacts  to experience

P1060670

 

P1060672

 The lake is one mile long!

P1060678

 Very handy for a boat trip and to show off  one of the many fun items that pop up all over the huge garden.

P1060681

 

P1060677

 A Fairy figure crafted from steel, ideal for the many children and their parents attracted by the venue

P1060659

 The entrance borders have considerable impact as they have to in a garden on such a large scale. Think how out of proportion bedding borders would look!

P1060652

 

P1060686

 The gardens are part of a larger estate which has considerable commercial outlets which are not in the gardens so  they never detract from the gardens which have to be financially supported to keep up their maintenance and development all of which are excellent.

P1060654

 Powis Castle, Welshpool' Powys. www.nationaltrust.org.uk.>powis-castle-and-garden

The oldest gardens (From 1680) we visited. South facing on a stunning site

 

 

P1060383

 

P1060364

 

P1060372

 

P1060389

 

P1060392

 

P1060393

 The gardens are very steep and Moira kindly volunteered to demonstrate this!

P1060397

 

 Kiftsgate Court Gardens, Chipping Camden, Glos.   www.kiftsgate.co.uk

The final one of the old gardens which in parts is also on a steep slope.

Celebrating the Gardens 100th anniversary this year having been developed by 3 generations of lady gardeners from the same family and still in the same ownership.

Just down the road from Hidcote but Kiftsgate should be your first choice to visit!

NJustP1060346

 

P1060334

 

P1060343

 The view across the Vale of Evesham is an added bonus when you visit the garden

P1060342

 Each of the ladies has added their own touches and this one of course is that of the current owner.

P1060338

 

As a change from garden visiting we paid a visit to the Pembrokeshire seaside with friends Sylvia and Tony.

 Freshwater West, Angle.

We are all devotees of Pembs but had never previously visited this huge beach

 P1060495

 The beach has firm sand and there is an added interest from the sand dunes that back it

P1060482

 Sea Holly is an added bomus in the dunes along with other sand loving plants

P1060473

However to find our native clematis vitalba in that setting was quite a surprise

P1060480

It is such a popular spot that parking can be an issue.

P1060468

 

Sections of the beach are covered in a range of attractive stones that merit beachcombing which can be quite obsessive!

P1060455

 

P1060472

 

 Syvia's work of art on the beach- no shortage of stones

P1060483

 

PHEW. What a marathon! Thanks for staying with me KeithX