Gardeners Diary


It’s great to have soil under your fingers nails again.  It means that Spring is almost here and that the garden needs attention again.

Lythrum in full flower

 

I didn’t really plan to get planting today, but we had a lythrum that had self seeded itself in the “wrong” place and so it had to come out.   Lythrums are very hard plants to get out once you have them and we find that the only practical tool is a pickaxe.  The trouble was that the lythrum had managed to get in the middle of a clump of geraniums, so they had to be lifted to make space for the pickaxe.  Well, the good thing is that it meant that I divided the geranium and had a lot of new young plants to put in other areas of the garden.  There aren’t too many spare bits of ground in my garden even at this time of year, but I managed to find some homes for the new plants.

The plants are really taking off this Spring.  We had snow almost two months earlier than usual this winter and it is as if the plants have taken that as their cue and woken up much earlier than usual.  The red stems of the peonies are looking wonderful and the hemerocalis are growing really strongly.  The aqualegias are growing strongly and the daffodils are out.  The hellebores are looking wonderful this year.  One of my new ones turns out to be a pink speckled double – a real beauty.

Not all in the garden is rosy though – one of my vibernums has suffered very badly from vibernum leaf beetle over the last few years, so I decided that it was for the chop.  The underside of the leaves were badly infested with larvae eggs, and there was little that I could have done to stop the leaves turning to lace in a couple of months.  The good thing is that the shrub was stopping me seeing the true beauty of my Cercidiphyllum (aka Katsura) tree, so now I will really be able to enjoy its beauty and I have a whole new area to plant in my pond garden.

UK sales of gnomes doubled last year, according to one chain of garden stores.  So what is happening, are gnomes becoming fashionable again or are there other factors at work?

Certainly last week’s UK release of the movie “Gnomeo & Juliet” has given gnomes some media attention and may well lead to a revival in their popularity.   The range of gnomes available today is much less than in their hey day, but there are figures available in all manner of sizes.  Some like to relax after a hard day’s work in the garden, whilst others are ready to help out in the garden.  But surely the eponymous image of a garden gnome is one fishing.

So, why did gnomes fall from grace?  Fashions change, but gnomes became a hated items for many gardeners.  Quite possibly this was because their huge popularity lead to poorly made items in gaudy colours and cheap materials, even plastic was used.  Probably the final straw for most gardeners was the introduction of cheeky figures which pushed the boundaries of taste.   It is likely that the key thing is that they were a fashion and therefore, by definition, interest was bound to diminish.

For years, I said that I didn’t want gnomes – they just felt out of place in my garden.  A couple of my friends made it their business to find me a gnome that I was prepared to have in my garden.  I have to say that they came up trumps and I agreed to find homes for both gnomes that I was presented with.   When I wanted to photo one for this post,  I had to go searching for them in the garden – they are small and well hidden!  I managed to find the one above, who had fallen and was covered by some leaves.  As you can see, his colours are muted, he has a very friendly face and he is prepared to help me out in the garden.  I decided that for the photo I would move him to enjoy the cyclamen and wait for the hellebore to flower.  Who knows, he may end up staying in his new location.

The sad thing was that I couldn’t find the other gnome.  He is even smaller than the one above and his clothes are in shades of brown, a very cute fellow.  I think I will have to watch out for him when I am tidying this spring.  I think I know roughly where he should be – he is bound to be covered by quite a lot of fallen leaves.

Another factor in the claimed growth in sales may be a reclassification of the term gnome to include other humorous garden objects such as the digging dog.  For me, the first time I saw such an item, I was amused, but that quickly vanished.  I feel that these garden ornaments are a one line joke which pale very quickly with repetition.  My real life dogs don’t dig, and I hardly want a pretend one to do the job.

So, will I be buying more gnomes?  That is highly unlikely, however I wouldn’t totally rule out the possibility if I happened to find a small tasteful one somewhere.

My pond garden is about to have a major change in its environment – and I am not doing anything to make it happen.

My previous neighbours planted a Leylandii hedge, just on their side of the fence.  True to its reputation, the hedge has grown very fast, and not been kept trimmed back.  It has therefore become rather tall.  Each year I trim back what I can reach on my side of the fence, but as the trees get taller and taller, this has become more and more difficult, and I have gained a tree covered archway into my garden from the side gate.

My new neighbour had the trees trimmed back a little when she first moved in a couple of years ago, but this has only slightly reduced their race for the sky.  She has now researched the growth habit of the trees and understands that they will not regrow from dead wood.  I am really glad therefore that she has decided that the trees should go.

The only thing is that this means that I am going to have to totally rethink the planting on my side of the fence.  Currently I have concentrated on plants that can cope with dry shade since the trees took a great deal of the moisture available and obviously created a great deal of shade.  The one thing that I don’t plan to change is the ideology that in this area of the garden, the key focus is green rather than bright flowers.  The pond garden has been designed to be a restful area, very different in feel to the rest of the garden.

I will have to wait until the trees come down to see how much more light we will get in this part of the garden.  Then I will have lots of fun deciding which plants will suit the new conditions and then seeing if I am right.  I will have to remember that my neighbour does plant to replant this area, possibly with shrubs, so there probably won’t be a great deal more moisture available.

Now I wonder if this project will give ideas to my other neighbour who has a Leylandii hedge on my border.  Thank goodness they do trim theirs every few years, so my garden hasn’t totally lost all the light, but I do wish that more people were prepared to wait a little for plants to grow and bought less vigorous options.

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