Six On Saturday: Stop whingeing

I’ve been a little irritable of late. The garden is definitely pushing on but at a much slower pace than I would like. No matter how much energy I expend in muttering and moaning it will not stop dragging it’s heels. I give in, honestly. Not another word will be said on the subject. All in good time. The rain of this week will help things along and although it’s a challenge to find six things it is a challenge worth responding to. Here’s my six finds this week.

One

It’s raining this morning, so I headed off to the remaining greenhouse to see how things were going. Sometime last year I sowed seeds of echinacea ‘White Swan’ and echinacea pallida. I overwintered the seedlings in the greenhouse, in the last week they have generously responded to the rising temperatures. Most of these are pallida. Way back when I sowed them I had a clear plan, now I can’t remember it. But they will have to be on the sunny side of the garden so maybe they will help rejuvenate the thin border.

Two

Also sown last year, the seeds of lychnis coronaria. Around autumn time I potted on eight of the strongest. These have not faired well but those left in the seed tray and positively flourished and look twice as healthy! I will have a generous supply to dot around the garden.

Three

There has been plenty of sighing over lost plants but amazingly the scented leaf pellies are rising from the ashes. Just a few signs of green leaf but enough, I think, to be encouraging. I’ve just started to water them again and they will get a thorough cut back some time around the end of April.

Four

Proof that pulling the stems of climbing roses down to the horizontal really does pay off. This fills me with optimism for the months to come.

Five

There’s more signs of things to come on the weigela. Masses of lovely new leaves showing up as the shrub moves from Winter brown to Spring green.

Six

There have been so many lovely hellebores featured over the last few months. This is a simple unnamed variety which has seeded freely in the border. I think those seedlings will take a few more years to flower but in the meantime I continue to enjoy the parent plants.

In between the moaning I have kept myself busy doing those ‘must do’ jobs for this time of year. I have netted the gooseberries and blackcurrants. I’ve given them and the apple trees a sprinkling of Fish Blood and Bone, successfully timed to coincide with a healthy downpour of rain. More and more of the browness of winter has been cut back and this weekend I plan to feed all the roses. Onion sets have been started off in the greenhouse and I hope to find the time to sow some seeds of hardy annuals. I also need to settle down and plan out the thin border although those echinaceas may be potted on again before I plant them out. I need them to be strong and healthy to compete with the existing plants. I hope your garden plans are going well. More from the SOS team can be found at Jim’s place. All welcome.

10 thoughts on “Six On Saturday: Stop whingeing

  1. I had not brought in my pelargoniums during the winter and I fear that they are grilled. I have not noticed that new shoots have appeared compared to yours.
    You say that you’re late but I haven’t started sowing annual flowers yet, but I’ll have to do it soon…

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Ha – my post started with a moan too. But things are moving now so onward and upwards. Very jealous of the echinacea seedlings which are looking good and healthy. Glad to see the scented leaf pellies are pulling through. I have spotted a leaf sprouting at the bottom of one of mine too.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Lots happening in your garden with spring just around the corner. I have one echinacea growing in my garden after several unsuccessful attempts. It’s the common or garden one and has sat silently and stubbornly not flowering ever since it emerged. Very frustrating. Oh dear, I think that counts as a moan!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Is Weigela like Forsythia without its yellow? We got a few last year, so I am waiting to see what they do. They have bronze foliage and rosy red bloom. I barely remember these from school in the late 1980s. There are more cultivars now.

    Liked by 1 person

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