Unusually for me I am writing this on a Friday. The forecast for Saturday is heavy rain and gusting winds. Today it is just rain all day. It has been a showery week and you would think the garden would be well lubricated by now. But the late planting out of dahlias in pots revealed dry soil just an inch down. Of course a wet top surface is perfect for the slugs and snails and sure enough by the next day the new shoots of the over wintered dahlia I spotted last week and one of the newly planted dahlias had been munched. Hopefully the potted dahlias are strong enough to push on. Here’s six from a gloomy garden.
One

This is ‘Etoile Violette’, a viticella clematis that has been flowering for weeks. It is putting the neighbouring trachelospermum jasminoides to shame. I though it would be a good combination if they entwined but so far the TJ is being a little weedy!
Two

This is an early arrival on the anemone front. But I seem to remember they came early last year too. This is ‘September Charm’, so well in advance of expectations. They have bulked up well this year after a worrying year when I thought they had a disease of some kind.
Three

I admired a white form of geranium phaeum being shared on twitter. I succumbed and bought some, really thinking it was too late in the season and I would have to wait for next year for flowers but rather generously they have put out one or two new blooms. It’s in the northish facing border but there is a moment of morning and afternoon sun. I hope it does well.
Four

I didn’t have my secateurs to hand when I took this photo so I share spent blooms and new blooms of the red rose ‘Tess of the D’Urbervilles’. It’s a climber and I was also lacking string to tie in a few wayward stems. Must be better prepared!
Five

Another inherited plant that gets by without too much attention. The magenta phlox was thinned out last year and divisions added around the garden. They have all done well. Easy peasy plant! In the background is the grass Miscanthus sinensis ‘Silberfeder’. Second year in the garden and beginning to clump up quite nicely. Also in the background, gooseberries which need picking!
Six

A survivor! This hebe – inherited and unknown – is on it’s second move in three years. I think this will be its forever home. It coped with the move and the cold winter. The bees appreciate it and I hope it will be happy here.
I’m not sure what I’ve been up to lately but I have neglected my SOS reading duties. I’ve also neglected to give the roses their mid season feed. Last weekend the blackcurrants were picked and some of those gooseberries. The summer raspberries really didn’t have enough watering to do well this year but with the current forecast I’m more hopeful for the autumn variety. Sometimes the garden is neglected a little but it pulls through. Jim, the SOS host, had an abundance of blackcurrants last weekend, stop by and see what’s happening at Garden Ruminations this week. There’s always a surprise.
Enjoyed your photos. I really like the anemone and I am looking for a spot in my yard to add. some. Tess of the D’Urbervilles is a ‘looker’.
LikeLiked by 1 person
They’ll take some shade.
LikeLike
Love the clematis and beautiful Tess. ‘Easy peasy phlox’? I can’t grow them, I have tried now and then but they just get mildew and die.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Strange isn’t it. I won’t jinx but ….
LikeLike
I have a hebe (name unknown) like yours. I have taken several successful cuttings from it. I like your Magenta Phlox too, I have a white one.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Isn’t Étoile Violette a beauty? I have one too and she flowered her socks off. We also share Tess but for me she is my least floriferous rose, just a handful of blooms this year, maybe I need to move her to a better spot.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Interesting. Tess was good first flush and has slowed up. But then I have been neglectful.
LikeLiked by 1 person
‘Tess of the D’Urbervilles’ is such a lovely rich colour. I hope your Dahlias make it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I think the hebe is at the right place, in relation to the flowering you have. Lovely Etoile Violette flowers.
LikeLiked by 1 person
‘Tess’ is a beautiful colour. I also lacked secateurs and string when I photographed ‘Blush Noisette’ for my Six. Fingers crossed for your Dahlias
LikeLiked by 1 person
Gorgeous rose and clematis. I love those deep rich colours. I don’t think I’ve ever managed to give my roses a second helping of granular feed as the ground underneath them disappears under a sea of geranium etc. I will try this year!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Still haven’t done a second feed!
LikeLike
Hey, that is another (almost) familiar cultivar of an uncommon species (or group of hybrids). ‘Etoile Violette’ was one of the first few of the fancy Clematis that was available from nurseries here, after Clematis X jackmanii. None of those sorts of Clematis perform well here, but a few of the earliest introductions are reliable and bloom nicely for spring. (They just do not bloom into summer like they do elsewhere.) Some of the more basic species, like Clematis montana, perform nicely here, but also bloom only for spring.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Too hot or too dry?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes. Both. Fancy clematis hybrids dislike the arid warmth. This is a great climate, but is not perfect for everything.
LikeLiked by 1 person