Six On Saturday: Late flowerers

September has flown by, pushed through on the back of some strong winds. Storm Agnes fortunately passed this garden by and the month has been benign. I have cleared the garden of courgettes and cucumbers. The chilis ripened to a wonderful red colour and as the plans to revamp the veg garden are still in hand, there will be no new planting here for me this year. The hydrangea quercifolia are now in their new positions and will be joined by some white tulips and white hellebores. I spent a great deal of time weighing up replacements for winter losses and a few weeks ago I had settled on osmanthus delavayi but having spotted it in a garden recently I am now going back to an earlier choice – fatsia japonica. I think I will hold firm on that one, but watch this space. Here’s six from the garden this week.

One

Some weeks ago I showed a plant rescued from the pity bench at a local supermarket. It was echinacea ‘Delicious Nougat’. Here it is in flower.

Two

I also have some flowers on a newly purchased penstemon which if my notes are to be believed is called ‘White’! I can’t argue really.

Three

The tough and reliable osteospermum are also in flower again after a quiet spell.

Four

And I couldn’t resist revisiting salvia ‘Nachtvlinder’. This has been in flower for some time but has suddenly become a real focal point and is always thronged with bees.

Five

Some weeks ago Jim, our host, showed some hylotelephium spectabile which had benefited from a timely Chelsea Chop. Here are mine which did not get the benefit of the chop. They fall in this interesting way as they grow out from a dark corner of the north facing border. How they came to settle in this spot happened well before my time and they are deeply entrenched in some walling and seem to be impossible to dig out. I’ll leave them be.

Six

I’m really scrabbling around for my last one and I’ve opted for a re-flowering of geranium psilostemon. It’s valiantly trying to fill the space where the fatsia japonica might end up.

Thank you to all who comment on these weekly posts. I didn’t manage to respond last week but I will be in touch soon. I hope all is well in your gardens and to find out about other SOS gardens stop by at Jim’s to find the links. Happy gardening.

Six On Saturday: Autumn has arrived

I was away in Suffolk last week, worrying about the mid-week winds and the pots on the terrace but all was well. I had managed to stake some Japanese anemones that were flopping before I left and they too largely remained upright. I returned to a very autumnal garden. Courgettes and cucumbers are ready to be consigned to the compost heap and there is some change of season tidying to be done. It’s a bit of a struggle to find six delights this week but here is what is happening.

One

There was plenty of rain for the garden while I was away and these alchemilla mollis thrived. They are being saved for a friend who says they do not grow for her, while here they self seed everywhere.

Two

The persimmon fruits have been falling off the tree for several weeks but finally the ‘drop’ seems to have finished and those that are left will be ripening over the coming months.

Three

I am not a very ruthless gardener but I’m going to call time on this cherry tree. It’s not very old but it has the lurgy and in three years the birds have always feasted on the fruits before we get even close. Decision made. It’s going.

Four

There are new flowers on the daphne ‘Eternal Fragance’. It’s not a ‘stop you in your tracks’ shrub but it fills a corner and is very low maintenance.

Five

The Hart’s tongue ferns looking very shabby after winter but they have pulled through and are establishing themselves in a shady corner.

Six

My mystery plant. It grows in the wall, is never looked after and this is the first time in seven years I have noticed it in flower. Answers on a postcard please!

There’s a good week of weather ahead, if only I had the time to spend in the garden. It’s all a bit crazy at the moment. I hope you find time to enjoy your gardens. Jim, our host, still manages to find colour but also concedes the arrival of autumn.

Six On Saturday: Scorchio!

It’s too darn hot to garden and almost too darn hot to write. But I’m giving it a go. The apples had to be picked this week, other commitments meant this was the best time for us if not for the apples. The pips were brown and the job was done early one morning. The quote for the new paving and veg beds arrived and was a third more than I was expecting. I should not be surprised by that. It is very likely that I will have to scale down my ambitions but that will have to wait for cooler times. I managed to snap (photograph not break!) a few things in the garden as I watered the pots and threw a large courgette on the compost heap, I am sure many will recognise that summer ritual! Here’s my six for the week.

One

A boot full of apples, ready to be taken to be pressed and bottled. The three cox’s pippin trees did not perform so well this year but the other three trees will have probably made up for them. On these trees the apples were much bigger than in previous years, no doubt due to all that rain in July.

Two

A surprise aster. Could this be a come back kid or is it a new arrival? A few years back I dug out some tall thuggish asters from this spot. Those were bright pink so I guess this one has seeded itself from somewhere else. I’ll see how it goes.

Three

The grasses are beginning to flower. This is calamagrostis × acutiflora ‘Karl Foerster’. It’s lovely. So lovely that I planted another one the other side of the steps for some of that designery symmetry. Of course the second has just sulked and refused to bulk up. What can you do?

Four

The lemon tree that suffered near death last winter has put on some lush new growth after being cut back. Being a softy, I did not throw it out as I said I would but there is no greenhouse now for overwintering so if a similar fate occurs this winter it will have to go.

Five

Although the new paving is under review, the gooseberries are definitely going to be replaced by two hydrangea quercifolia ‘ Snow Queen’. There was money off being offered so I couldn’t resist. They are now inhabiting a shady corner until the gooseberries are cleared.

Six

And speaking of hydrangeas, those in the garden are turning to their autumn colours but with one or two new flowers still coming through.

I am still looking for plants to fill winter losses. Does anyone grow osmanthus delavayi? I’m thinking of this for a partial shade spot. What do you think?

If you have time, please stop by and visit our host, Jim, in his garden. He generously provides the glue that keeps us all together and has some fabulous plants too. Stay well everyone.

Six On Saturday: Lagging behind

I’m not sure what I have been doing of late but clearly it is not gardening! The borders have gone wild. Self-seeders abound and there is still much to be cut back. I am not alone. Off The Edge Gardening is having a similar experience which has prompted this week’s confessions. Tidying up after Summer has to be done but in the meantime here are six from the garden this week.

One

The pity bench at the local Supermarket called to me. The echinacea was substantially reduced in price and all it needed was dead heading. Home it came and here it is ready to flower again.

Two

The Japanese anemones are enjoying their time. This group of ‘Honorine Joubert’ are happy enough but I have two other plants that have been in the garden for many years now and they do not shine. This is the year to accept that they are in the wrong place and get them relocated somewhere else.

Three

If geranium ‘Ann Folkard’ flowered earlier in the year I did not notice it. Here it is now, gamely making the best of of dryish, shady location.

Four

This mallow is a pretty flower but I made the mistake of putting the seed heads on the compost. Now I have a sprinkling of it in all corners of the garden.

Five

An unknown fuchsia that looked a gonna after the winter. I cut it to the ground and it has regrown happily.

Six

Another compost bin self-seeder. Astrantia major. This one is in the raspberry patch. I’ll move it soon. I think I am also going to have move the raspberries when the new beds are laid out. The measurements do not quite allow them to stay in place while work carries on around them.

Our host Jim, invites you to share his garden and all the links to SOS posts from around the world. Somehow I will try to fit a few hours in the garden this weekend. I hope you can too. Enjoy.