Six On Saturday: The garden survives

I’m back in the garden after a week on the Suffolk coast. The North Sea breezes kept things a little cooler there. Here it was hot and it is going to be hot over the weekend. My collection of things in pots growing on survived, the tomatoes were drooping a little but all in all a week’s neglect did not cause too much suffering. Here’s six from today’s cloudy garden.

One

It’s hydrangea time here. This striking blue one is a fascination to me. I inherited it as a white, possibly pinkish colour but over the years it has become very much blue, with the occasional purple head. The cloud has dimmed its colour a little.

Two

Also inherited, this one has been moved around the garden three or four times. It lives in a large pot now and is possibly getting a little too big for it. Maybe next year another move will be on the cards.

Three

The clematis ‘Etoile Violette’ opened up more while I was away. It scrambles away quite happily and needs very little attention. That’s what we like.

Four

Next door is a trachelospermum jasminoides or star jasmine. It scrambles too, but at a slower rate. Planted out in 2018, it has finally filled the allocated space, but even now there is still room to spread further.

Five

I’d almost forgotten what this is, I sowed seed last year and they just languished. I kept faith and overwintered three small stems which materialised into just one stem healthy enough to plant out this year. It’s antirrhinum majus ‘Chantilly Velvet. Quite lovely, more of them would be even better.

Six

My mad crazy hebe. This has also been moved around a few times and is now in it’s permanent home. It is fizzing out in all directions and is much loved by the bees. It’s about 6 feet tall and I sense that it could go higher. I dead head once the flowers fade but then it is left alone.

I was picking strawberries before I left and had a good crop. On my return the strawberry patch smelt gorgeous, mainly due to the number of over-ripe strawberries. But others were just about okay. Red currants and black currants were also picked but most of the summer fruiting raspberries were also over ripe. Sometimes the garden just gets away from me. I’ll be watering and dead heading roses this weekend. All the fruit will be used to make a summer pudding for a family lunch on Sunday. Wishing you all happy and productive gardening wherever you are. Jim, in Cornwall, hosts the SOS band as usual at Garden Ruminations.

22 thoughts on “Six On Saturday: The garden survives

  1. This morning I took the exact same photo of that blue hydrangea then I posted it on my Instagram Story. We seem to have the same variety blooming at the same time. It’s gorgeous, isn’t it?
    The star jasmine wasn’t featured this week, but it’s due next week, and what blooms are there this year!

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  2. Several cultivars of Hebe are too common here, but I still only see that Hebe in pictures from other gardens in other regions. I sort of wonder if its cultural requirements are different from those of the other common Hebe, which are very well suited to the climates here.

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  3. The blue hydrangea is fab. I would love a blue one, but whether it would remain blue… My neighbour has several hydrangeas and they are all pinks. ‘Etoile Violette’ is gorgeous too. My clematis are slow this year, in fact several are missing again.

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