It was the perfect week to be on holiday with nothing to do as it was too hot to do anything. The dead heading was left but there was no avoiding the need to water in the greenhouse. Tomatoes, melons, strawberries, lettuce and basil are all motoring along. Outside the green beans are being picked along with raspberries, gooseberries and blackcurrants. Here’s the view of the garden this week.
One

I have to share this view of the allotment end of the garden although it’s not to my credit. I had a few calendula plants in the garden a couple of years ago and if they are not ruthlessly controlled they run riot! Beautifully so, but I need to fight back. I’m enjoying the splash of colour for the moment but an afternoon spent pulling them out is on the agenda and next year I will be hoeing them off, immediately, no ground given. Honestly.
Two

It is now four years since the move to this house and the garden borders are transformed. Each year a new corner or two comes under scrutiny. This year it was the passion flower draped arch and trellis. I could see that a honeysuckle also entwined its way around the uprights but it never flowered. One side of the passion flower has been taken down and the honeysuckle probably got a bit of a cut back in the process. Perhaps this is why it has flowered for the first time. It’s a great addition.
Three

The scented leaf pellies are back in their summer pots and are decorating the patio. The peat free compost does dry out quickly on the surface so daily watering was necessary. This one is ‘Prince of Orange’.
Four

The cheerful Shasta daisies seem to be twice as high this year. They were started from seed about four years ago. They grow up into the wild blackberries that are another corner of the garden awaiting some attention. It looks like there will be a good crop there too.
Five

Most of the delphiniums are going to seed now and need to be cut back but this one came through a little later. It was a pot luck buy at a plant sale, just marked delphinium. I’ve had it for three years now but it always only puts up one spike. Is that a thing for certain types of delphinium ?
Six

To finish I offer this combination of blackcurrant sage and a penstemon – could it be ‘Apple Blossom’? The sage looked a little sad after the winter but it responded well to a cut back and is now threading its way around the penstemon.
Cooler temperatures for next week will see me back in the garden catching up on the dead heading. The roses need to be fed to help them produce the next wave of flowers and I think I’ll have a nose around the late crop new potatoes. If nosing around gardens is your thing then go immediately to Mr P’s he has the most divine photo of the rose ‘Generous Gardener’, it’s a must see!



















Pride before the fall and fall the persimmons did. Two branches came down, both heavily laden with fruit. They broke from the inside so nature has done a good job of opening up the tree.
No sooner had the delphiniums put up their second flush of flower stems than the storm arrived. Of course I hadn’t got round to tying in the tops but the ties at the bottom seem to have helped steady the stems enough to keep them safe.
The stately cosmos that was just opening out its flowers was not so lucky. I had tried to push a cane into the ground but there was no give at all. The plant snapped off at the bottom. All was not lost as I cut back the side stems and brought them inside to fill a vase.
The fruits of the passion flower are ripening and providing a focal point over the top of an arch. These is the more common Passiflora caerulea and although the fruits are edible when very ripe I prefer to leave them be.
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Indeed the doorbell rang a moment ago and although it was not the aforementioned plants I was excited to receive the first of the bulb orders. Excited on two counts: Yes! I had my six for the week (it was touch and go) and I could cross Colchicum speciosum Album off of the wish list. I hope they are going to like the space I have ready for them. Fingers crossed that it is sunny enough.






This is the top end of the border. Sweet pea, cosmos purity and nicotiana lime green were sown from seed. The lambs ears in the foreground looked bedraggled in last week’s six. Will they survive after the freezing weather of this week? This path is staying. It’s not very attractive and if I had a magic wand it would be transformed into a lovely brick cottage garden path. I have also planted alchemella mollis and geranium brookside, both of which tumble onto the path edges.

