Six On Saturday: Old favourites and a newcomer

The garden is grappling with the conditions but is definitely beginning to put on a show. There has been no rain here for about three weeks and I’m out of stored water. I don’t think I’ve ever watered the garden using mains water this early in the year. The roses are opening but flowers seem smaller. The slugs are definitely out and about but they do not seem to be wreaking the same damage as last year. Here’s my six for this week.

One

First, I have a question. Do I have English bluebells in the garden? I spotted these as I was pulling out swathes of those annoying ones. I stopped just in time. Should they stay or should they go?

Two

These are pretty standard in most gardens at this time of year, purple alliums and in this case ‘Purple Sensation’. I like them for their strong colour.

Three

I also have the white allium ‘Mount Everest’. I have several clumps of them that seem to take it in turns to flower. Last year the slugs/snails stripped all the green of the stems. This year, so far so good.

Four

The climbing rose ‘Tess of the D’Urbervilles that was moved a couple of years back. It seems to have settled in and although it could do with a few more leaves in certain places it is flowering well.

Five

The variegated weigela is a reliable shrub that has been in the garden since the very beginning so about eight years now. The pink flowers work well with the leaf colouring. I do also have a hankering for my neighbour’s dark red one. I get a small glimpse of it over the fence. Borrowed gardening.

Six

The dicentra spectabilis has been in the garden for about three years now and is really becoming established. I love it’s whiteness in the surrounding greenery. There’s a white rose nearby that is just in flower and they do look good together.

There’s more bluebell pulling to be done and the in/out with the seedlings. Weeds galore but there are more and more flowers every day so there’s plenty to enjoy. I had a chuckle in the week as I started to organise the Alhambra photos, the yellow climber that I couldn’t put a name to is so obviously a rose, probably a multiflora one. I am ashamed to call myself a gardener! I blame the thornless stems. I hope you get to enjoy your garden space over the coming week. Jim, as usual, hosts the merry SOS band at his site Garden Ruminations.

Six On Saturday: Missed oportunities

Hallelujah! It’s a dry day here, or at least forecast to be. But can I make the most of it? No. There are other things to do today and I must hope that tomorrow stays dry too. The great dilemma is whether or not to plant the potatoes. The long range forecast is for more rain so I feel I might as well get on with it while it is dry. That’s tomorrow’s job. For today, here are six things from the garden.

One

The plum blossom quietly opened last weekend. It seemed to appear just after the photos for last week’s SOS were chosen. It looks like being a bumper crop this year.

Two

The relentless rain has had an amazing effect on these ‘Negrita’ tulips. I have never seen them so tall and strong. They have been in the ground for several years and have a done a good job of returning.

Three

The same cannot be said for narcissus poeticus ‘Actaea’. Undeniably beautiful but so few of the many I planted have shown up this year. Perhaps they will surprise me next year. I can be patient.

Four

Dicentra spectabilis ‘Alba’. This was another disappearing plant, succumbing to slugs in it’s first year but fighting back the next year. This started out in the garden as a one litre pot in 2021 and hasn’t really bulked up at all. But I am pleased that it seems to have dug in and hopefully it will become stronger over the next couple of years.

Five

A few weeks back I showed the bronzed foliage of the old leaves of an epimedium, promising that I would be cutting them back to reveal the new growth. No, wasn’t done, too much rain, didn’t have the time and so here it is again with flowers – epimedium x versicolor Sulphureum. As you can see, this week I have been checking my notes in order to bring you the full names.

Six

This is another of those plants I intended to have more of. Erythronium ‘White Beauty’, just opening. I decided to share this before the slugs get to it. Even with this downside I will put it on the ‘Do not forget to buy more of’ list.

Some gardening jobs were started last weekend, the pruning of the hydrangeas has begun, red onions were planted in sets and the greenhouse was swept out in preparation for seed sowing. The grass has been mown again, the lawn is definitely enjoying the warmth and rain. I am beginning to feel like a gardener again and a great feeling it is too! Join the other SOSers at Jim’s place and don’t hesitate to join in, everyone welcome.