Six On Saturday: Changing times

We are into August and I feel the Summer shifting towards the next season. I was quick off the mark with cutting back the geranium psilostemon and they have rewarded me with a new flurry of flowers. My goal for the coming week is to deal with the alchemilla mollis and the hebes. The first tomatoes have ripened which always makes me think of Autumn. I should be looking at bulb catalogues and sorting out an order of special daffodils for the pots but I haven’t quite settled to that yet. Here’s six things from my garden this week.

One

I am still waiting to see if my pots of thalictrum seedlings are purple or white. Here’s the white one that’s flowering in the garden. Thalictrum delavayi ‘Album’. It should grow to over a metre but it stays stubbornly at about 30 cms. Right plant, wrong place?

Two

And this is thalictrum delavayi in its purple form. This one has self-seeded generously and once settled it does grow tall. Here it is mixed with veronicastrum virginicum ‘Album’, miscanthus ‘Silberfeder’ and magenta phlox.

Three

I moved the pennisetum villosum to a sunnier spot last year and it does seem happier. It has been on the verge of disappearing from several years now. Let’s hope it can cling on through another winter.

Four

The Japanese anemone ‘September Charm’ are always the first in flower. This year they have been hit hard by the drought. Crispy stems and leaves, drooping flower buds looked terminal but there was a shower of rain and they perked up.

Five

The solidago golden rod was in the garden when I arrived. I thought I had driven it out but it reappeared last year and here it is again. It’s a tall version and does an excellent job of hiding the fence so it stays.

Six

Montbretia or crocosmia. I have always called them crocosmia but I think these are probably montbretia, which seems to be the name for the more invasive form. Inherited again and I did spend a great deal of time trying to dig them out as they never flowered. This year I have flowers. Who knows why?

I visited my daughter’s garden to see how things were. Taking down the old shed and fences proved easy but putting up the new fence was not a success. The ground was too hard to excavate deep enough post holes and various quantities of brick were found along the fence line suggesting that in amongst the undergrowth there might be a retaining wall. Work stopped and they are calling in the specialists. Fortunately they were able to secure the fence line. The garden is now piled high with the undergrowth that was cleared, a miscellany of items left in the old shed and splinters of wood. Bindweed is rampant and the lawn is brown. It’s not the green sanctuary that was envisaged and spirits were low. The green bin was refilled for another collection and a rose was planted. There is a glimmer of hope rising again.

I’m still longing for promised thunderstorms and downpours that mysteriously bypass the garden. I have plans for new planting which I am strongly resisting until September. Deadheading is the order of the day. That’s tomorrow’s work. Happy gardening to you all and if you have time stop by and see what Garden Ruminations has on offer.

Six On Saturday: Drying out

It is lovely to have a period of sunny settled weather but of course gardeners are muttering about the lack of rain. I’m hoping that the sun will ripen the outdoor tomatoes, they are only just beginning to turn. I’ve used up all the water from the butts and have had the hose out a couple of times now. The garden is a little scrappy due to my meaness with the watering but that’s the way it is. All the potatoes on the veg plot have now been dug up. I grew ‘Charlotte’ and very lovely they are too. The green beans continue producing and are the best variety I have grown – Franchi ‘La Victoire’, I will definitely sow these again. Cucumbers and courgettes are steadily producing. I just need those tomatoes to catch up and all will be well. Here’s six from the garden this week.

One

The apples are beginning to fall and I will have soon have to set aside time to pick them all ready for taking them to the juicing joint. It’s hard work but one of the highlights of the year.

Two

This is a relatively new rose to the garden and is, therefore, treated to some watering. It’s ‘Lady of Shalott’. A really beautiful colour.

Three

Down in a shadier corner the eurybia divaricata has begun to flower. It’s a low growing sprawler and spills its way around the hellebores and astrantia.

Four

When I first arrived in this garden eight years ago I spent a great deal of time digging out ground elder and also this goldenrod – it wasn’t on my favourites list. The goldenrod has made a come back, snuggling up to the miscanthus. They work together really well and my mind has been changed.

Five

The japanese anemone ‘Honorine Jobert’ always gets a mention at this time of year. I really like it, but I have struggled to get more of them established. Even these ones that are very settled have not spread out much beyond their original space. Too well behaved!

Six

I was hankering after some white hesperis to add in between the oak leaf hydrangeas but was completely distracted by finding the more common purple hesperis at a local garden centre. I’ve added to into this patch of magenta phlox with the hope that they will self seed. The white version is still on the wish list.

More from the SOS crowd can be found on Jim’s Garden Ruminations, drop by any time and take a look. There’s yet more weed pulling to do and those courgettes need to be watched very carefully. Happy gardening.