Saturday, May 29, 2010

Flowers For Free

Very often gardeners are so intent on finding plants to flower for the garden that they overlook those that grow in the wild around them. To an extent there is a certain amount of snobbery concerning plants. If you don't buy it then it is not of any worth.

I have come across this many times throughout the years. Plants that are every bit as good for the garden are despised purely because they are wildflowers.

Yet if the same plant with the same flower came from another continent then it would be bought and cosseted within that persons garden.

Growing plants that are from ones own region not only adds to a garden diversity but encourages wildlife to thrive in the garden. True many garden plants that come from elsewhere do still have good ecological credentials. But ones that are natural to the area often support greater and more diversified wildlife colonies.

a bed of wild red campion, silene dioca

Here in this bed I encourage Red Campion (Silene dioca) to thrive. The blast of colour it gives for quite some weeks is so eye catching that passersby comment on the show. I hope some go away with new ideas for their own gardens.

Having said that,they just as likely think it is an expensive plant from a Garden Centre, what else would give such a show of colour!

London Pride

It's time now for the London Pride (Saxifraga umbrosa) to be at it's showiness in an understated way. We love this plant not only for the delicacy and airiness of the blooms when it is flower, or the florettes of leaves that fill in some difficult places. But also for the fact that all the plants of it that we have in the garden were completely free.

Just because it was free is not the true significance of it. But because how we obtained them.

When we first moved here there was not a garden as such and on the bottom part of the land where the old shed stood, once used to be the farm workers cottage.

The cottage had a low stone wall built in front of it. This had become overgrown with bushes and grass. But right on the end of the wall two London Pride plants maintained a hold in the rocks.

These plants and their ancestors must have been growing there for over 60 years. That was the last time that the cottage had been lived in before most of it was demolished and an old hooped shed built on the foundations.

From these two plants we established a colony within the garden that now consists of hundreds of plants.

Saxifraga umbrosa, London Pride

Soft filmy flowers with all year green rosettes contrast wonderfully against stone and rock within the garden. The flowers attract numerous small flies and is alive with movement when the sun is warm.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Gathering Lilacs

The Lilac (Syringa vulgaris) is in full flower within the garden.

lilac,syringa vulgaris

Once again the garden is filled with a  delicious scent.  This is plain ordinary Syringa vulgaris which quite frankly takes a beating for it's scent. Other varieties are still scented  and bolder in colour, but the true Lilac is still the best for scent.

We are quite fond of our Lilacs, we have them spread throughout the garden. When we first moved here they existed on an earth and rock mound at the front of the house. Planted many years ago by one of the tenants who farmed here when it was an active farm.

We split the bunch of Lilac and positioned it around in varied places to ensure we always had a good stock, and have been rewarded since by the glorious displays we get each year without fail.

lilac flowers

The name Syringa is derived from Syrinx meaning a hollow pipe or tube. Traditionally the Lilac used to be used for making reed pipes and flutes. A few years back this caused some confusion when an old lady asked me if she still had her Syringa in the garden. The chap before who had maintained her garden had pruned everything in Winter, the so called traditional time for doing so.

I searched for the Lilac but found nothing. Several shrubs though I pruned back into shape at the right time to encourage flowering. One of which was a Philadelphus. When it flowered a year later, I took a large bunch to her and she really did cry out for joy, "You found my Syringa".

This was confusing especially as she told me she had always called it Syringa and lots of people she knew always called the Philadelphus, Syringa. I did some research and found that Philadelphus was often referred to by country folk as Syringa as it too used to be used for making pipes.