29 minute read
GARDENING EVENTS GALORE
The True Cottage Garden
Learn how to plan the perfect cottage garden incorporating the scents and foliage of herbs, the colour of annuals, biennials and perennials, different decorative vegetables and native fl owering plants. £25
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19th-29th Fishbourne, Chichester
Fishbourne Roman Palace
01243 785859
Have a Go Archaeology
Have a go at archaeology at Fishbourne Roman Palace. Take part in the special excavation, wash your fi nds and have them identifi ed by a specialist. Find out what happens to artefacts after they are recorded. Booking advised. 10am-5pm daily £8.90 adults, £4.70 children, family tickets & concessions available
23rd/24th Romsey Sir Harold Hillier Gardens
Fishing for Compliments – Art Workshop
Local artist Jenny Hill will help you capture the vibrant colours of a kingfi sher, creating realistic eyes, beak and feathers. Suitable for beginners, improvers and those new to watercolour pencils. 10am – 4pm. £55, includes all materials, light refreshments & lunch
24th Wimborne St Giles paws Shaftesbury Estate Paws in the Park in aid of the Worldwide Veterinary Service (WVS)
Fun for all the family… including the dog! Enjoy food demonstrations, a dog show, falconry display, a sponsored walking event and a ‘valuation surgery’ by John Benjamin, jewellery expert from the BBC’s Antiques Roadshow. For more information go to www.wvs.org.uk
26th-28th Brockenhurst The New Forest and Hampshire County Show
Show gardens, fl owers and vegetables will interest gardeners at The New Forest and Hampshire County Show an annual agricultural show held for three days at New Park, Brockenhurst in Hampshire. The show attracts, on average, 95,000 visitors every year and brings together a celebration of traditional country pursuits, crafts, produce and entertainment. Adults £20, children £7. Seniors £19.
27th Selborne Gilbert White & The Oates
Collections, 01420 511275 Herb Gardening herb Learn how to identify, grow and use a wide range of herbs in the beautiful setting of Gilbert White’s Garden. The evening will consist of an introductory talk about herbs and herb gardens by the Head Gardener, followed by a practical session in the herb garden. 6.30pm – 8.30pm. £10
CLUBS AND OTHER ORGANISATIONS
July
2nd Kingsclere Gardening
Association
ANNUAL SHOW Details on 01256 781892 5th Denmead Horticultural Society ‘DESIGN & RE-DESIGN YOUR GARDEN – ROGER HIRONS 5th Solent Fuchsia Club ‘THE CHANGING SEASON IN MET’S GARDEN’ – JENNIFER CARTER Details on 01329 310124 7th Dibden Purlieu Gardening
Association
‘THE ROSE WORLD’ – ROGER HIRONS Details on 02380 842006 9th Lee-on-the-Solent
Horticultural Society
SOCIETY SUMMER SHOW AT THE COMMUNITY CENTRE Details on 02392 552341 9th Totton & District Horticultural
Society
SUMMER SHOW Details on 023 8029 2761 13th Totton & District Horticultural
Society
‘WATER GARDENS’- JOHN NEGAS Details on 023 8029 2761 13th Winchester Horticultural
Society
‘STRESS-FREE GARDENING’- JULIE BELL www.winhorts@weebly.com 14th Petersfi eld Gardeners Club ‘MAKING THE PARKS GARDEN, SOUTHSEA SHOW’ – ROGER YOUNG www.pgc.webeden.co.uk 14th Winchester Floral Design
Society
MINI CLUB SHOW Details on 01962 854271 16th British Cactus & Succulent
Society, Portsmouth Branch
‘CAUDICIFORMS’ – BOB POTTER Details on 07775 910303 20th Sandhurst Gardening Club ‘NATIONAL TRUST GARDENS’ Details on 01420 768965 21st Bartley Horticultural Society ‘GROUND COVER’ – GEOFF HAWKINS Details on 023 8081 2853 27th Warsash Horticultural Society MINI COMPETITION SWEET PEAS www.warsashhorticulturalsociety. btck.co.uk 29th Southampton Gardening Club ‘NATURAL PLANTING WITH PERENNIALS, SHRUBS & GRASSES’ – KEVIN HOBBS Details on 01489 784823 30th/31st Stockbridge OPEN GARDENS WEEKEND Details on 01264 810516
Plants
Wolverton Common, Nr. Kingsclere, Hampshire, RG26 5RU (Brown tourist signs off A339) (01635) 298 453 plantranch2000@hotmail.com
Open 7 days a week Trade enquiries welcome
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LARGEST NURSERY IN THE AREA
EDGING YOUR WAY to a tidy garden
Grenville Sheringham says that when it comes to getting the garden to suddenly look better during the long days of summer the answer is all in the edges
A simple thing like properly edging your lawn will make a huge impact on the way the garden looks
Sometimes in the summer, when everything in the garden of the bed or border, fi rmly pushing through any roots of needs attention at once, it is diffi cult to know where to start. perennial weeds or grass, and loosening the soil. Don’t be Mow the lawn? Weed the beds and borders? Trim the hedge? distracted by individual weeds, and don’t be tempted to bend Well, many years ago I discovered the secret of making a down and pick anything up at this stage. The secret is to garden look tidy quickly and effi ciently – it’s all in the edges. focus on the job in hand and not be distracted, or you will It’s all too easy to let the edge of the lawn become indistinct soon fi nd yourself doing another job ‘just while you are there’. and a mixture of weeds and grass establishes itself at the front Don’t waste time on perennial weeds like dandelions and of the border or in the fl owerbeds. docks. Give them a sharp jab with the hoe just below the soil But a neat, clean weed-free edge leads the eye away from all those overgrown shrubs and tired foliage. surface. Any garden plants that have spread themselves near or over the edge of the bed should be cut back with edging shears or secateurs (except of course if they are in fl ower and Just two tools are essential to achieve this transformation looking appealing!). – edging shears and hoe – and they both need looking after properly if they are going to do their job effi ciently. Edging shears must be kept sharp. If they are sharp, they should slice through grass and weeds easily and feel as if you are using a pair of scissors. If you need to pull at the grass with the I also keep my hoe sharpened, though obviously it is a blunt tool and any edge will quickly be taken off by hoeing through soil, but I do fi nd it makes a huge difference just to use the sharpening stone every so often. shears, they are in serious need of sharpening. I do mine after Now comes the clever bit. Use the hoe to pull any chopped every few uses, but then as a professional gardener I am using weeds or other rubbish into small piles, and pick them up them every day throughout the summer, so they need to be to go on the compost heap. Now turn the hoe sideways sharp. I use an ordinary sharpening stone and just give each and drag it along the edge of the bed with short sharp blade a few quick strokes. It is surprising how much difference movements, fl icking up the earth to expose a neat lawn edge. that makes. The aim is to create a regular slope of something like a Before cutting the edge, you need to make sure it is clear of 45degrees angle between the bed and the lawn. earth and weeds. I do this by hoeing a strip along the edge This technique takes a lot of practice to perfect, but any attempt will invariably lead to some level of success. I learnt this technique working as a gardener at Kew gardens forty-odd years ago, and I’m still working on it! Working in a wide range of private gardens, I often need to create a neat effect in just a few hours, ready for a special visit or event, or just for the owners to enjoy their garden at the weekend. This technique always works, as long as you remember the golden rule is not to get distracted by other tasks. If the edges are tidy, the eye is led away from the docks and nettles lurking at the back of the border. Believe me, it works! www.countrygardener.co.uk 41
WILDLIFE
Newts can survive in your garden even without a pond By Vivienne Lewis
Newts look like lizards and it’s sometimes confusing when we fi nd one not by a pond – so how do you tell the difference? Great crested newts are quite recognizable, being bigger and usually darker. They are up to 16cm long with rough, black I picked up a tiny newt near the back door. At least I thought it was a newt – or was it a little lizard? And if it was a newt why it was there and nowhere near a pond? How could it survive away from water? skin often with white-tipped ‘warts’, and a bright orange belly with irregular black blotches. During the breeding season males have a jagged crest running from the head, along the back, with a break at the base of the tail; the tail also has a conspicuous white fl ash. I found out that amphibians like newts can spend a huge amount of time on dry land, in fact most of their time away from water, and can be hundreds of metres away from it, although they need to fi nd a pond in the spring to breed. If you think you have a great crested newt in your garden pond contact Natural England or the Countryside Council for Wales. After receiving information from the relevant statutory agency you should inform your local Amphibian and Reptile The difference between lizards and newts is that lizards have Group and the local Biological Record Centre of the sighting. scaly skin while newts have skin that’s much smoother but These records help these groups understand the distribution sometimes ‘warty’. If you have a chance for a closer look you of this species locally and will be important for providing could count the number of toes on the front pair of legs – planners and developers with the correct information. newts have four toes and lizards have fi ve. I didn’t do that but maybe next time, as I did pick it up. Sometimes newts with gills are seen in ponds. This is known as neotony, where an adult newt has retained its larval Lizards will rush characteristics. It’s a natural phenomenon but the newt won’t away with quick develop and will remain in a pond for the whole of its life. movements but newts have a slower, more lumbering way of getting around. So this was defi nitely a newt – it didn’t exactly freeze but it didn’t rush off either! Sometimes newt larvae (or frog tadpoles) are found in the water after the summer. This is unlikely to be neoteny, but a delay in development and metamorphosis will be completed the following spring (if they survive the winter). It’s not advised to introduce newts into your pond, or any amphibians and their eggs. Instead, create amphibian-friendly features like ponds, compost heaps and log piles and this should encourage newts into your garden. There are three native newts in the UK. Smooth newts are the most common and are similar to the palmate newt. Although all newts are protected All three species feed mostly on invertebrates, either aquatic or terrestrial. They can be effective at keeping down populations of pest species such as slugs and snails. Great crested newts can take larger prey, occasionally even feeding on the tadpoles and adults of frogs and the other newt species. by law the rarer great crested newt is strictly protected. Newts are also a good food source for many species such as Smooth newts are about 10cm long, usually with a brown upper body sometimes with visible black spots and a grass snakes and birds. The tadpoles provide food for larger aquatic invertebrates, and other amphibian species. pale orange belly with small black spots. Males develop a So fi nding the little newt proved to be quite a revelation. We continuous wavy crest, running from the head to the end of don’t have a pond, nor do our neighbours, so it has come the tail, during the spring. quite a long way. But we do have plenty of damp corners Palmate newts are a little shorter with pink unspotted throats, and males develop webbed back feet, a ridge running along the back and a thin fi lament at the end of the tail during in our old garden so it should survive and we have seen them before – and when we do, it’s another exciting wildlife discovery. the breeding season. There can be colour variations: smooth Find out more from www.wildaboutgardens.co.uk/wildlife/ newts can appear orange, cream or pale green and these are amphibians natural genetic variations. 42 Country Gardener
Hampshire Country Gardener is available free of charge throughout the county at the outlets listed below. For amendments to details or deliveries call Pat Eade on 01594 543790 email pateade@btinternet.com
Alresford
Long Barn Lavender
Natural Talents (Westlea Farm Shop) Alton Farm & Country Supplies Lavender Fields Alton Home Hardware
Mill Farm Organics
Andover Vigo Nursery (C Blake & Son) Mole Country Stores The Weyhill Farm Shop Basingstoke The Vyne NT Manydown Farm Shop Mole Country Stores Beaulieu
Fairweather Garden Centre
Brockenhurst Setley Ridge Garden Centre Bursledon Pickwell Farm Shop Grandessa Farm Shop Cadnam Cadnam Garden Centre
Eastleigh
George Beckett Nurseries Emsworth Emsworth Home Hardware Fair Oak Allington Nurseries Orangery Coffee Shop@ Arturi’s Arturi’s Garden Centre Fareham
Mud Island Nurseries
Mole Country Stores
Fleet
Peacocks Garden Centre Fordingbridge Baskets & Blooms Bleakhill Plants Hyde Garden Shop
Scent Sational Plants Wolvercroft World Of Plants
Four Marks, nr Alton Garthowan Garden Centre Hartley Wintney Organically Speaking Havant Staunton Country Park Hayling Island Meadow Farm Nursery Terracotta Pot Shop Tourist Information Centre Stoke Fruit Farm Hinton Ampner Hinton Ampner NT Hook B & M Fencing Ltd Lindum Nurseries Newlyns Farm Shop Serendipity @ Hook Garden Centre
Wellington Farm Shop
Whitewater Nursery Horndean Keydell Nurseries Queen Elizabeth Country Park Lasham Avenue Nurseries Liss Hillier Garden Centre Lyndhurst Furzey Gardens Lymington Apple Court Gardens Garden Secrets Mole Country Stores St. Barbe Museum Everton Nurseries Newbury Fairoak Garden Machinery Yew Tree Garden Centre New Milton Redcliffe GC Ferndene Farm Shop & Plant Shop Bashley Plant Centre Danestream Farm Shop Park Gate Carters of Swanwick Cork & Cheese Deli Petersfield Friends of Petersfield Physic Society Ringwood Penn Lawnmowers
In-Excess Garden Centre
Romsey Mottisfont Abbey NT Kimbridge Farm Shop
Gilberts Nursery
Choice Plants Nursery Romsey Home Hardware Romsey World Of Water Mole Country Stores Cedar Nurseries Sir Harold Hillier Gardens Pococks Rowlands Castle Rowlands Home Hardware Stansted Park Garden Centre Salisbury Tourist Information Centre Mompesson House NT Salisbury Garden Centre Wilton Garden Centre The Shed Shop Selbourne Gilbert White’s House Southampton Mayfield Nursery Woolston & Dist Allotment Association Stockbridge Garden Inn Garden Shop Longstock Park Nursery Tadley Mowers UK Elm Park GC
Wolverton Plants
Titchfield Abbey Garden Centre
Garsons Hambrook’s Garden Centre
The Ultimate Shed Company St Margarets Fuchsia Nursery Totton Sunnyfields Farm Shop Waterlooville
Rumsey Gardens
Southern Mowers Whitchurch Hardy’s Cottage Plants Whiteparish Courtens Garden Centre Wickham Park Place Farm Nursery Westlands Farm Shop Winchester
Kings Worthy Garden Machinery, Winnall
Mole Country Stores Sparsholt College The Goodlife Home & Garden Tourist Information Centre Winchester City Mill
Accommodation Two Scandinavian lodges. Set in beautiful Worcestershire country side. Go to Cottages.com ref nos W43950 and W44036. Glorious North Devon. Only 9 cosy caravans on peaceful farm. Wonderful walks in woods & meadows. Easy reach sea, moors & lovely days out. £125-395pw. Discount couples. Nice pets welcome. 01769 540366 www.snapdown.co.uk
Bosworlas near Sennen/St Just,
Cornwall. Cosy Cottage, rural views, Sleeps 2-4 www.bosworlas.co.uk 01736 788709 Gloucestershire, Cosy annexe for two non-smokers, lovely garden, beautiful countryside. Pets welcome.
Tel: 01452 840531 Sidmouth, Devon
Fully equipped self catering house.
Undercover parking. 10 mins walk to the seafront.
Tel. 01934 862840 www.sidmouth-stayatnewlands.co.uk Carmarthen Bay South Wales
Seafront chalet situated on estuary.
Sleeps up to 6. Seaview. Well Behaved
Dogs Welcome. For brochure
Tel: 01269 862191 Cornwall, near St Just. Chalet, sleeps 4, heated indoor pool, open all year – near gardens/coast, golfi ng nearby. Prices from £260 pw. 01736 788718
Delightful cosy Shepherds Hut for 2 on Cotswold Farm Pretty villages, Bustling market towns excellent walking N.T. and gardens Tel: 01242 604189 www.pinnockwoodfarm.co.uk
Accommodation Abroad Beautifully romantic cottage for two
In sunny SW France just 30 mins from
Bergerac airport. www.maison-bb.com Accommodation: Holiday Cottages Devon, Culm Valley. Well equipped rural cottage for 2. No Pets/Smokers 01884 841320 Self-catering cottages in countryside near Lyme Regis. Japanese food available. www.hellbarn.co.uk Padstow house, 4 + baby, gardens, parking, Wi-Fi, Camel trail (bike storage), beaches. 07887 813495 holidaysat55@gmail.com Wye Valley/Forest of Dean. Fully equipped 4-star single storey cottage. Two bedrooms both en-suite. Central heating/bedlinen provided. Rural retreat with shops/pubs one mile. Short breaks available. Warm welcome. Tel: 01594833259 www.cowshedcottage.co.uk
Cotswolds near Chipping Campden.
Thatched cottage. Sleeps 4. Tel: 01386 840950 www.tythebarn.co.uk info@tythebarn.co.uk
Lanlivery near Eden and other Cornish
Gardens lovely woodland lodge 2/4 people www.poppylodgecornwall.co.uk 01726 430489 Devon. Tamar Valley. Pretty cottage sleeps 2-4. Wood burner, garden, small dog welcome. 02073 736944/07940 363233 www.northwardshippon.co.uk Ryde Isle Of Wight, two cottages. Sleeps 2/4, close sandy beaches. Tel: 02380 849565 rydecottage@talktalk.net
Cornwall. Village location between
Truro and Falmouth. Fully equipped renovated cottage. Peaceful garden. Off road parking. Ideal for 2 adults. No children/animals. Good public transport. Good pub and shop. Easy reach of Heligan
and Eden. 01279 876751 ayrepj@aol.com Country Gardener
Peace, Privacy, and Stunning Views! 4* Delightful cosy cabin for 2, nestling between Wye and Usk Valleys. Shirenewton village & pubs closeby. Wonderful walks, splendid castles & bustling market towns. Perfect for all seasons! Tel: 01291 641826 lynne@bryncosyn.co.uk www.bryncosyn.co.uk
Hartland Abbey Cottages 2 delightful cottages in AONB. One by Atlantic cove, one in hamlet ½ mile inland on Hartland Abbey estate. Wonderful walking/wildfl owers on adjacent SW coast path and beautiful beaches. Both sleep 2-8. Available weeks from Sept 2nd. www.hartlandabbey.com/holidaycottages/ Email: ha_admin@btconnect.com Tel: 01884 860225/01237 441234
Waters-edge, Rural & Village Cottages
Sleeping 2-8. Peaceful & Comfortable.
Available year round. Dogs Welcome.
Open Fires.
Call us on 01326 375972 for our colour brochure www.creeksidecottages.co.uk
Pembrokeshire, Wales 4 star luxury cottages in idyllic surroundings. Fully equipped, open all year. Children & pets welcome.
Tel: 01239 841850 www.valleyviewcottages.co.uk Sidmouth Devon
Holiday bungalow in AONB overlooking Donkey Sanctuary. Sleeps 4. April – October. Ideal for walkers, nature lovers and children. jandtmercer@gmail.com www.sandwaysholidaycottage.co.uk 07842 514296 Gardens
Northumberland Luxury self-catering
major tourist attractions inc Hadrian’s Wall 01884 841320 North Devon near Clovelly. 3 delightful cottages situated in 12 acres of idyllic countryside. Sleeps 2-4. 1 Wheelchair friendly. Prices from £190 p.w. Brochure:
Creekside Cottages, Near Falmouth, Cornwall
01237 431324 www.foxwoodlodge.co.uk
Penrice Castle Gower 16 holiday cottages on an 18th century Estate on the Gower Peninsula with beautiful Grade I listed historic park and gardens. Tel: 01792 391212
www.penricecastle.co.uk Near Stratford-upon-Avon Lovely self-catering cottage in peaceful location: Large garden, Sleeps 2. Perfect for famous gardens, NT properties & Cotswolds. Tel: 01789 740360
Accommodation With Beautiful
cottage, sleeps 2. Rural location. Near to
www.romanacres.com Antiques
International dealer requires records
(all types) old gramophones, phonographs, music boxes, radios, valves, telephones, early sewing machines, typewriters, calculators, tin toys, scientifi c instruments etc. Parts also wanted. Top cash price paid 07774 103139 davepauled1@yahoo.com
Bed & Breakfast
4 Star Gold Award B&B in Stoulton,
Worcestershire. Luxury accommodation in beautiful surroundings. Perfectly situated to visit Worcester, The Malvern’s, Pershore, Cheltenham and Cotswolds. 01905 841129 www.sunbrae.co.uk
Charming B&B in garden cottage annex.
Double with en-suite. Village location near Jurassic Coast, Bridport. Tel: 01308 488177 Explore Devon and be spoilt. 2 nights DBB £185 per couple. Farmhouse hospitality. Great trip advisor reports. 01566 783010 www.eastraddon-dartmoor.co.uk Quality B&B Truro Cornwall. Ideal for visiting beautiful cornish gardens and coast. £40 pppn 01872 241081
Somerset 5* Restaurant with Rooms.
Close to many NT Gardens, Houses and Dorset Coast. Countryside Location with Lovely Garden. Pet Friendly 01935 423902 www.littlebarwickhouse.co.uk Paignton, Devon, 4* B&B. Ideal location for coast, countryside and NT gardens. En-suite rooms, garden, parking. Green Tourism Gold Award. www.harbourlodge. co.uk 01803 556932
Cards & Prints
A range of over 200 greetings cards and prints from the flower paintings of AnneCotterill
We sell to both individuals and trade. no order too small. Contact us for your free 2016 catalogue. Mill House Fine Art Publishing, Bellflower Gallery,
Market Place, Colyton, Devon eX24 6JS
Tel. 01297 553100 info@millhousefineart.com www.millhousefineart.com
Craft & Stationary Paper
Unusual paper with an extra surprise,
even Ellie Poo! 100% recycled made in UK. 01458 251662 www.elliepoopaper.co.uk Flyscreens
flyscreens4u@sky.com
Advertise here... ...from just £2 per word
Fruit Trees Adam’s Apples
Apple trees from £7.50 Over 100 varieties
Dessert, juicing, cider & cookers to suit your farm, garden or smallholding Many other fruit trees & bushes. Discounts for wholesale, community projects & schools. Advice and free catalogues.
Tel: 01404 841166 sales@adamsappletrees.co.uk www.adamsappletrees.co.uk
Garden Accessories
www.shedtidy.co.uk www.shedtidy.co.uk
Gardeners multi-purpose Gardeners multi-purpose hanging panel. Ideal as a vertical garden (living wall) for all year floral colour (pictured) to hang hanging panel. Ideal as a vertical garden (living wall) for all year floral colour (pictured) to hang on any rail or bare wall or on any rail or bare wall or as a kitchen herb garden as a kitchen herb garden as a kitchen herb garden or as storage for garden or as storage for garden accessories. See our accessories. See our web site for more uses. web site for more uses. Trade enquiries welcome. ONLY £8.95 INC P&P ONLY £8.95 INC P&P
Garden Furniture
UKs leading supplier of Teak Furniture for the Garden
Drystone Walling and Paving
Wisteria Pruning, renovation, Oxfordshire,
surrounding area. Richard Barrett 01865 452334 wisteriapruning@tiscali.co.uk
Mortared work also undertaken. Patrick Houchen - DSWA member. Tel: 01963 371123 www.yenstonewalling.co.uk
Gardens To Visit Burrow Farm Gardens www.burrowfarmgardens.co.uk
13 Acre Garden Open 10am-6pm Tea Room, Nursery & Gift Shop Dalwood, Axminster, EX13 7ET
Garden Sundries Solent Engraving for Plant Labels, Memorial Plaques, Signage, Name Tags, etc. Flat plate engraving on Metal or Plastic. 02380894843 solent.engraving@ btinternet.com
Tel: 01256 809 640 sales @chicteak.co.uk www.chic-teak.co.uk
FREE BROCHURE
Garden Services
Polytunnels
ANDREW TOLMAN Professional Garden Services
Services include
Consultations, Garden Design, Borders, Orchards & Meadows. Specialist Pruning; Climbers, Fruit & Topiary. Supply of Trees, Plants & Bulbs. Talks on Gardens & Plants.
Tel: 07546 874083 / 01643 818092 andrew@atpgardening.co.uk www.atpgardening.co.uk
Polytunnels from £345 available to view by appointment 01363 84948 info@ferrymanpolytunnels.co.uk www.ferrymanpolytunnels.co.uk
Pond Services
Ponds, large and small, constructed,
renovated and maintained. 01761 434349 www.southwestponds.co.uk Specialist Garden Products Ex display sheds. Stables, fi eld shelters, garages, summerhouses, offi ces, workshops/agricultural 01935 891195 Dorset Hazel Hurdles. Made to order by Alan Brown, Wool, Dorset. 01929 462761 www.brownshurdles.co.uk
MALVERN COPPICING
Rustic timber garden rooms, summer houses, gazebos and garden structures from sustainably managed local woodlands
Tel. 01684 574865 Mob. 07946169123 www.malverncoppicing.co.uk
NESTING BOXES FEEDERS INSECT HOMES CAMERA NESTBOXES WILDLIFE CAMERAS
Quality products carefully made in Britain
Tel: 01675 442299 www.nestbox.co.uk
Specialist Nurseries & Plants
ACORN TREES & SHRUBS
440+ VARIETIES OF TREES & SHRUBS RARE And cHOIcE cOnIFERS including pinus montezume broadleaves and rhododendrons MAIL ORDER WELCOME | VISIT BY APPOINTMENT ONLY TEL: 01884 881 633 / 07976 807 510 EMAIL: goakey101@gmail.com Hilltown Farm, Rackenford, Devon, EX16 8DX
Water Lilies Direct from the National Plant Collection® at Bennetts Water Gardens in Dorset Buy online at www.waterlily.co.uk or visit our gardens in Weymouth
Dwarf Hardy, Rockery & Alpine Plants Geraniums & Gentians
55x45 DWL ad_Dorset Water Lily 16/01/2015 11:3
www.plantsforsmallgardens.co.uk
DORSET WATER LILY
COMPANY
UK’s largest selection of established, pot grown water lilies; Speciality hardy exotics, tropical waterside, marginals and moisture loving bogside.
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Tel: 01935 891668
Email: dorsetwaterlily@uwclub.net
www.dorsetwaterlily.co.uk
DULFORD NURSERIES
SPECIALIST TREE & SHRUB GROWERS
Growers & suppliers of the widest range of Native & Ornamental Trees, Shrubs & Hedging in the West Country Tel: 01884 266361 www.dulford-nurseries.co.uk
Dulford Nurseries, Dulford, Cullompton, Devon EX15 2BY Grower and retailer of hardy alpine plants for your garden
Nursery open Thursday, Friday, Saturday Visit us at tadhamalpines.co.uk for availability and further information.
Thornhayes nursery
Devon’s specialist tree grower for a wide range of ornamental, fruit, hedging trees and a selection of choice shrubs. Courses, expert advice, arboretum, display fruit garden.
Tel: 01884 266746 www.thornhayes-nursery.co.uk
Largest selection of organic plants in the South West
Visit us at Kitley Farm, Yealmpton, PL8 2LT Or order plants at www.growersorganics.com Tel: 01752 881180
Peonies, Iris, Perennials and Herbs from HURST BROOK PLANTS
Lower Severalls Crewkerne, Somerset TA18 7NX Tel 07857 645123 or 07851 468430 www.hurstbrookplants.co.uk Specialist Nursery OPEN March - October Thursday - Sunday 10.00 - 4.00 GROUP VISITS WELCOME and HOMEMADE REFRESHMENTS available by prior arrangement. Please email or ring for details.
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Wanted Old Radio Valves And Audio
Valves. Tel: 02392 251062
Wholesale Nursery
Tel 01404 41150
Looking for young, hardy garden plants to grow or plant? Try
Trimplant Nursery, Combe Raleigh, Honiton, Devon sales@trimplants.co.uk www.trimplants.co.uk
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Coming up in the August issue of Country Gardener
SPEAKERS GALORE!
Our August issue will carry the hugely popular Speakers Supplement, a pull out and keep guide to garden and gardening speakers and lecturers. It has been fully updated for 2016.
It provides new options, new ideas and possibilities as you plan your meetings.
Contact Ava Bench on 01823 619073 or email ava@countrygardener.co.uk The August issue of Country Gardener will be available from mid July onwards.
Hollyhock heaven is here again!
No traditional cottage garden would be complete without the tall, graceful spires of hollyhocks. Once a Victorian favourite, these glorious towers of colour became forgotten fl owers. Now their time has come again.
Growing hollyhocks (Alcea rosea) in the garden is the goal of many gardeners who remember these impressive fl owers from their youth. The fl ower stalks on hollyhocks can reach heights of nine feet tall! They can tower above a garden, adding a lovely vertical element to your borders. Translated as 'holy mallow', hollyhocks were brought here from the Holy Land by Crusaders, and have been gracing our gardens ever since. They are nomads by nature, so if your neighbours have them, they are bound to pitch up in your garden sooner or later, spreading out a parasol of green leaves in the fi rst year, then soaring skywards in the second. The fl ower spikes teeter above bristly foliage and are studded with felted buttons, which pop open either into poppy-like bells or rosette doubles in shades of white, lemon, cola-cube or liquorice, depending on the variety. Hollyhocks no longer quite fi t their let-them-get-on-withit cottage garden image. But if you give them care and attention, they are worth it come July. With their open, saucer fl owers, splashed all the way up their jack-and-the-bean-stalk stems, each one busy with butterfl ies and bumblebees, they'll more than repay your efforts. Because they fl ower in summer, and because of their selfsuffi cient habit of self-sowing in paving and gravel, it would seem that they are happy to live in desert-dry soil. In sunny, fi ve-star accommodation, the fl ower-spikes will tower as high as nine feet giving sunfl owers a run for their money. Once you have planted your hollyhocks, they will need minimal care, but there are a few things you should be aware of when growing hollyhocks. First, hollyhocks are a short lived perennial. This means that most varieties will only live two to three years. Their lifespan can be extended some by removing growing hollyhock fl owers as soon as they fade. Cutting them back to the ground and mulching them will also help. The one benefi t that comes from growing hollyhock fl owers is that they easily reseed themselves.
Make more plants Hollyhocks self-sow, so once you have introduced them they should spring up of their own volition, but they will creep to the sunny, open front of the bed. Watch out for this and dig some up and put them further back out of the limelight to get a balanced sweep. Don't transfer them directly, though – they need a short spell of tender love and care. Dig up self-sown seedlings and pot them into a three inch pot. Once the roots have fi lled it, move them on into a slim, deep pot to accommodate the tap root.
Hollyhocks are archetypal cottage garden plants and you often see them growing beautifully in churchyards. The cleaner, sulphur-free air that we all now enjoy, however, means that fungus on hollyhocks is more common. Rust fungus forms little pustules on the underside of hollyhock basal leaves and often spreads from there up the stem. Hollyhock rust is a fungal disease that shows up as angry cinnamon coloured spots on the undersides of leaves. It fi rst came here from South America in the late 19th century, when hollyhocks were the must-have plant. It devastated collections across Europe, spreading between gardens via the leaves of wild mallow. As soon as you see rust, pinch off the affected leaves. Water is key to preventing it. Hollyhocks have long tap roots, which allows them to bypass the surface dryness and hunt for moisture deep down. So any way you can trap moisture around their roots - watering in dry weather and creating a lid over the soil to hold in water by spreading a two inch layer of garden compost around stems - will help. Don't pile it up against the stem as it will cause rot and, as rust is worse in humid conditions, keep your hose aimed low so that no water splashes on the hairy leaves. If you let them grow tall - they're great for hiding fences at the back of a border, or as centrepieces to island beds and partners to roses - it pays to keep them on the straight and narrow by staking with a bamboo cane pushed in the ground behind the tallest spikes. When they fi nish fl owering the stems can be cut right down to ground level or left to ripen for seed. Although classifi ed as annuals or biennials, the parent plant might come back to fl ower again for a few years, but it should only be kept if healthy. If it's riddled with rust, bin or burn it. The same goes for self-sown hollyhocks: clear away all affected rusty leaves in spring and you're halfway to having fantastic fl owers in summer.