From spring into summer
The transition from spring to summer is probably the best
time in a garden and however unpredictable the weather may be. Rosemary
Verey reflects and explains how to plan for an even better next year.
How lucky we are in England to have a true spring, happening slowly
so we can enjoy each treasure as it comes through in the garden.
This year April showers lasting an hour or two continued well into
May. I am always amazed at how the flowers accept this with equanimity
and quickly raise their heads when the sun dries their petals. Looking
back through my diaries a typical entry for now reads: ‘morning
wet, then the wind changed and the sun shone all afternoon,’
More than at any other time of the year the garden changes daily. To
enjoy it fully go out every morning, if you have time, and evening when
you return from work. Everywhere new stems are pushing up, new leaves
unfolding and new buds opening.
Normally the daffodils are over by mid-May and despite the weather
this was the case this year. At Barnsley, where they grow in borders,
we leave them so they build up and expand every year. I think tying
the stems into bundles is hideous and you don’t have to wait forever
before cutting them down. RHS Trials at Wisley showed that you can do
this six weeks after peak flowering without damaging future flowering.
While these spring joys are fresh in your mind this is the time to
note down changes and additions you want to make so that in the autumn,
when you are planting new bulbs, you haven’t forgotten. I have
noticed that my double daffodils ‘White Lion‘ and ‘Mount
Hood’ have both reduced in numbers and I have made a note to replenish
them.
There were gaps as well so I have noted in the same place to ‘plant
more crocuses down the middle of the beds and clumps of Iris reticulata
in the corners, to bring the garden to life in early-spring.’
I find red tulips difficult to place. They are too strident close to
the gentle colours of spring blossoms. At Barnsley we restrict them
to under the laburnum walk where they have flowered for years.
The late My Hoog of Van Tubergens in Holland recommended the Darwin
hybrid ‘T. Apeldoorn’, and advised planting each bulb very
deeply. I have supplemented with another tulip, ‘London’.
He also sent us 200 Allium aflatunense to synchronise with the laburnum
and we added wisteria (influenced by the garden designer Russell Page)
to harmonise with the mauve and yellow. And so this is the composition
of one of the garden’s best-known features, at its best right
now from the middle of May through to early-June.
In another part of the garden the rock rose path is in full colour
by the end of May. The path is a prominent feature in front of the house,
dividing lawns and beds and lined with dark yews. Compared to the carefully
composed shades of yellow and mauve in the laburnum walk, I am always
excited by the explosion of the rock roses into reds and oranges –
clashing colours can be vibrant and pleasing.
And soon we’ll be into rose season. I greatly enjoyed the new
roses that the leading grower David Austin launched on his stand at
Chelsea. They are all fragrant and ‘Malvern Hills’ is a
climber with luxuriant rich double yellow flowers. ‘William Shakespeare’
(pictured above) honours the man of the millennium and is irresistible
crimson turning to purple. More notes to make for future orders, but
good things are always worth waiting for and you must remember how much
gardening is in the mind, thinking, planning.
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