Showing posts with label Visits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Visits. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 September 2013

How it's done

Last month my friend had a garden warming party. She's been in her new home for a year now & boy has she been busy.

The Layout

The North-facing front is paved parking so all the garden fun is out the back.

Previous owners added decking by the house to make the most of the Southern sunshine. The deck also organises the hefty level changes that come from living on the side of a hill. The staged drop to the main garden, combined with strategic boundary hedging, makes for a secluded spot, shielded from passing gusts & prying eyes.


Packed with treasure

I really struggled to get an overview photo that does the garden justice. This is a section from a Photosynth panoramic, hence the left hand bendy shed.

When my friend arrived a year ago, the main area was lawn with small edging borders and a couple of small trees, but it's all change now. The trees remain, jazzed up for the party with some beautiful glass globe tealight lanterns. But the changes are much more than a few cosmetic touches - the garden now has a series of distinct spaces, each with their own atmosphere - no mean feat in such a modest plot.

Moving left to right:
  • Raised veg beds, on the deck near the house.
  • Lounging seating area, also on the veg deck.
  • Crafting hut terminating the veg deck (the bendy shed above). This doubled as the party's bar.
  • Pond, in the back left corner - the latest addition.
  • Pergola with chimenea, for evenings round the fire.
  • Potting shed/glass house (right, above).
  • Dining table & chairs on the right hand deck off the kitchen/conservatory.
    and finally, the star of the show
  • Major central flower bed.
My friend used to work in horticulture so she's far more interested in a range of interesting plants than a monoculture. Up came the old central lawn, and in went the huge central bed. With a gravel edge and a winding bark chip path through the middle, you can get up close & personal with the planting, to weed or just to drool.

Here's some pics of my favourites - I have no idea what most of them are, so if you spot some familiar faces, please shout up!

Update

My friend has now kindly provided me with some names for the plants below. She's not 100% about them all, but hey, they'll be close enough & better than nowt!

Flowers

Thistle-type thing


Little spiky blue & silver thistle globes
Echinops ritro (globe thistle)

I've been looking longingly at thistles for a bit, but I hear they can be invasive - perhaps why this pale blue beauty is in a pot on the path.

Fiery daisy

There was a lot if buzzing in the garden but this clump of fiery daisies were particularly popular.
 
Fire! (Do do do)...
Helenium 'Sahin's Early Flowerer'

I love the flame coloured petals, surrounding a raised black pompom shot through with gold - just like glowing embers. Gorgeous.
 

Foliage

Freaky frenzy

The garden was packed with foliage of all shapes, all colours.

All the foliage
Sedum spectabile 'Autumn Joy'
Artemisia 'Powis Castle'
Cotinus coggygria 'Royal Purple' (smoke bush)
Philadephus 'Belle Etoile' (mock orange)

What fabulous contrasts here, so much texture cheek by jowl. Just blew my mind.

The gold leaf edge is brighter than this pic shows
Berberis thunbergii 'Golden Ring'

Fancy corn

In pots dotted around the garden & deck were these statuesque sweetcorn stems.
 
Fancy candy-striped corn
Zea mays (Japanese ornamental corn)
 
She picked up these as seeds on holiday in Canada. I've seen multi-coloured corn cobs before but not on the plant. Those bold stripes remind me of the seaside windbreaks of my youth!
 

Frosted fern

Lots of leaves were from the red end of things, but some aren't always the same colour. There were nice examples of leaves that change colour as they mature.

Candy-floss fern
Sorbaria sorbifolia 'Sem'

I love this kind of thing - plants with changing interest as they age & with the season; so useful in small gardens where everything needs to work harder to earn its keep.
 

Green grey shrub

Along with the reds, hints of silver were another recurring foliage theme.

A wall of silver green fluff
Euphorbia characias

This beast sits below the crafting hut and was taller than me. It's cool to have interest at eye level, especially something so bold.

An old friend

Also below the hut was something more full-on silver; something familiar:

We used to have one of these!

I know this! It's a curry plant, so named cos it gives a fenugreeky niff when you brush past it. Ours is long gone, possibly due to over-zealous pruning on my part, but at least I now know who to talk to if I want to re-introduce it.
And I think I might.

Sunday, 25 August 2013

Who's the Daddy?

How did I get into gardening? As with many things, (my height, my love of Monty Python & Queen, & my colour blindness) it comes from my family.

My Mum & Dad are both keen gardeners & my Dad is King Of Veg. I think for him it started as a combo of financial necessity & sanity break, but over the years his dedication & ability have become legendary amongst family & friends.

I was recently at my folks for my Dad's birthday party, so I took some pics to show you all, & to show myself that, whilst veg plants are needy, if you look after them they will look after you.

Maximise the space

Dad's garden is bigger than ours (veg plot of... erm... about 12m x 15m I think) but he also cannily makes the most of what he's got.

Runner beans up front,
courgettes in the compost at the back,
& blackberry management over the fence

Runner beans

I used to help my Dad put up the runner bean canes in early summer. One year, we could hear my Mum laughing all the way back in the kitchen. What? Turns out that whilst I was still shorter than my Dad at that point, my legs were already longer than his. Seems it wasn't only the beans that were climbing...

Courgettes

On holiday in Switzerland the other year, we saw folk growing pumpkins on top of the cowpat compost heaps. Apparently they love the heat and aren't bothered by the high nitrogen levels that would burn many other plants. So it was interesting to see Dad doing the same this year with his courgettes. I've not seen him do this before - always learning, always evolving.

Blackberries

Brambles are so invasive. There's a large bush that runs along the edge of the arable farmland to the South of my folks' garden. Many people are amazed that Dad tolerates this invasive bully of a weed on the other side of his fence. But blackberries are tasty, & Mum makes a mean apple & blackberry crumble, so why not manage them? Fair point.


Banter

My Dad & his neighbours have an annual veg competition. It's run along the lines of an RHS show, & by-and-large to those guidelines, but it's mainly about the banter: year after year of wind-up, gloating, goading, snooping... they love it.

Onions

There are many categories the growers can enter, but the 2 onion classes (Heaviest 3; & Heaviest Single) are the ones they all want to win.

Biggest Onion is the blue riband event at the street growers annual show 
The 50p is to give you some scale... & that's one big onion.

Beetroot

Dad's been growing beetroot since the early days. He & Mum used to pickle jar after jar, but over time they stepped away from the vinegar & we all started to appreciate the fabulous natural taste of the beetroot itself.

The beets are looking canny hefty too
Since he's been competing, Dad has split his sewing. His primary concern is still tasty fresh veg, so that still makes up the majority of his plot. But he now sews competition varieties too, alongside the kitchen ones.

However, his fellow competitors agree that growing for size alone misses the key point veg growing - great taste.

Tomatoes

One of the 1st taste categories they introduced was Tastiest Tomatoes. Last year I know lots of folks suffered terrible tomato times, but we've had plenty of sunshine this Summer so I hope everyone else's look as juicy as these:

Soooo many tomatoes
The toms get pride of place in the greenhouse, although there is room too for capsicums & cucumber.  Rather than plant these guys straight into the ground, the pops them in large containers instead. He's also rigged up an irrigation system, with each plant getting its own dedicated little showerhead. Certainly seems to be working.

Pest management tips & tricks


Brassica row: Cabbages, sprouts & purple sprouting
As we were chatting, one of my Dad's friends asked for advice on how to get such great cabbages. He had 2 tops tips.

Rhubarb for club root

Once you have the club root fungus in your soil, it can be nigh impossible to remove. This usually means the end of your cabbage growing capers, but Dad said he had recently received a top tip that was working for him: chop stems of rhubarb into the bottom of the cabbage trench. Reading the RHS page, I wonder if the rhubarb changes the pH of the soil? Worth a shot I guess.

Spray for cabbage insect pests

Dad knows I'm not keen on traditional chemical pest treatments so asked me to cover my ears as he said it. The butterflies even found my kale seedlings in the greenhouse this year. It must be a massive pain in the arse to clear all the eggs off every leaf of every plant by hand. We each make our choices, but I know the chemical path is not for me, & given how lazy I am, I guess I won't be growing any cabbages any time soon.

Carrot crèche

Dad will admit however that chemicals aren't always the answer. Sometimes a physical barrier is the best defence, hence the fleecy play pen for the carrots.

Carrots play pen
As you might know, carrot plants are quite pungent little things - if you ruffle the leaves with your fingers they give off quite a strong scent, and the carrot root fly can smell that from a long way away. However, they fly low to the ground. So, if you wrap them in fleece like this, you both reduce the risk of creating carrot perfume clouds as you wander around your plot, and you have a physical barrier that stops any of the little miscreants getting in to punch holes into your lovely roots.

New kids on the block

Part of the fun of gardening is trying out new stuff, & there are several plants Dad grows now that he didn't when I left home nearly 25 years ago.

Corn

I love the look of sweetcorn plants. They're fabulous - statuesque, unusual & tasty too. All good.

No elephants to measure corn height against
Dad has 2 rows, this one was by the greenhouse sheltering from the wind. This is exactly what our neighbour did the other year - a row of corn between his greenhouse & the stinky dog cage.

Rainbow chard

Dad has tended to grow quite traditional fare, but after his asparagus success I think he's really starting to think outside the veg box. Mind, this one might've been Mum's idea...

The yellow stems of the rainbow chard

Sunflowers

Flowers?! In the veg garden?! My, things have definitely changed...

Bringing all the bees to the yard
I think I remember Dad saying these had been started with the grandkids, but it has to be said that the row of sunflowers makes a lovely line of sentinels marking the boundary between Mum's flowers & herbs & Dad's veg.

Grapes

Mum & Dad love a Summer holiday in the Med, & who can blame them. It was understandable too that they would want to bring a bit of that sun soaked gorgeousness back home with them.

This Is England. I kid you not.
The vine is on a pergola over a patio that gets sun all day long & catches the sunset too. It's also against the neighbours' tall boundary wall, so the bricks catch what heat there is & feed it back to the vine as the day fades.

The vine has taken quite a few years to get established, but there are some things you just can't rush.

If you do just 1 thing...

As you might imagine, it was lovely to wander around taking snaps of Dad's garden, remembering old stuff, checking out the new.

Some of Dad's oldest friends were at the party, & one of them is just getting into veg gardening. Dad's advice?
"Talk to people."

As it's been since before the dawn of our species.
The oldest ways are the best, eh?



Update

Cos this post was about family stuff, I sent the link to family folk. My Aunt has an allotment & today she sent me a photo of her Patty Pans. I do like these spacey squash varieties, & given how well the courgettes grow in our garden, I think I'll add these to my Spring seeds shopping list.

My Aunt's visitors from Outer Space




Update #2

I saw Dad recently. After berating me for "sharing his secrets" with you, I got some of his results from the annual weigh-in:
  • Heaviest 3 beetroots - Won!
  • Heaviest 3 carrots - Won!
    It helped that the favourite, & eventual overall winner, left his carrots at home...
  • Final position overall - 3rd
Every year there's some controversy - a bit of drama is all part of the banter for them.

Where's the champ?

This year's overall winner wasn't present when the results were revealed. Why did he miss his moment of glory? Because the local football team had a match the same day & he was determined to be in front of his telly for kick off.

Let me get this right - you spend all year growing outstanding veg for competition day, & then sack it off for football, which happens every weekend for half the year? Boggling. But then, this guy wins the overall prize most years, so maybe he just sees it as a foregone... Bit of a slap in the face for the other guys tho'.

The best cucumber?

Dad says his cucumber was his best submission ever for that class. Then seeing the competition laid out on the judging table, he though his was a shoo-in. But no! Another won & Dad feels robbed.

I asked:

Did you ask for feedback on why you didn't win Best Cucumber?
No.
Why not?
Is it cos you're sulking...?

Yes.

Did I mention Dad was 65 this year?

Monday, 20 May 2013

The Late Shows with Moorbank

I love The Late Shows.

I work full time so having stuff open in the evening is spot on for me. Plus, as a hard-of-hearing non-drinker, I've gotta to say pubs are losing their appeal... But how about a visit to a gallery or the botanic gardens of a Saturday night instead? Now yer talking!

The Late Shows are in their 6th year & put on a defiant front in the face of the Civic Centre's vicious Arts funding cuts. The range of events & activities over last Friday & Saturday night was just amazing.

All aboard the culture bus

The venues where scattered throughout Newcastle & Gateshead, so the open-topped sight-seeing buses were drafted to ferry people from Moorbank Botanic Garden at the top of Claremont Road, to Ouseburn & over the river to The Baltic & The Shipley Gallery in Gateshead.

Attacked by a cherry tree on the open-topped bus back into town
 
Many of the events were free & visitors got glow stick - a really nice idea: as the night draws in & you walk from venue to venue, you can spy fellow culture vultures. You realise quite how many people aren't just out for the usual night on the lash.

Got me a glow stick!

1st stop for me was Moorbank. The Garden has had a stay of execution since I wrote about it last, & the Friends are working their socks off trying to secure the funding & the permissions to keep it open. All power to 'em!

It was a bit too dark for visiting the outdoor areas but the glasshouses were just magical in the evening light.

Totally Tropical

How orchids should look, rather than dead like mine

In the Tropical House the orchids were putting on a spectacular show. On my last visit the volunteers mentioned that most of the orchids are donations - folk buy them from M&S, but once the flowers die they've no idea what to do with them. Moorbank clearly do! I really should've donated mine rather than consigning it to the compost heap...

Gotta love pitcher plants

Moorbank also has quite a collection of carnivorous plants, & I do love them for their weirder shapes. I know they're quite difficult to keep but the ones here, like everything else, just look amazing.

Desert sessions

If you visit Moorbank during the day, the key atmospheric difference you notice between the 2 main glasshouses is the humidity: moist in the Tropical House; dry in the Desert House. But visiting in the evening you also get: hot in the Tropical House; cold in the Desert House. Ah yes, desert can get cold at night. I always forget this, even though we saw frost on Saharan dunes (& I froze my ass off) on our Tunisian daybreak camel ride (on holiday, a thousand years ago).

A number of cacti were flowering

After admiring Moorbank's cactus & succulent collection, you could mosey round to the Cactus & Succulent Society's stand & take a little bit of the desert home with you - on the walk up Claremont Road, it was so cool to pass happy customers proudly clutching their new pets.

Not so starry night

Folks from Kielder Observatory were also a Moorbank for The Late Shows. The Gardens back onto part of the Town Moor & so are in one of the darkest areas of the City, so the plan had been to do a little stargazing... No great surprise then that we had the foggiest night so far this Spring. I have this kind of track record with astronomical observations: I made the trip to our nearest event for Stargazing Live a couple of years ago & of course it was cloudy. We got luckier in 1999 after hauling ass down to Cornwall for the eclipse - it was cloudy but we were at Mullion Cove on The Lizard, one of the few places in the UK where the cloud lifted right on cue. Pretty damn cool.

So instead of looking at Saturn & Jupiter, the lads from Kielder took us though some beautiful photos from the Cassini probe (& others). Check this film of the Huygens lander floating down to Titan:



It's liquid methane down there & the surface was described as like "crème brulee" - crispy on the top & squidgy underneath.

Is there anybody out there?

The Kielder chaps also spoke about the potential for life on other planets, & about waterbears. These microscopic chaps are a tough as they are tiny - this from Wiki:
Tardigrades can withstand temperatures from just above absolute zero to well above the boiling point of water, as well as pressures greater than any found in the deepest ocean trenches, ionizing radiation — at doses hundreds of times higher than would kill a person and have lived through the vacuum of outer space. They can go without food or water for nearly 120 years, drying out to the point where they are 3% or less water, only to rehydrate, forage, and reproduce.
Why did they need to evolve this battery of superpowers to survive life on earth?
Well, maybe they didn't.
Maybe they.... CAME FROM OUTER SPACE!!!

Summer breeze

With my mind well & truly blown, I hopped onto the culture bus to hit the Laing Gallery & their current Sunlit Pleasures show. Ahhh... virtual Vitamin D... mmm...

The Late Shows - here's to more of them.

Sunday, 27 January 2013

International jet set plants

Japan jolly holiday pix, part 1

Oh we do like a bit of that Nihon goodness in this house. This Christmas was our 3rd trip to Japan, so over the next few posts I'm going to show you some of the gardening stuff we saw this time around. I'll look at the local vegetation & hard landscaping in the next couple of posts. Right now, let's set the scene & then take a look at some tropical regulars.

Where in the world?

As you may or may not know, Japan is made up of over 6800 islands. The archipelago stretches over a couple of thousand miles (give or take a couple of ongoing territory disputes), starting up by Russia, through Honshu where Tokyo lives, & running on down the Pacific Ring of Fire to just clip the top of the tropics.

This year we went to the Yaeyama Islands, a group at the South Western end of the chain, due East of Taiwan. We visited 4 jimas on this trip: Ishigaki-jima, Taketomi-jima, Iriomote-jima & Yubu-jima.

Climate

So, just North of the tropics means no frost & good positive temperatures all year round. But it was most definitely Winter while we were there, with the weather changeable & regularly stormy. But when the sun came out, it was glorious - shorts, sandals & sunglasses.

The international tropical jetset

We've been fortunate enough to have been on several sunny trips abroad, & I'm starting to notice that there are some plants that seem to follow us around on our holidays. Are they stalking us?

Bougainvillea

I think we've seen this plant on just about every trip we've had to a frost-free destination. 1st time was Tenerife, where its dark green leaves & its lairy magenta or orange flowers looked great against the white buildings.

For some reason I didn't expect to see it in Japan, but here it is:

Bougainvillea, pushing my camera to the limit
(Sorry about the photo quality - my camera really gets its pixels in a twist with vibrant pinks & reds)

The photo above was taken in the garden of the Guesthouse Iriwa on Ishigaki, and we saw this pink variety in gardens everywhere on the trip. Then, on Yubu-jima, there was a greenhouse packed with other colours too.

The Yubu-jima bougainvillea collection

The big blousey bits aren't petals, but pseudo-flowers made by specialist leaves called bracts. The true flower is the teeny white one, right in the middle.

Hibiscus

I tend to think of Hawaii when I see this flower. It's so pretty that it's no surprise this luau lovely has conquered the tropical world:

Hibiscus, in red, the hairclip favourite

We're all used to seeing the flower in isolation, as a motif on a sarong or shirt, or behind the ear of a beach babe, but the parent plant of this beautiful bloom is a shrub. On our trips we've seen it regularly used as the most glamorous of hedging.

The plant seems almost insanely willing to flower too - in Madeira, we saw a freshly planted hibiscus hedge that consisted of sticks barely 2 inches out of the ground, & one of these bare twigs already had a whacking great flower hanging off it.

It comes in loads of colours, some of which we saw in Japan:

Hibiscus, in a delicate pale pink

Hibiscus, in a much less delicate PIIIIIIINK!

Bamboo

The bamboo craze didn't only hit the UK, it would seem. The bigger varieties have been planted with enthusiasm across the tropics, & you can see why: statuesque, elegant, shade-giving, windbreak, plus handy construction material.

Best use I've seen was in the grounds of the hotel at Chichen Itza in Mexico - fabulous tall clumps of green stemmed giant bamboo were planted throughout the hotel's extensive gardens. Admittedly, they used a chainsaw to prune them, but at least they were never short of a fence post.

The variety below is from a little closer to bamboo's natural home, as the photo is from the grounds of another hotel, Painu Maya, where we stayed on Iriomote:

Big bamboo

Palms

Hot weather = palms: date, coconut, banana, the lot. No promo tropical beach shot is complete without a palm or too, preferably with a hammock strung between them.

Palm are so happy in warmer climes, they end up as the municipal default:
"We've got a long road with no shade... Best line it with palms, then..."

You know you're on holiday when you can see palms :)

Palm grove

So that's some of the familiar faces. In the next post or two, I'll look at some stuff that was new to me this time around.

Friday, 19 October 2012

Moorbank Botanic Gardens threatened with closure

Noooooooooo!
I only just found it...

This week the Journal reported that Moorbank Botanic Gardens is to close. Newcastle University are pulling the plug on this little green oasis in the City.

Who knew there was a tropical paradise on the edge of the moor at the top of Claremont Road? Not me, that's for sure, & I used to work on Claremont Road. I must've driven past its gates a thousand times.

But I was given a heads up earlier this Summer when I went to an open evening a Moorbank with some green-fingered friends from work, & it was fab.

More about Moorbank

Rather than me mashing up their history, here's the description from the Moorbank Facebook page:
The garden has been used by botanists from the University since 1923.
& the research continues to this day - when we visited, there was an area cordoned off outside that was under test, plus there was what looked like a drought wheat trail in one of the hot houses.
In 1981, the area under cultivation was increased to over 1 hectare to provide a safe haven for rare plants donated to the University from the Kilbryde Garden in Corbridge.
Sadly, it turns out that haven may not be so safe... The plants were collected by Randle Cooke, a very private but dedicated exotic plant expert. He built his collection over 70 years, growing seeds brought back from all over the world by more intrepid plant hunters. The Hexham Courant has a fab article about the Kilbryde rescue which includes a great profile of Cooke.
In 1985, the new glasshouses were acquired to house experimental facilities and collections of tropical, dryland and insectivorous plants.
This part of the visit was amazing: a tropical section & a desert section, both packed with fabulous exotic species. The tropical area has a large collection of carnivorous plants such as this monster:
One of the many pitcher plans in the Tropical House
And to keep the atmosphere moist in the jungle, there's a little pond with trickling stream.
Lots of greenery round the Tropical House's pond

In 2000, the garden was further extended to allow for new developments including a hay meadow, wildlife hedge and Northumberland bed.
Apparently the hedge had a spot of bother recently after neighbouring cows had a bit of a maraud...

Also outside in the grounds is a little lake, although to be fair this Summer it was a little tricky to tell where the lake stopped the lawn started. But the bog plants were loving it.
Gunnera, outdoors by the little lake
Mind, Moorbank seem to be doing a better job at controlling the slugs & snails that the rest of the nation this Summer, as evidenced by the fabulous leaves on their giant hosta.
Huge hosta with impeccable leaves... not that I'm envious... not much...
As much as I love them, I've given up with hostas. Our resident snail population is so vast there's just no point. Instead I'm going to research how to go about harvesting snails for the garlic & butter treatment... I kid you not & you'll be the 1st to know.

A little work for charidee

One to drool, please...
Moorbank isn't normally open to the public, but we got in cos it throws the doors wide from time to time under the banner of the National Gardens Scheme. The Scheme is a fabulous way of getting a glimpse into places & spaces not normally open to the public.

& in a fit of IT fervour not commonly associated with horticulture, the scheme has an iPhone app. Yes really.

Moorbank will be opening it's doors again next year. I think we paid an entrance fee of £3 each. Plus there were tasty cakes & gorgeous little plants for sale. All the proceeds to charity.

Moorbank Open Days 2013

  • Sunday 17th March, 1-4pm
  • Wednesday 22nd May, 4-7pm with wine
  • Sunday 21st July, 2-5pm
  • Sunday 8th September, 2-5pm
Visit while you still can, & keep an eye on the Moorbank Facebook page for the latest news...