Cotswolds Country Gardener September 2022

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„ Terrariums „ The last burst of summer dahliasPLUS: „ Making sloe gin „ Impatient gardeners „ September days out „ Gardening news throughout the Cotswolds Cotswolds www.countrygardener.co.uk Issue No 189 SEPTEMBER 2022 FREE Saving the summer! How or n a m e nt a l g r a s s e s c ont i nue t o f l o u r i s h i n t h e d r o u g h t And while we are on the weather: How to save seeds this autumn; Long term water wise gardening; The right plant in the right place OPEN SIX DAYS A WEEK - Tues-Sat: 9am - 5.30pm Sun: 10.30am - 4.30pm ALSO OPEN BANK HOLIDAY MONDAYS M40 M40 STRATFORD UPON AVON LEAMINGTON SPA BANBURY SOUTHAMBICESTERDAVENTRYM40 J11 A422 A425A423 A361 B4100 CHIPPING NORTON GardenFarnboroughCentre AT THE GARDEN LOVERS GARDEN CENTRE On A423 Southam Road, Nr. Farnborough, Banbury OX17 1EL. Tel: 01295 690479 Autumn Gardening Awww.farnboroughgardencentre.co.uktraditionalgardencentrethatfocussesonproviding quality plants, garden products & giftware

ROSS GARDEN STORE OPEN 7 DAYS PER *caféOpen10am-4.30pm9am-5pmWEEKMon-SatSunBankHolidaysopeningtimesdiffer Looking for a different shopping experience? Look no further than Ross Garden Store! A unique independent family run business nestled in the heart of Ross on Wye, a small market town on the banks of the river Wye in an area of outstanding natural Burstingbeauty.with100’s of seasonal plants all housed undercover, and with a shop full of unusual gifts you won’t see on the high street, this is a must see Thedestination.mainshop is found within an historical “Brunel” designed “Engine Shed” building-formerly of the Great Western Railway, and houses a wonderful café serving homemade cakes, light lunches and their signature “cheese scones”. Great customer service, coupled with knowledgeable staff always willing to help. Why wait - make it a date in the diary - you won’t be disappointed! The Engine Shed, Station Approach, Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire HR9 7BW 01989 www.rossgardenstore.onlineonline@rossgardenstore.co.ukwww.rossgardenstore.com568999

There are still some gardenslovelyopening in Gloucestershire for the National Garden Scheme during the more mellow days of September, ranging from a varied group of gardens at the village of RissingtonWyckwith its village green and pond, to a garden of contrasting areas and wonderful views over meadow and woodland in the village of Bibury. There are four gardens opening for the NGS in Wyck Rissington, 4thWaterBourton-on-the-nearonSundaySeptemberfrom 1pm until 5pm, an unspoilt village off the beaten track. LAURENCE HOUSE has a much admired garden with new features including a wildlife pond, while GREENFIELDS FARM‘S garden has been completely redesigned under its new owners with a new Japanese garden.

BIBURYAWKWARDHILLAWKWARDCOTTAGE,HILL,GL75NH is an withinformalbothsurroundings,incountryever-evolvinggardenpicturesquewithformalandplanting,year-round interest, reflecting the local landscape and wildlife.encouraging

Opening for the NGS on Sunday 4th September from 2pm until 6pm, admission is £5, children free, with home-made teas, plants for sale, and dogs allowed on leads. This is also a garden that opens for the NGS by arrangement July-August for groups; contact the owner directly on 01285 740289 or email v.summerley@hotmail.com and the website is www.awkwardhill.co.uk For more gardens in the Cotswolds and other areas covered by Country Gardener, go to our main feature on garden visits on page 32

RARE PLANT FAIR AT ADWELL HOUSE, NEAR THAME

The 2022 programme of Rare Plant Fairs continues in September with the popular event set in the grounds and gardens of Adwell House, near Thame, on Sunday, 4th September. Adwell House is just on the edge of the Chiltern Hills.

Lovely gardens open for the NGS in Gloucestershire during September

in Chipping

Ancient tree in Chipping Campden churchyard could become Tree of the Year A spectacular lime tree in Chipping Campden could become Tree of the Year 2022, in the annual competition run by the Woodland Trust, asking the public to vote for their favourite venerable tree. Called the ‘12 Apostles’ Lime’, it’s the largest of an avenue of 12 pollarded limes in the churchyard of St James, Chipping Campden. The avenue was planted in the 1700s to represent one of the 12 apostles. Five trees were replaced in 1929 but based on the tree’s size and condition with a completely hollow trunk, it’s possible that it is one of the originals planted more than 250 years ago. A panel of experts has shortlisted 12 of the most fascinating trees from across the UK for Tree of the Year 2022. Now the public has been asked to vote for their favourite and help crown a winner which will represent the UK in the European Tree of the Year 2023 competition. Voting is open until noon on Monday, 31st October and the winner will be announced on Friday 4th the shortlist have been added to the Ancient Tree Inventory in the last two years. So far more than 180,000 trees have been recorded in the Inventory. Go to the Woodland Trust’s website to find out more about the competition, and about helping to map old and ancient trees in the UK. If you find a tree you think is very old, send information to the Trust and it will be visited and verified by one of their experts. SHOW EXPANDS ITS WINGS 2022

FOR

Moreton-in-Marsh hosts the ever-popular farming, food and family themes show on Saturday, 3rd September. The show not only celebrates the best of the British countryside but also the wonderful businesses that have shown endeavour across the Cotswolds. Tickets for adults are £20 in advance and £25 on the day. Children’s tickets are £10 online and £15 on the day. www.moretonshow.co.uk

MACES COTTAGE has fine borders and old fruit trees and like Greenfields has wonderful views over the Windrush Valley. ANSELL’S BARN is entirely new, with an emphasis on grasses, fruit trees and Admissionsculpture. is £9, children free, with homemade teas in the village hall, plants and produce for sale, and an exhibition in the parish church of native species growing on the village green. There’s access for wheelchairs and dogs are allowed on leads; coaches are also welcome. Wyck Rissington Gardens, Cheltenham GL54 2PN

The ‘12 Apostles’ Lime’ Campden churchyard

The current owner’s ancestors laid out the garden in the 19th century, and successive generations have continued to enhance and develop the gardens since then. The fair supports the work of local charity Aspire Oxford and is open from 11am to 4pm. Adult entry, which includes entry to the fair and garden costs £6, with children under 16 free. There is a great selection of specialist nurseries attending, all experts in the plants that they grow. Refreshments are available. Full details can be found at www.rareplantfair.co.uk Adwell House, Adwell, Nr. Thame, Oxfordshire OX9 7DQ

www.woodlandtrust.org.uk CUTTINGS MORETON

Wyck MacesRissingtonCottageAwkwardHillCottage Adwell House www.countrygardener.co.uk 3

TheNovember.treesin

A LOOK AT NEWS, EVENTS AND HAPPENINGS IN YOUR AREA

Gardeners cuttings in the Cotswolds

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AUTUMN WORK IN THE GARDEN GETS CLOSER

as possible and submitting entries

Gardening club events and meetings in Cotswoldsthe August 21ST Cheltenham Horticultural Society SUMMER SHOW AT PITTVILLE PUMP ROOMS September 1ST Churchdown Horticultural Society ’NEW PLANTS FROM OLD’ - DAVID CROPP churchdown.secretary@gmail.comEmail: 4TH Moors Meadow Gardens CONCERT & TEAS IN AID OF ST MICHAEL’S HOSPICE Details on 01885 510318 7TH Bishampton & District Gardening Club ‘PLANTS YOU THOUGHT YOU SHOULDN’T LIKE’ - JOSH EGANWYER www.bishamptongardeningclub.org.uk 8TH Alderton Gardening Club ‘PLANTS OF THE SEASON’ - PAUL www.aldertonvillage.co.uk/alderton-GREENgardening-club Cheltenham Horticultural Society ‘THE ANSWER LIES IN THE SOIL’PHILIP AUBREY Details on 01242 691135 15TH Newent Gardening Club ‘GARDENING FOR BUTTERFLIES & MOTHS’ - SUE SMITH Details on 01531 820761 19TH Abbeydale Garden Club ‘UK CASTLE GARDENS’ - RICHARD HARVEY Details on 01452 540790 Southam Gardening Club ‘LOOKING GOOD AT THE MOMENT’ - COLIN WARD Details on 01926 813986 Warwickshire Group of the Alpine Garden Society ‘NARROW ROAD TO THE DEEP NORTH - TRAVELS IN JAPAN’DIANA CLEMENT Details on 0121 7443129 20TH Lawn Gardening Club ‘TALKING TOMATOES’ - NICOLA HOPE Details on 01793 523099 21ST Codford & District Gardening Club ‘INHERITING AN HISTORIC GARDEN’ - WILLIAM & MARIANNE CARTWRIGHT-HIGNETT, OWNERS OF IFORD MANOR Details on 01985 850258 ‘Time Off’ set to return If your gardening club or association is back in full swing after the restrictions of the past couple of years be sure to let Country Gardener know. Send your club meetings and details to timeoff@countrygardner.co.uk Look out for the October issue of Country Gardener available from Friday, 30th September Vegan market for Cirencester Cirencester hosts another Vegan Market on Sunday, 22nd September. The market has been running since 2018 and offers a day jam packed with all things plant based and cruelty free. Open from 10am to 3pm. Search for

Street’ begins

many

The British Hedgehog Preservation Society and People’s Trust for Endangered Species, who together run nationwide campaign Hedgehog Street, are urging people to connect as many gardens in their area as possible. This will allow local hedgehogs to roam between them in search of food, mates and nesting materials – a small action vital for the species’ long-term survival. The idea is simple: become a ‘Hedgehog Champion’ and connect as many gardens as possible via ‘Hedgehog Highways’ (a 13cm or CD case sized square gap under garden fences or walls), and then submit your entry online. Free dedicated invitations for Hedgehog Champions to share with neighbours explaining the idea, and window posters highlighting Hedgehog Highways, are also available online.

www.countrygardener.co.uk 5 CAVESNURSERIESFOLLY Organic and Peat free Perennials, Herbs, Alpines and Grasses. OPEN: Thurs, Fri & Sat 10am-4pm Evendine Lane, Colwall WR13 6DX www.cavesfolly.com AUTUMN SALE STARTS 1ST SEPT OPEN 7 DAYSWEEKA Coventry Road, Guy's Cliffe, Warwick CV34 5FJ 01926 492273 info@hintonsnursery.co.uk Hintons is a not for profit organisation Deliveryavailableservice National Garden Gift Vouchers 10%www.hintonsnursery.co.ukOFF all PLANTSAQUATIC Septemberin TAKING ORDERS FOR Soft Fruit, Ornamental and Fruit Trees, Autumn Baskets and Bare Root Hedging Great range of nursery grown plants & EXCELLENT SELECTION of gardening SUNDRIES & COMPOSTS, EXPERT ADVICE & PLANTING PLAN SERVICE TIMBER MERCHANTS ANDSPECIALISTSFENCING Open: Mon-Fri 8am-5pm Visit our well-stocked yard for timber, gates, fencing, decking, trellis, pergolas and arches, plus expert advice. TRY OUR ONLINE FENCING CALCULATOR AT www.hartwellfencing.co.uk 01386 840373 The Timber Yard, Weston Subedge, Nr Chipping Campden, GL55 6QH

CUTTINGS

After a hot and dry summer, the autumn months will be a relief for many that have struggled to keep their plants, trees and grass hydrated and alive. However, autumn brings challenges, and there’s still plenty of work facing those who care for the outdoors. Leaves will soon be thick underfoot, and a rake is often woefully inadequate even with hours of backbreaking labour. Making life easier for those with the difficult task of caring for the land is the passion and expertise of SCH Supplies. As a British manufacturer of leaf collectors and sweepers, they are ideally suited to help with the task of leaf removal. When it comes to efficiency and practicality, nothing compares to the Leaf Suction Unit (PSU), which is hungry to clear up large areas of fallen leaves. The PSU features a powerful 9hp Honda engine, which is mounted next to the fan on a two-wheeled chassis. The fan is belt driven and not connected directly to the crankshaft, adding longevity to the engine’s lifespan. The green waste passing through the fan is chopped up and propelled into the trailer, significantly increasing the storage density, allowing for fewer empties per day, and saving a great deal of time and cost in labour. For a free 80 page brochure featuring all the designs and variations, contact SCH on 01473 328272, email sales@schsupplies.co.uk, or www.schsupplies.co.uk ‘Britain’s biggest Hedgehog Cotswolds gardeners have been asked to help hedgehogs by connecting as gardens Twoonline.wildlife charities are asking the public to link their gardens this summer in a bid to help hedgehogs and find ‘Britain’s Biggest Hedgehog Street’.

The highest number of gardens linked will be crowned ‘Britain’s Biggest Hedgehog Street’, with prizes including special Hedgehog Highway plaques and a hamper packed with hedgehogthemed goodies. The search for ‘Britain’s Biggest Hedgehog Street’ will run over the summer holidays until Saturday 10th September. Throughout the summer, PTES and BHPS will be sharing hints, tips and examples on their social media channels, where the winner will be announced at the end of September.

systems Never water in the heat of the day Country Gardener6

It stands to reason we should all use water wisely. Weeks without rain in this most dramatic of summers has led many gardeners to accept the inevitable – that their gardens have suffered and will continue to suffer and there has been permanent damage. The rain which finally came for much of the country mid-August, was too late for many plants. The biggest worry has been the availability of plants which need it most, the newly planted shrubs and trees, the plants in pots and the fruit and vegetables which run to seed or shrivel up without the right use of moisture. We mustn’t waste water on trees and plants which don’t need it – such as well established trees and shrubs but even plants which come under the ‘drought tolerant’ description will need to be watered during their first season to give their roots any chance of survival. Long term solutions for the years to come:

Are you water wise?

3. Avoid watering the lawn It may be that lawns will start to be less important in our gardens in the coming years. They can be vast areas of drought affected parts of the garden. As tempting as it might be, don’t water the lawn. It will recover. This summer more than most it may take a few weeks but the amount of water you can sensibly use on a lawn will not make much difference, so the answer is to be patient.

6. Add shade If our summers are to be this hot then our gardens need more shade so start planning now for more trees and shrubs gathered together in planting regimes that will provide cool and restful areas away from the sun in the years ahead.

7. Use more decorative mulches around the garden Pebbles and stones added in more areas of the garden specially around specimen plants means things won’t dry out so quickly.

This scorching summer perhaps more than any other has put our watering techniques to the test and has suggested we need longer term solutions for the garden if the recent heat is to become the norm

Drought-tolerant plants, usually native to dry regions such as the Mediterranean, have evolved to thrive in dry soils with little rainfall. With climate change and extreme weather events such as drought increasingly likely in the UK, growing droughttolerant plants means you can still have an attractive garden during a hosepipe ban.

2. Investigate garden irrigation systems Technology has moved ahead significantly over the last few years and there are now some wonderfully efficient systems on the market. At a very basic level they will mean you don’t have to lug hosepipes and cans all over the garden. The other huge benefit is they are hugely efficient with watering as they deliver the water directly to where it is needed. Perforated pipes close to the ground and covered with bark mulch will ensure that every drop of water is used.

Turn to more drought tolerant plants

Agapanthus is a fantastic drought-tolerant genus of plants, hailing from South Africa. There’s a variety of types to choose from, with both deciduous and evergreen agapanthus, with flower colours ranging from darkest purple-blue to white.

5. Tackle your soil long term Add lots and lots of organic matter so it can better hold on to moisture in dry spells. Lay a five cms covering on the damp early in spring to conserve moisture and keep down weeds.

Agapanthus ‘Silver Baby’ is a compact variety reaching 60cm in height, so is ideal for the front of the border or a pot. It has white flowers that have just a hint of blue and combines well with ornamental grasses such as Nassella tenuissima. It’s a hardy, deciduous variety. Geums Geums are hardy perennials that flower from May to August –cut them back after flowering and they should reward you with another flush later in the season. Geums look especially good when growing with contrasting colours such as blue flowers and lime green leaves. Grow in sun or part shade.

Sea Hollies Beautiful and long-lasting, sea hollies such as Erygnium x zabelii have tough, silvery leaves that never suffer in drought. Many species come from mountainous regions, where their long tap roots venture deep into the soil in search of water.

4. Choose larger containers They look more dramatic and dry out more slowly. Small pots are very labour intensive.

1. Fit more water butts Simply collect as much water as you can. Rainwater seems to suit plants so much better than tap water so fit water butts to as many downpipes as possible. Organise this now so that when spring and summer comes round you have a useable supply of water to start the season with.

8. When you do water use common sense Never water in the heat of the day when the water just evaporates and does little to help the plants. Wait until the cool of the evening or even before the temperatures rise in the mornings.

Choose larger containers water butts irrigation

Sedums Sedums are drought-resistant succulents that produce domes of starry pink, ruby or white flowers in late summer and autumn. Taller sedums may flop, but many of the smaller varieties have glaucous foliage which turns a rich purple when water is scarce.

Agapanthus ‘Silver Baby’

Look into

Hardy geraniums are low-maintenance, long-flowering perennials that can flower for months from spring, and need very little care. They thrive in sun or partial shade and are good for the front of the border. Cut back after flowering to encourage a second flush.

Fit more

www.countrygardener.co.uk 7 Enjoy the build-up to autumn in the arboretum, browse our newly-extended Garden Centre followed by lunch or a sweet treat from our café. A perfect day out for all the family – including the dog! BATSFORD ARBORETUM AND GARDEN CENTRE Batsford, Moreton-in-Marsh, Gloucestershire GL56 9AT. Tel: 01386 701441 E: arboretum@batsfordfoundation.co.uk Book your Arboretum tickets online at BatsfordArboretum@BatsfordA@BatsfordAwww.batsarb.co.uk Gretton Road, Gotherington, Cheltenham GL52 9QY 01242 www.gotheringtonnurseries.co.uk676722info@gotheringtonnurseries.co.uk 1 mile from Prescott Hill Climb. Open Mon-Sat: 9am-5pm Sun: 10am-4pm GREAT RANGE OF BULBS FOR PLANTINGAUTUMN Autumn bedding plants, hanging baskets & planted containers Cottage garden plants, shrubs & trees Plant, lawn & garden care products Specialist composts & decorative gravels Barrels, terracotta & glazed pots Specialist bird care products Cannop Crossroads, Nr Speech House, Royal Forest of Dean, Glos. Tel: 01594 833398 www.pygmypinetum.co.uk Pygmy Pinetum NURSERY & GARDENS Come and enjoy our lovely garden while shopping in safety, taking your pick from the glorious selection of plants we have to offer. TreesandOrnamentalFruit Excellent quality and a wide range. Something glorious for all types of garden. Spring flowering bulbs Favourites and more unusual varieties to plant now for a stunning spring display. Autumn and Winter colour Pansies, violas, heathers and more to fill your containers with the splendour of spring, or you can let us plant them for you. Shrubs and Perennials Lots now available and a perfect time for planting. A wide range of evergreens for a bright display all year round. MAKE THE MOST OF SUMMER 2022 FREE & AMPLE PARKING Creating beautiful flowers for all occasions PLUS chocolates, wine, gifts and balloons FREE LOCAL DELIVERIES (WITHIN A 4-MILE RADIUS) Mythe. A38 Worcester Rd, Tewkesbury GL20 6EB EMAIL: flowers@flowershedtewkesbury.co.uk Family-owned and managed “independent” Garden Centre, catering for all your gardening needs and so much more. Stockist of a wide range of well-known gardening brands and locally sourced plants, trees and shrubs. Browns Garden Restaurant serving Breakfasts, Homecooked ‘Fresh’ lunches, Afternoon teas, cakes & treats. SUNDAY ROASTS - BOOKING ADVISED FULLY LICENSED 01684 299996 info@brownsgardenrestaurant.co.uk Open Mon -Sat 9am-5.30pm, Sun 10am-4pm CHILDREN’S PLAY AREA ORDER ONLINE OR CALL US: www.flowershedtewkesbury.co.uk 01684 290288 T: 01684 293103 W: www.tewkesburygardencentre.com Find us on Facebook & Instagram Worcester Road, Tewkesbury, Glos, GL20 6EB OPEN: Mon-Sat 9am - 5.30pm, Sun 10am - 4pm NEW ONLINE SHOP!

• Dahlias originated from central and Southern America and were cultivated by the Aztecs who used parts of the plants for culinary and medical purposes.

seeds for next year Country Gardener8

• The name dahlia is not Mexican or Aztec but Swedish, named after the botanist Andreas Dahl.

• Dahlias became hugely popular in the 19th century when hybridisation created many new forms including a true double flower.

It’s grand finale time!

DAHLIAS HAVE DESERVEDLY BECOME OUR MOST POPULAR CUT FLOWERS BUT WHETHER IN THE BORDER OR IN A VASE THEY SHOULD BE READY TO PUT ON A SHOW STOPPING END TO THE SEASON

1. Start by picking early in the day, a good practice for any cut flower.

• The Great Exhibition in Hyde Park, London in 1851 was paramount in showing off the dahlia to all classes of society. The rise of the exhibition dahlia started and the National Dahlia Society was formed.

There are more than 57,000 different dahlias to choose from so if you prefer flowers with a more open centre for bees and butterflies then there are plenty of those to choose from too. Easy to propagate from tubers or by cuttings, as well as from seeds, dahlias became widespread in gardens. There are thousands of varieties, but the best thing is to find a colour and shape that suits. Height is important because it should match the other plants in the area where the dahlias are to be grown. While some people like to have lots of kinds and colours, it is probably best to choose just a couple of varieties and increase plant numbers by dividing the tubers in spring or taking cuttings in early summer.

Don’t

2. In order to maximise their relatively short three to four days life, warm or hot tap water is ideal. Dropping them in a vase of hot water and letting it cool to room temperature can extend their vase life up to two or three days.

If you want to collect seeds from your dahlias then wait until the seed heads become nice and brown and crispy then collect them on a dry day and store them somewhere cool and dry in paper bags or envelopes until next spring. They may not turn out exactly like their parents but that’s half the fun of sowing seed.

It’s important to grow single flowers as well these dramatic blooms. You can choose short varieties for pots and containers or bedding schemes or tall plants to borders and cut flowers. Dahlias come in most colours except blue. There are shades of red, orange, yellow, pink and white. Their foliage is attractive too with strong stems and broad green or even chocolatey colouring. It’s not just the open flowers that are beautiful. Dahlia buds are something special too. They are easy to grow but watch out for earwigs which like to hide inside the folded petals. How many times you wait for a lovely big fat bud to open only to find that all the tips of the petals have been nibbled by earwigs. Setting earwig traps is the only way to prevent your beautiful blooms being ruined. Did you know that you can grow dahlias from seed?

Three top tips for cut dahlias

Dahlias create a show and cut flower harvest like no other plant The more they are cut for the vase the more buds they produce, and no other flower gives as much glamorous clout. They have deservedly become the most popular summer and autumn cut flower enjoying a revival that has not been seen since they first sent Georgian Britain into a craze when they arrived from Mexico. These exotic looking flowers would steal the show in any garden, and you will love them in yours. A single plant may produce up to 100 blooms. The reasons for this devotion to the dahlia are obvious; it’s the sheer range of sizes and colours unmatched in the world of garden flowers. Equally important is the time of flowering. Continuously from July to the first frosts, dahlias provide colour when so many flowers are past their best. Hence the appeal of a bonanza full colour finish to summer. A very accommodating plant, it does well even in the hottest, dry summers. It likes good soil but will grow almost Itanywhere.relishessunshine but can still do well in partial shade. On their own, in the herbaceous border or even patio containers for dwarf varieties, they are ideal. Dahlias are also excellent for providing cut flowers.

3. Dahlia buds do not open after cutting. Dahlias should be harvested when they are about three quarters open and the back petals are not yet wilting. forget collect

to

Some old gardens around the country often have varieties that have been in the borders for many decades. There is a beautiful old ruby-red variety with smallish flowers that seems very robust and is often seen in old gardens and farm gardens in the south and west in mild areas. This variety, and many others, are obviously left outdoors in the ground from year to year and survive without frost damage to the tubers. These plants will flower later but their show will go on into autumn when they are most useful and the secret is to try and plan that last dramatic burst of late summer, early autumn colour. Dahlias must have full sunshine and reasonably good shelter to increase temperature levels.

• By 1936 there were some14,000 recognised dahlia cultivars. To date this number has risen to over 57,000- all developed from two or three species brought in from Mexico.

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Q. MANY OF MY HOUSEPLANTS ARE DRY AND CRISPY AND LOOK TO BE DYING

Our Q&A special looks at how the extreme heat this summer has been affecting our plants and gardens and forcing us to start to think of different ways to cope longer term with high temperatures out gardens!

A. Once leaf scorch has occurred, there is no cure. The leaves that have already turned brown will not recover. Scorched leaves normally indicate water is being lost from the leaves faster than it is being replaced. This usually happens to plants situated in positions that catch the sun all day, or those in exposed sites. Brown patches following a hot spell can also indicate high temperature damage. If you water properly, the rest of the plant should survive. Deep watering is the best option– a slow, deep soaking of the soil at the roots.

Q. WHAT IS THE MOST EFFICIENT WAY TO WATER VEGETABLES AND FRUIT DURING EXCESSIVE HOT WEATHER?

A. If the plant is short of water, try and avoid the foliage as that can cause leaf burn, but there is nothing wrong with carefully watering to the soil and root system, to alleviate heat stress. Plants normally consist of 80 percent water, and the only means of drawing up water and nutrients from the soil is through the roots, meaning proper watering is essential in ensuring they survive. Plants can often suffer during hot weather and making sure they get enough water is vital. Overwatering in hot weather is a real issue and is a common error made by many.

Q. CAN SCORCHED LEAVES RECOVER?

Q. DOES COVERING PLANTS WITH SHADE CLOTHS HELP?

A. Plants which are moved too quickly from a greenhouse to the outside can be at risk. This is because while plants are inside a greenhouse, they are exposed to high levels of filtered or artificial light, so their leaves get used to absorbing light rays at this wavelength. But, if they are suddenly moved outside during an extremely sunny spell, their leaves won’t be prepared for the extra UV rays.

A. Hydrangeas have a fibrous and reasonably shallow root system and require consistently moist soil to thrive. If your hydrangea is wilting or drooping then this is most commonly a sign of stress due to drought or lack of moisture. The soil is draining too quickly without retaining moisture, tree roots that compete with the hydrangea for water/ intercept rainfall, too much sun or too much nitrogen fertiliser.

Q. MY LAWN IS A MESS AND I’D LIKE TO MOW IT JUST TO TIDY IT UP

www.countrygardener.co.uk 11

A. For plants already suffering, use a sunshade to restrict their exposure to UV light. Slowly give them more time each day with the sunshade removed until they are toughened up. This process can take about two weeks, at which time your plant should be ready for the sun.

Q. IF THE GREENHOUSE IS TOO HOT WILL MOVING PLANTS OUTSIDE DAMAGE THEM?

A. Many plants will inevitably suffer from ill effects in a heatwave. While some plants such as succulents are equipped with handling heat by conserving water in their fleshy leaves, most do not have this luxury. If you have a plant that’s become dry and crispy, don’t throw it away - because there is a way to possibly rescue it. Put it into a bucket of water, see the bubbles coming out, and you wait until all the bubbles have gone and then lift it out and that plant is properly hydrated. You leave that to stand, make sure it doesn’t dry out and it should come back to normal again.

Burnt

Q. MY HYDRANGEAS HAVE REALLY SUFFERED THIS SUMMER AND NOTHING SEEMS TO HELP THEM

A. You can protect vulnerable and young plants from direct sunlight and dry winds with shade cloths. Choose a high shade factor for young and heat-sensitive plants and a low factor for hardier, older plants. Also, don’t lay the cloths on or too close to your plants to allow good aeration and light, and secure tightly on one side or above the plants depending on your garden’s perspective to provide protection from the harsh midday or afternoon sun. A cost-effective shade cloth option is an old cotton bedsheet.

A. Mowing your lawn during hot weather can push it past its tolerance for physical and environmental stress. Mowing your lawn less often and removing less grass when you cut reduces the stress on your lawn and makes heat damage less likely. Fertilising your lawn with nitrogen-based fertilisers during hot weather promotes the growth of green foliage over roots and makes your lawn less tolerant of heat. By cutting your lawn too short you remove the shade that the taller blades provide, which in turn helps retain soil and blade moisture.

Q. WHAT CAN GARDENERS DO DIFFERENTLY IF HOT SUMMERS LIKE THIS ARE TO BECOME THE NORM?

A. Mulch and wind protection will certainly become more important in gardens. Beside the intensity of the heat during a heatwave, the accompanying hot winds remove traces of moisture in a flash. In order to retain it, you need a layer of mulch between 20mm and 75mm thick, depending on the material. Organic mulches will achieve good levels of moisture retention and mulches need to be applied generously to retain moisture efficiently. Plants that are situated in garden beds may regularly in hot summers benefit from a temporary shade structure. A beach umbrella is perfect for the job. There are all sorts of shade structures that are commercially available, or you can also get some shade cloth and tomato stakes and make your own.

It’s the latter part of the day where you will see wilting and scorching of plants occur, making them look brown, burnt, shrivelled and dead on the ends in the days following a heatwave. Easterly or morning sun is tame in comparison. It is likely that in the future delicate flowers including roses and poppies will have to be swapped for plants such as salvias and dahlias, which are more resistant to heat.

Q. DO PLANTS EXPOSED TO HEAT IMPROVE WITH FERTILISERS?

Q. HOW DO YOU SAVE SUNBURNED GARDEN PLANTS?

A. It is certainly true that nutrients rather than fertilisers will help your plants survive the hotter, drier months as the nitrogen in fertilisers can burn a heat stressed plant’s roots and force it to grow rather than repair itself. A weekly application a seaweed solution which acts like a multivitamin, will provide essential natural compounds and trace elements for resilience and growth, particularly root growth which is vital for water uptake.

Country Gardener12

The extremely hot weather over the past few weeks has been the cause of a number of reader problems. A busy gardening season has also brought a record number of queries from readers which we are happy to advise on. If you need advice on any gardening problem or concern the write to us at Country Gardener, Mount House, Halse, Taunton TA4 3AD or email editorial@countrygardener.co.uk

Frieda Rankin Martock

YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED

The spots can look like water spots on the petals, however, the spots are actually caused by the plants’ reaction to the invasion of the fungus Botrytis cinerea, at the spot where the petal has been damp. Other times, the flowers simply ball and fail to open, or result in a mess of brown petals. The cause, as with so many of the Botrytis infections, is to do with water. The flowers and leaves get wet: the ground is wet, therefore the air is generally humid: and the rose does not have much in the way of air circulation. It’s important to remove infected flowers as soon as you see them. If you don’t remove them, the mould will spread to the stem of the flower, and if you are very unlucky, it will continue to spread downwards.

What will stop parrot feather from invading a pond. Andrew Osborne Exeter Parrot’s-feather Myriophyllum aquaticum remains a controversial non-native invasive plant. It produces long stems and floating mats of attractive feathery leaves. It can root from small stem fragments and readily escapes into the wild, where its vigorous growth allows it to become dominant in ponds, lakes, reservoirs, ditches and canals. It grows to such an extent that it can choke water bodies and out-compete native vegetation, blocking light and altering patterns of flow. It is mainly found in southern England but is spreading in the wild, possibly assisted by our warmer Regularwinters. cutting will help to weaken the plant. In your pond you can thin using a rake. Cut material must be removed from the water and all fragments need to be removed to prevent regrowth.

Emma Bracken Taunton They have been a victim of the hot weather I am afraid. The most likely thing is that the extreme heat at various stages of the summer caused the cherries to colour up prematurely when they were not fully developed. As a result, they looked ready for picking and they were in fact a long way from being ripe.

Is there a simple explanation why so many of my new plants bought at great expense in my new garden are dying. I don’t think I have been doing anything wrong – certainly nothing differently but it has been a tale of woe. I need some encouragement that it’s not all me.

My compost bin is proving very hard work to turn, and I think this year the compost won’t be up to standard. Is a revolving bin the answer? If nothing else I should be able to turn it. Mark Henderson Torquay Gardeners have different views about revolving bins and those with most experience in growing compost don’t rate them. You are right that getting in and turning compost is very hard work. There are however tricks to make it all easier. Make sure the compost bin stands on soil. Most importantly, mix the material well before adding it. Don’t just heap piles of material on top of each other. Finally keep the material moist then you should be able to get everything rotting down faster without needing to turn it.

Most rhododendrons, even large ones, can be moved using proper care. Large leaved rhododendrons have shallow fibrous root systems and should be dug with as large a root ball as possible. The dug root ball will likely not need to be too deep to get most of the roots, but it should be wide. Take your time in digging the plant so you can feel or see where the roots are and dig a root ball to get as many roots as possible. The planting hole should be prepared before you dig the plant you are moving when possible. It is best to plant your newly dug rhododendrons right away, but if you are not able to do so, the plants can be heeled in with a good mulch, such as pine bark soil conditioner, or even potted up in very large containers using good potting medium, such as the pine bark soil conditioner. Careful attention to watering will be required for plants heeled in or potted up, and for the plants once they are transplanted. Why has my early crop of cherries tasted so bitter this year? It was a great disappointment to pick them and then taste them.

Garden advice September

I have an old and much-loved rhododendron which needs moving as we plan some landscaping work. What are the chances of it being able to be moved successfully?

Henry Robinson Cullompton

What is causing pink spots on my roses? I haven’t noticed them before.

Eric Patterson Poole This has been an exceptional spring and summer and there is a common theme here which has affected many gardens. A dry hot sunny spring, and these significantly record-breaking summer temperatures is most likely to be the cause. New plants are very vulnerable to drying out in hot weather and matters are compounded if they don’t have the right soil (typically moist but well drained) regular watering and shelter. It may not be too late for some plants. Try applying a mulch. Repot sick plants into John Innes rather than normal compost. Make sure the pots are not over watered during the winter and you may be able to salvage some of the plants.

I was given a pot of lovely golden lilies as an anniversary present and while they have been a picture this summer I wonder if they will come again next year and am not sure if they are hardy and I can leave them outside all winter? May Atkinson Clevedon Ideally keep containers in a cool but frost-free, airy place with strong light, such as a well-ventilated cold greenhouse or frame. In Somerset where you are lilies will be fully hardy and can be left outside in larger containers year-round. If there is any danger of frost, simply move your potted lily plants indoors until it has passed.

www.countrygardener.co.uk 13 Subscribing is simple. Just fill in the form below and include your cheque for £20. SUBSCRIPTIONS SUBSCRIBE NOW ..and treat yourself to a gardening delight Ten issues throughout next year Just £20 for a respected, knowledgeable and inspirational gardening magazine P P I would like to subscribe to Country Gardener for the next ten issues for £20: This is a subscription just for me * This is a gift (send next available issue) * Please choose your region by ticking the box: Cotswolds * Devon * Dorset * Somerset * Hampshire * Complete this form and include a cheque for £20 made out to Alro Publishing Ltd and send to: Magazine Subscriptions, Country Gardener, Mount House, Halse, Taunton, Somerset TA4 3AD. Remember to tell us which one of the five editions you would like to receive. Your details: Title Forename Surname TelPostcodeAddressNo Details of gift recipient: Title Forename Surname TelPostcodeAddressNo Hassle free and delivered to your door every month The subscription costs just £20 and guarantees a 10 times a year magazine packed with information , gardening advice, local events. You can select from one of our five editions of the magazine which is relevant to where you live. The dahliasPLUS: sloegardenersgin September days outthroughout OPEN Tues-Sat: 9am 4.30pm ALSO MONDAYS LOVERS On A423 Farnborough, Tel: 01295Autumn Gardening www.farnboroughgardencentre.co.ukfocusses garden Cotswolds www.countrygardener.co.uk Issue 189 SEPTEMBER 2022 FREE Saving the summer! How ornamental grasses continue to flourish n the drought And while we are on the weather: How to save seeds this autumn; Long term water wise gardening; The right plant in the right place P

Why are my onions bolting so early this year? Cameron Preece Chichester Red onions have a genetic tendency to bolt more so than white onions when they suffer a check to their growth caused by a dry or a hot spell so this may be another effect of the dramatic weather. The higher temperatures can cause the bulbs to be over stimulated and produce flowers rather than put energy and growth into the bulbs. My windbreak conifer hedge is going brown from the roots. Is this a sign I need to remove it and start again? I would be very reluctant to do that. Annie Laws Portsmouth Most conifers that turn brown are suffering from an attack of cypress aphid which tend to attack closely clipped hedges. They suck sap from the bark of a wide range of spruce trees (Picea species) and may form dense colonies several feet across on the trunk. The aphid is active from April until the autumn with populations reaching a peak in late May and June. The trunk and branches can become heavily coated with honeydew and sooty mould. This often causes a gradual drying up and browning of the foliage. Don’t give up on the hedging yet. It may be possible to reverse the damage depending on how long the roots have been affected. Organic sprays, such as natural pyrethrum are the best solution.

When should I prune my French lavender plants.? Jackie Sharpe Topsham Ideally at the end of winter but some tidying up may be necessary in May. Stoechas lavenders, also known as French or Spanish lavenders, are more and more widely available but they are less hardy than English lavender (Lavandula angustifola) and they don’t have as long lifespans. In terms of pruning, there is one core rule to follow: Only ever prune growth that still bears leaves. You should never cut into the wood of the plant (or it won’t grow back) and it’s important not to take too much away when cutting. Use secateurs when pruning as these will offer a good, clean cut.

WHAT TYPE OF SOIL WORKS BEST IN TERRARIUMS? Coco – coir, peat moss or houseplant soil works with most plants, besides succulents which prefer a well-drained inorganic medium. Some people choose to make their own soil but if you’re short on time, garden store houseplant compost works just fine. For succulents, you’ll need soil with a sand or gravel mixture.

2. Then fill the bottom of your container with half the amount of the layer of soil you plan to use. You may lay rocks as your first layer in the terrarium, but this is up to personal preference.

The ‘Wardian Case’ soon became an obsession for the British middle classes, who had found a way to reconnect with nature. They were not merely the interest of hobbyists, however, since they also allowed the long-distant transport of crops around the globe.

4. In the soil, make a hole big enough for the roots of the plants to rest.

Yes,TERRARIUMS?butnotasfrequently as typical indoor plants. The types of plants found in terrariums tend to be hardy plants that don’t require frequent watering. Also, the greenhouse-like structure of terrariums recycles water instead of evaporating water into the ambient air as with normal indoor plants.

DO TERRARIUMS NEED TO BE AIRTIGHT?

DO TERRARIUMS NEED AIR? Yes, but plants in airtight, or closed terrariums, recycle air. During the day, sunlight promotes the growth of sugars during the process of photosynthesis. Photosynthesis converts carbon dioxide into oxygen, releasing it into the Interrarium.aclosed terrarium, you may want to remove the lid to let fresh air into the terrarium, but a closed terrarium will not damage the plants.

6. Position the plants in the thin layer of soil and add the second layer of soil around the plants. Press somewhat firmly – the new soil level should be about the same level as the soil of the plant’s original root ball.

Terrariums can create a sense of peace and calm

BOTANICAL ACCIDENT SPARKED OFF A MIDDLE-CLASS OBSESSION

1. Buy a special terrarium case to hold your garden or make one of your own out of a bottle, fish tank, fish bowl or vase.

5. Remove the plant from its container – you may need to lightly massage the roots to loosen the roots from the soil.

Terrariums are self-nourishing, which is why they require little maintenance, if sealed.

3. Add any large rocks or pieces of driftwood that you would like to include in your garden.

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7. Get creative and mix up the plants, colours and sizes. Typically, foliage plants and plants that grow slowly work best – avoid fast growing plants. Ferns, carnivorous plants and airplants are quite difficult to grow without terrariums. So, if you would like these plants in your home, it’s recommend to buy or make a terrarium.

DO YOU HAVE TO WATER

Terrariums are a wonderful way to bring greenery into your home. Making them is also a great way to enjoy growing things if you don’t have an outdoor space or when there is less to do in the garden. You don’t need to be an experienced gardener to make a terrarium either- all you need is enthusiasm and a glass

Terrariums have a long and fascinating history that predates social media by more than 150 years but now they are again booming and the perfect way to display houseplants

Coir or peat moss works best in terrariums Country Gardener

The history of scientific discoveries is full of experiments that had taken another path from the planned route. Terrariums emerged from such an ‘accident’. The story of the modern terrarium goes back to a 19th century experiment by Nathaniel Bagshaw Ward, a doctor who also studied botany and entomology. Ward’s interest stemmed from a journey to Jamaica as a 13-year-old boy, when he fell in love with the exotic plant life. He developed a large collection of specimens, but he was disappointed to find that many species – particularly the ferns and mosses –died in his east London garden, due to the air pollution in the city. Britain was, after all, in the middle of the Industrial Revolution, which brought coal, ash and other toxic chemicals into contact with his precious plants. The solution came in 1829 from one of Ward’s experiments. He had been trying to hatch the chrysalis of a sphinx moth, buried in some moist mould within a covered bottle. The water, he noticed, would evaporate and then condense on the side, before returning to the mould – seemingly recreating the basic flow of the Earth’s weather systems. After a few days he found a tiny fern had begun to grow in the sealed ecosystem. The glass microcosm provided the perfect way to control air quality and humidity, Ward realised, allowing species to flourish that had previously withered. In 1842, he published a book on the subject, entitled ‘On the Growth of Plants in Closely Glazed Cases’.

TREASURES IN A BOTTLE

Terrariums are fine if they are airtight, but remove the lid periodically (about once a week or even daily) to allow fresh air into your garden.

Thecontainer.resurgence today of theses gardens in glass may have less to do with their photogenic properties than the sense of peace and calm that they provide, with many finding that the creation and maintenance of these miniature worlds offer a salve to the pressure and uncertainty of modern life. Terrariums are great for people living in small spaces or for those who just love to garden. They are lowmaintenance, space-saving and simply beautiful, making them great additions to any home or business. Being easy to care for is one of the biggest perks of having terrariums, but questions can arise about the essentials of terrariums. They are indoor gardens in a sealed container. The plants and the soil in the terrarium release water vapour –essentially recycling water. The vapour is then collected onto the walls of the vessel and trickles down to the soil.

www.countrygardener.co.uk 15 01473 328272 • sales@schsupplies.co.uk • www.schsupplies.co.uk Contact us today for a FREE brochure featuring over 200 British products, or visit our website to find out more. MADE BRITAININ Turn Table Trolleys Balance Carts British Trailers & Barrows Plastic Barrows Handy Bins Handy Movers SCH manufacture a vast selection of heavy-duty trailers, barrows, carts and trolleys, all sized specifically for gardens. Britain’s Largest Garden Trailer Selection Country Gardener Trailers_Caravan Industry & Park Operator 22.03.2019 02/03/2020 12:41 Page 1 We design and create garden sculptures. To see our full range visit our online shop at www.beechwoodtrinkets.com Contact Becky on 07813527954 or email sales@beechwoodtrinkets.com “With stunning results like this in a matter of hours, why settle for less”

important to you?  Yes  No Now a few questions about your own garden and gardening: 4. What size of

11. How often do you see Country Gardener?  Every issue  Quite often-once every two or three issues  Very occasionally

ft 

 66-75  Over 75 2. Do you

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14. Since Covid two years ago has the time you have spent gardening:  Stayed the same  Increased a little  Increased a lot 15. In the last two years how have you found the experience of obtaining a copy of Country Gardener from your local stockist?  Easier  No change  More difficult  Run out of issues

the county  Travel longer distances  N/A 21. How often do you visit a

17.

36-45  46-55 

No 3. Is Climate change and resource-use in the

ft  More than

or nursery?  Once a week  Once a month  Less frequently  Never 22. Which of the following would you like to hear about:  Holidays abroad  Holidays and breaks in the UK  Shows and events  Training courses/skills workshops 23. Are there any issues, topics, or themes that you’d like to see in upcoming issues of Country Gardener? Thank you for taking time to fill in this Ifquestionnaire.youwishtoenter the Country Gardener Reader Survey prize draw then fill this in and return to: Mount House, Halse, Taunton, Somerset, TA4 3AD. ForEmail*Tel*PostcodeAddressNamepurposes of prize draw only and will not be used for any other reason or passed on. Prize draw only available for UK residents. *Please add one or both so that we can contact you if you are a winner in the draw. Return your completed survey by Friday 28th September. READER SURVEY WIN ONE OF CountryBurgonFIVEandBallRHSEndorsedHedgeShearsGardener2022Readership Survey Country Gardener16

 Yes

are you?  18-25

ft  Medium

ft  Over half a acre 5. Do you grow your own

13. Has reading Country Gardener resulted in you:  Visiting a garden featured in the magazine  Buying a product advertised in the magazine  Telling someone about a product advertised in Country Gardener  Contacting an advertiser  Buying a particular plant  Keeping an advert or article for future reference for a long term project

18.

9.

16. Listed below are some of the regular features in Country Gardener. Tick the features which interest you most:  Jobs for the Month  Garden Advice  Classified advertising  Local gardening news  Plant profiles  Readers stories  NGS Garden Visits  Time Off information on local events Some questions about the internet and our online information: Do you use the internet to search for: Garden products:  Never  Occasionally  Frequently Local services:  Never  Occasionally  Frequently Places to visit:  Never  Occasionally  Frequently Have you ever made a purchase from an advertiser in this magazine?  Yes  No Finally some last questions about getting out and How often do you visit an open garden during the year?  Very occasionally  Three or four times  Four to eight times  Above eight times  Do you travel far to visit a garden?  Only visit local gardens  Travel out of garden centre

about: 19.

12. Including yourself typically how many people read or look trough your copy of the magazine?  No one else  1-2 people  3 or more people

 Yes  No 6. Which of the following would you expect to buy in the next 12 months?  Garden Plants  Garden Accessories  Garden tools/machinery  Vegetable seeds  Compost  Bird and wildlife products  Shed/ greenhouse/other garden building  House plants  Garden furniture  Pots and planters 7. Do you have or plan to have a pond or water feature in your garden?  Yes  No 8. Which outside services are you likely to use in the next 12

or

Firstly a few questions about you: 1. Which

Every few years at Country Gardener we ask readers to let us know their views on the magazine and a few questions about themselves. Our last survey was in 2018. We feel it is important to keep in touch with readers and it is an important part of our efforts to produce the best gardening magazine possible. As an incentive we have five sets of the much acclaimed garden shears from Burgon and Ball which have been endorsed by the Royal Horticultural Society and have an rrp of £39.99. Every readership survey form we receive will go into our special prize draw, from which five lucky reader’s names will be drawn to win. age group  26-35  55-65 have any children under the age 16?  garden garden Small 1-2,000 sq 2-4,000 sq Large 4-10,000 sq 10,000 sq fruit vegetables? months?  Tool or plant hire  Landscaping  Garden design  Fencing  Tree surgery  General gardening help - lawn mowing, garden tidying  Pond services For your garden, would you like to know more about any of the following?  Water efficiency  Environmentaly-friendly products  Plastic reduction  Attracting wildlife to the garden

10. ‘How important is it to you to know about gardening services and products that are local to you?  Very important  Quite important  Not important A few questions about getting hold of a copy of Country Gardener and reading it:

you

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Hartland Abbey & Gardens, Hartland, Nr. Bideford EX39 6DT Tel: 01237441496/234

September is a wonderfully peaceful time to relax in the Hartland Abbey gardens after the school borderscoloursStunningholidays!autumnlighttheandkitchen garden. Hopefully after the intense heat of August the ‘Monet’ display of annuals will keep going alongside rosy red crab apples, squashes, old apple varieties; dahlias and michaelmas daisies. The Hartland Abbey hydrangeas growing in their acid soil are deepest blues, purples and whites in the cool of the woodland gardens. Enjoy the walk to the beach at Blackpool Mill before a delicious lunch or cream tea in The Old Kitchen Tea Room, to see the stunning Hartland coastline with views to Lundy Island, much enjoyed by four legged friends too!

SEPTEMBER AND GENTLER COLOURFUL DAYS TO RELISH

The fairs return to the historic gardens of The Bishop’s Palace at Wells for an Autumn Fair on Sunday, September 11th. The Bishop’s Palace lies at the heart of the historic City of Wells and is a place full of secrets, stories and stunning scenery, and home to the Bishops of Bath and Wells for 800 years.

QUARTET OF PLANT FAIRS ROUNDS OFF A MEMORABLE SEASON

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The start of autumn is still one of the favourite times of year for gardeners and garden lovers. Hopefully the brutally harsh heat of the first two weeks of August is a memory and September arrives with cooler days when there is still so much to see. Stunning autumn colours will be lighting up gardens throughout the south and southwest and for those looking for days out there some high-quality garden shows worth a visit. And don’t let’s forget Cornwall where a trip to the sea is still high on the agenda of a lot of people. We have again rounded up some idea of places to visit, things to do, events to take part in so you can make the most of what promises to be a memorable September.

www.hartlandabbey.comBroadlands show ready to welcome the best of autumn

The stunning hotel is a stylish retreat boasting 9 acres of sub-tropical gardens, stunning sea views, 29 bedrooms and a treatment room. Award winning Restaurant Meudon, The Drawing Room and Freddie’s Bar are open to all, whether you’re staying at the hotel or simply passing by. All menus feature a variety of dishes and are created using Cornwall’s bountiful larder. A stay at Hotel Meudon will offer you time to sit back and unwind whilst enjoying stunning surroundings and topquality service. Hotel Meudon, Maenporth Rd, Mawnan Smith, Maenporth, Falmouth TR11 5HT www.meudon.co.uk

The final Fair is at a brand new venue, Langford Court, near Bristol, on Sunday, September 25th. Rarely open to the public, Langford Court Garden is the 6 acre private garden of Sir David and Lady Wills, and is set in a 19th century parkland with a ha ha, yew topiary and a late 18th century orangery. The garden also includes a cutting garden, large mature pond, woodland, parterre, and a fernery, along with large established herbaceous borders. The Fair supports the work of the charity Canine Partners.

The third in the series of Garden Shows this year run by Southern Shows Ltd takes place in the glamorous surroundings of Broadlands in Romsey on Friday, September 30th, Saturday 1st October and Sunday 2nd October. Opening times are 10am to 5pm on Friday and Saturday and 10am to 4pm on Sunday. The show will provide an excellent opportunity to explore all that autumn planting has to offer, the show will be set over three days and feature specialist growers, garden related goods, artisan designs, homeware products, fashion accessories and delicious country foods. There will also be talks, demonstrations, activities for young and old, expert advice and a variety of music & entertainment. Adult tickets are £10 with concessions at £8.50. You can buy tickets at discounted prices online at www.thegardenshows.com Only assistance dogs are allowed on site Broadlands, Romsey, Hampshire SO51 9ZD Hartland Abbey hydrangeas will be out in full glory Country Gardener

Peace, quiet and beauty at Hartland Abbey gardens

There is a great selection of specialist nurseries attending each of the Fairs, including several National Collection holders, all of whom are experts in the plants that they grow. Please visit the website at www.rareplantfair.co.uk for full details of the events, including admission charges and a complete list of the exhibitors attending each one.

Hotel Meudon remains Cornwall’s best kept secret Cornwall’s best kept secret: a hidden valley hotel with its own secluded beach, Hotel Meudon is a coastal paradise near Falmouth, Cornwall.

GREAT PLACES TO VISIT

The 2022 season of Rare Plant Fairs draws to a close in September with four fabulous events, all set in interesting and unique gardens, with full garden entry included in the admission price. On Sunday, 4th September, the first fair s set in the beautiful grounds and gardens of Adwell House, near Thame in Oxfordshire, an idyllic spot just on the edge of the Chiltern Hills. Visitors are greeted with a magnificent herbaceous border which sweeps around the drive. The Parish Church nestles within the grounds, and you are led around to the walled garden, with its herbaceous borders, roses and a superb collection of salvias.

Next up is the popular event at Llanover House, near Abergavenny in Monmouthshire, on Sunday, 18th September. This is a 15-acre listed garden and arboretum with lakes, streams and cascades, created by the Rhyd y Meirch stream as it flows through the garden..

www.rareplantfair.co.uk Please visit our website for full details of admission fees and times of opening. September Fairs 4th September Adwell House, Adwell, Nr. Thame OX9 7DQ 11th September The Bishop’s Palace, Wells, Somerset BA5 2PD 18th September Llanover House, Nr. Abergavenny NP7 9EF 25th September Langford Court, Nr. Bristol, BS40 5DA Hartland Abbey & Gardens Visit this timeless historic house, gardens and wildflower walks to a remote Atlantic cove Visit our family home with its fascinating architecture, collections, displays and film exhibition. Fully reopen again after filming Series 4 of ‘Malory Towers’. Enjoy its beautiful Walled and Woodland gardens, Fernery, Bog garden and walks to the Atlantic Coast. * Dogs welcome * Holiday Cottages * * Homemade light lunches & cream teas * * Hartland Quay 1 mile* For more information and events see www.hartlandabbey.com Hartland, Nr. Bideford EX39 6DT 01237441496/234 Sunday to Thursday until 3rd October 11am - 5pm (House 2pm - 5pm last adm. 4pm) DELIGHTFUL GARDENS TO INSPIRE YOU PLANT AND GARDEN ADVICE Mail order and click and collect available, or pop along and visit us at the nursery Groups welcome by appointment Open 7 days a week from 1st April to 30th September. Weekends 10am -5pm, Weekdays 9am-5.30pm Sands Lane, Badsey, Evesham, WR11 7EZ 01386 833849 info@cgf.net www.cotswoldgardenflowers.co.uk www.countrygardener.co.uk 19

As the nights begin to draw in and the temperature gets cooler, there is still plenty to see in the garden at the nursery. Come and see the late summer flowers of dahlia, phlox, rudbeckia and heleniums and look out for the new autumn plants. As the days shorten chrysanthemums and asters start to flower and enhance their display. Michaelmas daisies come in many shades. Also look out for the changing colour of leaves especially shrubs. Now is the time to make a note of your favourites so you can plant them at home. Foliage can be a real asset to the garden at this time of year. There are also autumn flowering bulbs to look out for, including autumn crocus, cyclamen and other bulbs and you can see their collection of nerines.

Cercidipyllum

GREAT PLACES TO VISIT Colours galore a real attraction at Marwood Hill Gardens

SEASON TICKETS AVAILABLE OFFERING 12 MONTHS OF GARDEN ENTRY AND 10% DISCOUNT ON PURCHASES OVER £20. Open daily, 11am to 5pm. Also open TUESDAY 20TH SEPTEMBER for the National Garden Scheme OPENING TIMES FOR THE YEAR: 1st Feb - 31st July, Wednesday to Saturday / Throughout August, Wednesday to Sunday (plus BH Mon) / 1st September - 20th October, Daily. Open 11am - 5pm (except during Feb/Mar, 11am-4pm) Specialist nursery and beautiful 1.5 acre garden just waiting to be explored CATALOGUE ONLINE OR AVAILABLE BY REQUEST Tel: 01684 540416 www.autumnasters.co.uk Old Court Nurseries, Walwyn Road, Colwall WR13 6QE The Michaelmas Daisy Specialists since 1906 Old Court Nurseries & The Picton Garden Cotswolds Garden Flowers nursery offers late summer sensations Autumn colours await Marwood Hill visitors Country Gardener20

Cotswold Garden Flowers, Sands Lane, Badsey, Evesham WR11 7EZ

Marwood Hill Gardens, Marwood, Guineaford, Barnstaple, North Devon EX31 4EA Tel: 01271 342 528 www.marwoodhillgarden.co.uk

There is still lots of colour here at Marwood Hill Gardens. Salvias, such as the two-toned blue and white ‘Phyllis Fancy, deep blue S. ‘Amstrad’ and Aconitum Arendsii really light up the tearoom borders with their deep purple hoods towering over surrounding flowers. In the ‘Ladies Garden’, the black eyed pink flowering Geranium ‘Anne Thompson’ attracts a lot of attention - a vigorous creeping geranium that starts off small, but quickly takes the space of other perennials that have finished for the season. Tucked away secretly by the walled garden gates, a large pineapple relative Fasicularia bicolor looks both monstrous and impressive, with its red spidery inner leaves and central blue and gold flowers. Really worth a look if you can find it!

Excitingly in the woodland, many trees are already beginning to show autumn leaf colour. This recalls memories of warm hats and scarves, which some of us may be missing during the recent heat waves. Flowering cherry Prunus sargentiana is the first to show autumn colour changing from green to bright scarlet. Whilst japonica ‘Pendula’, begin to emit a burnt sugar perfume as leaves turn yellow and pink. Go and explore for yourselves.

Late sensationssummerat Cotswold

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Want to advertise in one of our features? We offer special all counties prices when advertising with our features, plus 100 words of free editorial with an advert. Speak to one of our sales people for more details. Shhhh! Meudon’s the word. Discover Cornwall’s best kept secret - a hidden valley hotel in subtropical gardens leading to its own secluded beach. For special offers and bookings go to meudon.co.uk @HOTELMEUDON • #MEUDONMOMENTS Enquiries & Tea Room 01271 342528 Plant Sales & Nursery 01271 342577 e info@marwoodhillgarden.co.uk w marwoodhillgarden.co.uk Marwood Hill Gardens, Marwood, Barnstaple, Devon EX31 4EA Tea Room & WalledNurseryGarden BEHAVEDWELLDOGSONLEADSWELCOME Catch up over coffee and homemade cake or a cream tea in the picturesque Garden Tea Room or take a bit of Marwood magic home with you from our Walled Garden Nursery and Plant Sales. Nestled in the heart of North Devon, Marwood Hill Garden is a hidden gem Home to four National Plant Heritage collections, this private valley garden spans over 20-acres and showcases three stunning lakes, rare trees & shrubs, and colourful surprises throughout each season. Not only a haven for wildlife, the garden is also the perfect environment to explore and be inspired. Enjoy a day of inspirational and relaxation for the whole family. CADHAY, OTTERY ST. MARY, DEVON, EX11 1QT 01404 813511 www.cadhay.org.uk Member of Historic Houses GARDENS & TEAROOM Open every Friday 2pm - 5.30pm from 6th May to 30th September Also August Bank Holiday weekendSaturday, Sunday & Monday GARDENS: adult £5, child £1 21www.countrygardener.co.uk

The collection of dahlias continues to be a feature at the wonderful Cadhay gardens in Devon in late summer -providing a riot of colour. Most of the dahlias are left in the ground over the winter and a few more get planted in case of casualties from the frost. The last few winters have been so mild that there have been very few casualties with the result that the collection has multiplied. With spring fed medieval ponds, the Cadhay gardens have enough water to remain vibrant despite the shortage of rain over the summer. Cadhay gardens stay open on Friday afternoons until the end of September.

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BOSCREGE - WHERE YOU CAN FIND THE REAL CORNWALL Boscrege Caravan and Touring Park in Cornwall is a peaceful and picturesque park, set at the foot of Tregonning Hill, Godolphin National Trust and amongst a myriad of Cornish lanes in an area of outstanding natural beauty. The park, open all year through, is situated close to the wonderful Cornwall coast and only a few minutes’ drive to Praa Sands, one of Britain’s best beaches. St Ives, Penzance, Hayle, Lands’ End, The Lizard Peninsular, Helston and Falmouth and many other Cornwall attractions and beaches are very easily visited from the central location in West Cornwall. And new this year, an exciting development of single/ twin lodges available to buy with a 20-year site licence and two years free site fees. You can stay for two nights free, available for genuine buyers. Boscrege Caravan Park, Boscrege, Ashton, Cornwall TR13 9TG Tel: 01736 762231 www.caravanparkcornwall.com

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Dahlias continue to be a seasonal attraction at Cadhay

Cadhay, Ottery St Mary, EX11 1QT BOSCREGE CARAVAN MOST With a welcoming atmosphere and set 12 acres of Cornish countryside miles from beautiful sandy beaches of Praa Sands, Boscrege Caravan & Touring Park is the best place to Cornish minute date changes as a result of Government Covid Guidelines

holiday. Each of our luxury holiday homes comes with a private garden and Wi-Fi. Perfect for families and couples, we are open all year, and offer seasonal pitches. We offer the following: • Designated dog walking fields • Pet friendly accommodation • Comprehensive storage • Luxury holiday homes for sale 01736 762231 • www.caravanparkcornwall.comenquiries@caravanparkcornwall.com CARAVAN & TOURING PARK West Kington Nurseries West Kington, Nr Chippenham, Wiltshire, SN14 7JQ 01249 782822 www.wknurseries.co.uk PLANTAUTUMNSALE! Open to the Public Sept 10th & 11th 2022 SATURDAY 9AM-5PM SUNDAY 10AM-4PM Follow the yellow signs from the A420 FREE ENTRY Over 5 Acres of Refreshmentsplants Catalogues sold in aid of local charities PerPP Perennials Topiary Climbers Shrubs Roses Bedding Please check our Website for last minute date changes as a result of Government Covid Guidelines West Kington, Nr Chippenham, Wiltshire SN14 7JQ Tel 01249 782822 PLANTMASSIVEwww.wknurseries.co.ukSALE! Open to the public Over 5 Acres of Refreshmentsplants Catalogues sold in aid of local charities Please check our website for last

PICTON GARDEN READY FOR LATE SEASON SPLENDOUR As mid-summer becomes a memory the place to visit is The Picton Garden in Colwall. A hidden gem at the foot of the Malvern Hills this one-and-a-half-acre garden is just starting its late summer and autumn show. Home to the National Plant Collection of Michaelmas daisies there is plenty of colour to wow and it only gets better as October draws nearer. Should you be tempted by the plants you find on your wanders the adjoining Old Court Nurseries is well stocked and almost everything is grown on site from unusual succulents to delightful daisies. Tel: 01684 540416 www.autumnasters.co.uk

Plant sale is the way to restock your garden While the ground is still warm, autumn is a wonderful time to reconfigure tired borders with herbaceous perennials, grasses, ferns and shrubs. With this in mind, do keep Saturday 10th (9am to 5pm) and Sunday 11th September (10am to 4pm) free to explore West Kington Nurseries’ Massive Plant Sale. Normally a trade nursery, the five-acre site will open its gates to all with refreshments to revive happy plant hunters. As well as presenting thousands of keenly priced plants, proceeds from catalogue sales will be donated to local charities so just follow the signs to West Kington from the A420 and fill your boots!

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West Kington Nurseries, West Kington, Chippenham, SN14 7JQ Quality plants at West Kington to revive borders Dahlias offer a riot colour at Cadhay Picton Garden remains a hidden gem Country Gardener22

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SEEDSVEGETABLE for free

September is a time of abundance in the garden with lots to harvest. This is also the key time when many of your plants are running out of steam and setting seeds. This isn’t such a bad thing as your plants are providing you with the seeds for next year’s crop.

Tomato seeds Allow the fruits to fully ripen on the plant and scoop out the seeds and pulp. Place in a jar of water and leave for a few days, swirling them in the water daily. After a few days, the seeds should have come free from the pulp and sunk to the bottom. Pour the liquid away and rinse the seeds. Leave them to dry on a paper towel and, when fully dry, store in an envelope in a cool, dry place. Most ordinary tomatoes you buy from the supermarket are not suitable for seed saving, because they are F1 hybrids.

Seed-saving is easy. You’ll get better seeds than you can buy, you can keep your own varieties going for future years and rather wonderfully you can start a whole new dynasty of plants.

Pepper seeds Harvest seeds from peppers after the fruit has fully ripened on the plant and started to wrinkle. Remove the seeds from the peppers and spread them out on paper towels to dry. When fully dry, store in an envelope in a cool, dry place. Pea seeds Allow the pods to ripen on the plant until they are dry and start to turn brown. Remove the pods from the plant and spread them out on a tray indoors, to dry. Leave them for at least two weeks before shelling the pods or wait until you are ready to sow the seeds the following spring. Use saved seed within one year. The older the seed the lower the germination and vigour. Frozen pea seeds will not germinate and will most likely just decompose if planted directly into the soil.

And remember it’s all for free. It is so quick and easy to save seed from fruit and vegetables which will have been commonplace in your garden this summer such as lettuce, peas and chard.

Now is the perfect time to collect seeds from your crops. It is so easy, and you will save a fortune on next year’s seeds 24

In the gardening world there are few things that are more rewarding than starting a dynasty of new plants. Growing plants from seeds is one of the most basic and fulfilling of all the things we do in the garden. When we collect our own seed, clean it, dry it, store it ,we are taking part in an endeavour that stretches back for thousands of years. It is of course all to do with the cycle of life. It’s exciting to sow from brightly coloured seed packets which adorn the shelves of garden centres, and it is far more satisfying to collect your own seeds and start a new dynasty of plants.

When savings seeds there are a few basic rules which you will need to adhere to. Saving seed involves three steps: selecting seeds from the most suitable plants, harvesting them at the right time and storing them properly until you need to sow them.

Keep it pure and simple Some vegetables like courgettes and squashes are particularly likely to cross fertilise which just means that your saved sees can produce plants which are a hybrid of their parents. You can reduce the chance of cross pollination by only growing one variety so that pollen is less likely to be transferred from between plants of different varieties by insects or by the Somewind. vegetables produce seeds more easily than others and are more likely to produce good yields. For example, it is generally not recommended that you save seed from vegetables in the squash family, as the same variety will rarely grow the following year and what does grow can be inedible. On the other hand, it is easy to save seeds from peas and beans and the seeds produce good plants the following year.

Herbs are very rewarding to save seeds from Basil, coriander and dill are annuals, parsley is a biennial, flowering in its second year of growth.

Sweet peppers and chillies These are both are members of the same species, Capsicum annuum (some less common chillies come from other capsicum species).

You must dry your seed properly, or it will not survive storage. The key is to find the best option to get them dry. Don’t use heat though to dry it. One fairly foolproof way to really get rid of all the moisture is to use dry rice to suck the water out of the seed to get it dry. Then it will hibernate completely. You need to use at least twice as much rice as you have seed. It doesn’t matter if you have too much rice, but too little won’t work. Bake the rice on a tray in the oven for 45 minutes until it is bone dry. While it is still hot, put it in the jam-jar, about half full, and screw the lid on. Let the rice cool. You now have a jam jar half full of very dry, cool rice. Put your seed in a bag made by cutting off the foot of a pair of tights and tie it in with a rubber band. Put it in with the cool dry rice. Put the lid on tightly, so damp air can’t get in. Leave your seed sealed in the jar with the dry rice for a fortnight, and the dampness in the seed will be drawn out into the rice.

To save parsley seed, overwinter at least two or three plants. In warmer areas mulch heavily with straw or cover plants with a frame, elsewhere grow a few plants in a polytunnel or greenhouse. The next spring, the plants will start to flower and produce seed. Flat and curly leaved varieties will cross, as the flowers are insect pollinated, so you should only grow one type for seed at a time. Harvest the seeds from individual flowerheads as they dry and turn brown, as they tend to drop from the plant when ready.

Broad bean seeds

www.countrygardener.co.uk 25

To save the seed, take peppers on your isolated plants which have ripened fully to their final colour (usually yellow or red). Cut the peppers open carefully and rub the seeds gently off of the ‘core’ onto a plate. Wear rubber gloves to deseed chillies, as the chilli oil sticks to your fingers and is very hard to wash off. Dry the seeds in a warm but not hot place until they snap rather than bend.

Lettuce seeds Select two or three good lettuces from your row, and mark them for seed. It is very important not to save seed from any plants that bolt early, as you want to select lettuces that stand well. Heading lettuces may need a little help for the flowering stalk to emerge; slitting the heads partially open with a knife works well. Once the lettuces have flowered, the seeds will ripen gradually, starting in about a fortnight. Harvest seed daily to get the maximum yield, shaking into a bag. Or wait until a reasonable number of seeds are ready and then cut the whole plant. Put it headfirst into a bucket, shaking and rubbing to remove the seeds. If you leave the whole cut plant upside down in the bucket somewhere dry, slightly immature seeds will continue to ripen over the next few days. Most of what you have collected in the bucket will be white ‘feathers’ and chaff. To sort the seed, shake it gently in a kitchen sieve. Some seeds will fall through the sieve, with the rest collecting in the bottom. If the seed feels a little damp, dry it further on a plate before labelling and storing. Lettuce seed should keep for around three years, provided it is kept dry. Cucumbers Cucumbers need to be ripened well beyond the edible stage. They will become much fatter, and green varieties will turn a dark yellow brownish colour, white varieties a paler yellow. Keep for a week or so after picking to let the seeds mature fully. Then cut open, scoop out the seeds and surrounding pulp into a jamjar, add a little water and stir well. Leave the jar on a sunny windowsill for 2-3 days for the seeds to ferment. On the third day, fill the jar fully with water, and stir well again. The good seeds should sink to the bottom of the jar, leaving pulp, debris and empty seeds floating on top. Gently pour off the water and debris, refill the jar, and repeat. After a couple of rinses, you should be left with good seeds at the bottom of a jar in clean water - spread out on a plate to dry well.

Lettuce seeds need to be sieved well to leave pulp behind

F1 Hybrids Make sure you only save seed from open-pollinated varieties and not F1 hybrids. Open pollinated vegetable varieties are often heirloom varieties that have evolved over the years and been passed down through generations of gardeners. The vegetables produced from the seeds are like the produce of the parent plant and gradually evolve to cope with local conditions such as moisture levels and high or low temperatures.

It is important to label your seeds correctly, including the name, variety, and date you collected them. Not only does this ensure that you know which seeds you are sowing but you can also evaluate how successful each seed-saving project was.

Basil flowers are insect pollinated, and different varieties flowering within around 150’ of one another may cross. On a garden scale, if you want to grow several types of basil, just keep picking the flower stalks off all the varieties apart from the one that you want to grow for seed. Once several flower spikes have set and the flowers have started to wither, mark those spikes for saving seed from, and you can then allow the other varieties to flower. The seeds are ready to collect when the spikes turn brown and dry out. With both coriander and dill, to get the best seed for sowing in future years, pull up and discard the earliest plants to bolt, and only save seed from those plants that produce plenty of leaf and flower late. It is best to plan to save seed from early summer sowings, to allow plenty of time for the seed to mature and dry on the plant. Harvest as soon as the seed is brown and dry, as it does tend to drop from the seed heads. Rub the heads together in your hands over a bucket to free the seed. Dill seed usually comes cleanly away from the seed heads. Coriander seed tends to contain more chaff.

Broad beans will cross with other varieties that are growing nearby. So if you want to keep your variety pure, you need to isolate them in some way. Always keep seed of strong, healthy plants and get rid of any that are not typical of the variety, ideally before they flower. Let your seed beans mature and dry on the bush. The pods will turn dark drown, dry and wrinkled. Then pick and shell them out. Save only the best clean seeds.

How to really dry the seed?

F1 hybrid varieties are commercially produced seeds that combine certain traits of two parent plants such as resistance to disease, pests or bolting and a tendency to produce heavy yields. F1 varieties can usually be identified by the variety name or by a close reading of the seed packet. How to store seeds Seeds should be stored in individual envelopes, in an airtight container and in a dry place above ground level. This prevents moisture from spoiling the seeds or animals such as mice eating their way through your supply.

It’s also the time to give plants the best chance of strong growth including watering systems , nutrients or quality composting material. There’s an exciting choice for gardeners looking to get gardening.

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Spring flowering bulbs

Roses Roses need a special mention when planting. If you look after your roses in autumn, they will get safely through the winter, coming back healthy, vigorous and full of flowers the following year. Roses are particularly well suited to autumn planting. They tend to benefit immensely, and you can pay a quarter of the price for plants that you might be charged during the spring. Although container grown plants can be planted at any time of the year, autumn is the preferred time to encourage well established root systems before the surge of growth in spring. Bare rooted plants can also be planted once their dormancy has begun, and this can be a very cost-effective way to purchase, particularly as rose plants can be expensive. Roses can live for many years in the garden, and initial care taken with planting can assist health and longevity. Even though there are many different varieties, their needs are broadly similar and whilst certain varieties can tolerate some shade, most roses thrive in full sun, and will benefit from being planted in the sunniest parts of the garden.

The maintenance of trees planted in autumn is minimal because, once the weather gets consistently colder (around mid-October usually), there is no need for watering (unless we have a sudden winter heatwave and with the way the weather has been this year, it wouldn’t surprise us!). Plants planted in autumn will be allowed to gently settle their root systems before the onset of the harshest winter months usually in January or February and when the weather gets consistently colder the plants become dormant until the end of March.

Autumn is nature’s planting time!

Be generous when planting your rose — generous hole, generous feed, generous can of water!

Autumn is for example the best time to plant spring flowering bulbs. It helps to plan, so have your selection of bulbs ordered and delivered in time for planting. There are lots of wonderful nurseries who have an amazing range of spring bulbs for sale. For tulips, buy whatever variety takes your fancy and plants loads! Like alliums, these are best scattered through a border, as if you clump them, you’ll end up with gaps when the flowers are over. You can also combine two or three varieties with different colours and flower forms. They should be planted in a sunny spot, and look best in large numbers, scattered through a border, amongst low shrubs, ornamental grasses and perennials. This will hide the foliage, which gets tatty by the time the flowers are up. Wildflower seeds Seeds that are sown between August and October often germinate quicker, although this does not always show until the following spring. Autumn sown wildflower meadows tend to flower earlier in the spring, as they require the winter ground frost to kick start their germination.

Specialist trees

Contrary to popular belief, autumn is the time of year when you should be doing the most gardening – not Ifspring.youdon’t plant in the autumn, your garden won’t flourish until the last three or four weeks of spring - any most people are desperate for some gorgeous greenery before that! You can plant pretty much anything over the next few weeks; it’s the best time of year for planting as the soil is warm and perhaps not wet in this drought affected summer but with adequate watering when planting the principle remains the same. The warm soil allows roots to grow until the ground freezes, whereas in the spring, plants don’t grow until the soil warms.

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Healthy crops and plants don’t have to suffer because the season is changing. If you plan, you can upgrade your garden by making your irrigation system more efficient. HERE’S YOUR CHANCE TO WIN A HARVST WATERMATE IN THE SIZE OF YOUR CHOICE (mini or pro) with Country Gardener. WaterMate is a smart irrigation system that helps you spend less time watering, whilst wasting less than a standard irrigation timer. It comes in two ready-to-fit kits, the mini for small greenhouses and the pro for larger greenhouses and polytunnels. Harvst are a green-tech company who make smart, automated mini-greenhouses and automatic watering systems. They help people grow more at home in less time whilst reducing food miles, waste, packaging, water and chemicals. WaterMate can also be used across your garden, flower beds and pots too! To enter all you have to do is Sign up to Harvst’s newsletter. You can do this at www.harvst.co.uk. Enter Use the code ‘COUNTRY’ when signing up.

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Just put a handful of After Plant For Roses 1KG in the backfill and as a top dressing. After Plant contains nitrogen from alfalfa, potassium from comfrey, seaweed meal for trace elements, bio-char and humates to condition the soil and plant derived Amino acids that feed soil biology. Also feed with liquid After Plant for roses and make sure you soak the foliage as well as the roots as the nutrients can be absorbed through the foliage. It remains the perfect combination for perfect roses. www.rootgrow.co.uk

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COIR FREEEXCITINGGARDENERSOFFERSRANGEPEATOPTIONS CoirProducts.co.uk provides a wide and innovative range of natural and peat-free products that can be used to grow a variety of flowers and plants, including roses, perennials, and wildflowers. Made from organic material extracted from the husk of the coconut, they are ethically produced and sourced, with minimal harm on the environment. If you are looking to grow roses, CoirProducts growbags are ideal. Containing a mix of natural, peatfree, and biodegradable coir and chips, CoirProducts growbags are easy-to-use. CoirProducts coir potting mix is a versatile growing medium that can be used to grow a variety of wildflowers, perennials, and other plants, while CoirProducts coir chips are an ideal soil conditioning supplement. Coir retains water and moisture well, as well as having a neutral pH value, with such natural properties of coir helping plants develop strong and healthy root systems.

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Perrie Hale Nursery is a family run specialist tree nursery based just outside of Honiton. They have a large collection of ornamental and fruit trees that are pot grown and can be planted most of the year round. Some of the more unusual trees they stock include birches such as Betula utilis ‘Forest Blush’ or Betula utilis ‘Budda’ along with the favourites such as flowering cherries, crab apples and rowan. Fruit trees include a range of varieties local to the southwest such as the Totnes apple. They also have a large range of bare-root trees and shrubs suitable for woodland creation or native, evergreen and formal hedging. Bare-root plants are sent out between November and March while they are dormant.

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JOBS IN THE September garden

Many experienced gardeners used to think September was too late to sow wallflowers, but it is perfectly possible to direct-sow them in the first week of the month and, with no transplanting till spring, they did very well. Ideally, sow them where you want them to flower and add tulips in between in a couple of months’ time for a fabulous spring show. Remove shading from the greenhouse so plants benefit from maximum light. Temperatures can still be quite high, so make sure there is adequate ventilation during the day and shut everything up at night.

Now is the time to focus on taking cuttings Taking cuttings is a brilliant way to grow more plants for nothing. And there’s something satisfying about nursing plants through from tender young shoots to fully-fledged plants for use in your own containers.

Spring flowering bulbs need planting September is the perfect time to be planting hardy springflowering bulbs such as narcissus (daffodil), hyacinth and crocus. These bulbs will do best in a warm, sunny spot and they all love good drainage. If you’re planting them in a bed or border, dig a hole about four times the depth of the bulb. Put a layer of sand and grit in the bottom of the hole to aid Coverdrainage.this with a little compost, then plant the bulbs under about two bulb’s worth of depth of soil. Try to bunch six to ten bulbs together in one spot, placed one bulb’s width apart, or line a path with them for an impressive display.

Clear waste and fallen leaves

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Lift and divide perennials Summer-flowering herbaceous perennials can be lifted and divided in September when they’ve finished flowering and the soil is still warm enough to aid new root development. In fact, most perennials need to be divided every two to three years, otherwise they get too big for the space they’re in and become congested – it will also increase plant stock for free! Gently dig out the plant with a fork to not sever plant roots. Once the plant is out, divide it in a way suitable to its type. Small fibrous-rooted plants like hostas, can be gently teased into two with your Largerfingers.fibrous-rooted varieties, such as hardy Pelargonium (Geranium), are best levered apart using two garden forks thrust back-to-back into the plant’s centre. This will separate the plant into two with minimal root damage.If the plant you’re dividing is especially big, you will need a good strong fork to get good leverage. Protect your pots During the gloomy, cold and wet months you will need to stop your potted plants from becoming waterlogged. Naturally, bedded plants don’t require any extra care due to the excess water just being soaked deeper into the soil. However, for potted plants this is not the case. You can prevent this from happening simply by buying some ‘pot feet’ or try propping your pots up on some old bricks or wood to allow the excess water to drain.

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Now is the ideal time to start looking at investing in a compost bin. Be prepared for when the leaves begin to fall this autumn, and your garden is full of golden leaves. Not only does filling a compost bin save you general bin space for the winter, it can also help save you money, making fertiliser and other chemical compounds redundant when the time comes to encourage new growth in your garden.

2 The last of summer days are fizzling away but not without a final flourish. In September, there might be hot days while some mornings will be spent wilting roses and picking the last of the summer soft fruit. There is still plenty of time to enjoy the abundance of the lighter months, but now is the time to think about change-over jobs. September is not all toil, though. It’s a time to take note and plan for next year, whether that’s visiting an inspirational nursery with a great display garden or scrutinising your own garden for gaps. Take photos on your phone, make notes and mark up the bits which haven’t gone as well as expected. Later in the autumn, when you are digging up and dividing, you’ll have an excellent visual reference of what to move and what gaps need to be Meanwhile,plugged. here are some jobs to be getting on with.

3 It’s not too late to sow wallflowers

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You’ll need to find strong, young growth that hasn’t flowered this year. Snip it off using pruning snips at an angle just beneath a leaf joint, leaving a stem of about seven cms in length. Next, strip off the leaves from the lower stem, leaving just one or two pairs towards the top. This will help to prevent the plant from losing too much water via its leaves while it has no roots to take moisture up from the soil. Dip the end of the cutting in hormone rooting powder and plant in compost mixed with a little horticultural grit for drainage. This will help to prevent the end from rotting and promote good root growth. Put the plants in a propagator and cover them with a plastic bag to help retain moisture.

Place the cuttings somewhere bright and warm, but keep them out of direct sunlight until roots have formed (about six to ten weeks). It’s a good idea to mist plants daily to ensure their water needs are met while they are still rootless.

www.countrygardener.co.uk 29 JOBS FOR THE MONTH

Sloe Gin Ingredients • 500g sloes • 250g sugar • 70cl gin (strong) Method Pick over your sloes to remove any stems and put them in the freezer overnight. Find a clean, airtight jar. You’ll need something that comfortably holds 1.5 litres. Pop the frozen sloes into the jar. Add the sugar. Pour in your gin. Keep your jar in a dark place, but for the first week or so bring it out and turn the jar over a few times before replacing it. Once all the sugar has dissolved, leave it in the dark for as long as you can bear, three months at the very least. Then strain the mixture through some muslin and into a clean bottle, and it will be ready to serve. To make a sloe spritz This gin is lovely on its own, or reduced and drizzled onto cakes, but is also a great cocktail ingredient. To make a sloe fizz, simply pour 25ml of sloe gin into a champagne glass and top with Prosecco.

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9 Lengthen the tomato ripening weeks

Outdoor tomatoes are in danger of blackening overnight without protection, but experiment with cutting them down from their supports and laying them on fleece before you cover them with a polythene tunnel, so the fruit can continue to grow and ripen for a few more weeks. It is possible this way to enjoy at least three more weeks from outdoor vines. You can ripen tomatoes by covering them with a polythene tunnel.

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When you think you’ve harvested your last potatoes, carefully dig over the veg bed, collect those that were still lurking under the surface, and then dig over ready to plant some green manures. These green manures are useful in many ways; they protect the soil from erosion over winter, reducing the potential of any leaching of mineral and nutrients, and protect soil structure, as well as boosting nutrients when dug into the soil. They also provide a green carpet that helps provide shelter for beneficial insects through the winter, such as ground beetle, and if you leave a patch to flower they are loved by pollinators

7 Order garlic and onions Garlic and overwintering onions are planted out from now till the end of October but get your order in as soon as possible or you will be picking over the spoils. Get used to regularly overwintering onions; try ‘Japanese Shensyu Yellow’, and ‘Radar’ for red onions. Garlic does best planted out as early as you can; ‘Solent Wight’ and ‘Cristo’ are both reliable and hardy. Onions need to be spaced 20cm apart each way; garlic is best at 18cm each way. Choose your sunniest spot.

READERS STORY

Plus, there’s still work to do in the vegetable plot

• Bean and pea plants that have finished their harvest can be cut back, leaving the roots to be dug into the soil to provide extra nitrogen for future crops.

• Remove any crops that have finished leaving unneeded areas clear – weeding and tidying for the winter. Keep an eye on your brassicas for butterfly eggs and caterpillars; these will most probably be under the leaves.

• Keep watering winter squash and pumpkins if the weather is hot. This will prevent their growth from being checked. Use stored rainwater wherever possible. Keep pinching out the tips of triffid-like pumpkins and squash. They prioritise vegetative growth over fruit formation, and you may get fruit drop if you don’t keep them contained. With the tips pinched, all the fruit down to the base of the stem will now be ripening well. Place a tile under the largest fruit to stop rot creeping in where they sit on the damp soil. Leave pumpkins, squash and marrows to ripen in the sun if possible so that the skin can harden.

• Continue to feed tomato plants until all the fruits have finished growing and ripening. If your tomatoes refuse to ripen in miserable weather, then you could make a delicious green tomato chutney.

• Do a last outside sowing of radish. With the soil still warm and moist with dew, you should be eating these in four to five weeks.

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Sloe and strongthe perfect gin Country Gardener reader Janet Bates has been making sloe gin from fruit picked near her west Somerset cottage for 20 years and now shares her long practiced secrets We are very lucky as the common blackthorn , commonly known as sloe grows in abundance down the lanes round the cottage. I confess to being worried this autumn as a good crop of well ripened sloes needs the perfect balance of warmth and water over the spring and summer. We’ve had the warmth but not the water over this summer in west ThereSomerset.isalways some debate about when to pick the sloes but for the best flavour you must wait until the berries are ripe. They should be a rich dark colour and should squash easily between your fingers. I think it’s a good sign if they have already started to fall to the ground naturally. We always wait until after the first frosts before picking the berries to make sloe gin. These days it’s easy to bag them up and mimic that first frost in a freezer. The frost is thought to split the skins so the juices can flow into your gin without the effort of pricking all the berries.

Plant a hedge September is a good time for planting hedges. The soil is still warm and there is usually plenty of rain. It’s traditional to plant a mixed native hedge in the spring, but autumn planting is also successful. Evergreen hedging can be planted now, too, but don’t leave this any later than October as plants may be damaged by frost.

– Phacelia tanacetifolia for example, is one of the best nectar sources for the honeybee, bumble bee and hoverfly. 10

• Sow Swiss chard, winter spinach, broad beans and hardy peas.

• Sow spring onions – these will be ready to eat before the frosts get going in most parts of the country. Even if frosts are forecast, they are fine under glass or plastic to harvest through late winter and autumn.

Potatoes out: green manure in

Once you have your stash of berries you are ready for the fun part – making the gin. There’s two pieces of advice in all this -one is that while it is quick and easy to make sloe gin, the longer you leave it, the more it improves. The second piece of advice is use a good quality strong gin to give it a real west country ‘kick’.

www.countrygardener.co.uk 31 *Offer valid for openings up to 2.4m wide & including 2 remote controls, 55mm white slats, internal manual override. Garolla garage doors are expertly made to measure in our own UK factories, they’re strong and solidly built. The electric Garolla door rolls up vertically, taking up only 8 inches inside your garage, maximising valuable space. Our expert local installers will fit your new door and they’ll take away the old one too, so there’s no mess. Give us a call today and we’ll come and measure up completely FREE of charge.•••••WHAT’SGottagaragefifor£895Fromafullyttedelectricdoor.getaGarolla.INCLUDEDWITHEVERYDOOR:EXPERTMEASURING&FITTING2REMOTECONTROLSACOUSTIC&THERMALINSULATIONFREEDISPOSALOFYOUROLDDOORAVAILABLEIN21COLOURS CALL US TODAY ON: 0800 135 7065 MOBILE: 07537 149 128 Find inspiration and joy in a garden Your perfect garden awaits: ngs.org.uk Concrete Post Fixings (Wire Anchors) & Easy Trellising System Quick & Easy Solution to fix wires to concrete posts NO DRILLING - simply clamp the two halves together Three sizes to fit most concrete posts FREE UK DELIVERY Main Stockists of Gripple Trellising Visit our website to view our other gardening accessories and gift ideas 01246info@rivelinglenproducts.co.ukwww.rivelinglenproducts.co.uk462666 Wire Anchor Wire Anchor with Gripple Trellising System NEED AN EXTRA PAIR OF HANDS INyour garden? Head Gardeners and Garden Owners: enthusiastic and hard-working help two days a week can be yours. Take on a WRAGS (Work and Retrain as a Gardener) trainee and you will get a dedicated and willing helper, plus the satisfaction of nurturing the next generation of gardeners. Your part of the deal? You pay the trainee the National Living Wage and provide horticultural training. WRAGS is a unique scheme, administered by the WFGA, designed for career changers and those returning to work. Our trainees are keen to learn and hard workers. For more admin@wfga.org.ukinformation:wfga.org.uk BRITISH AFFILIATED GURKHA NURSES OFFERING SPECIALIST CARE FOR YOUR LOVED ONES Dedicated one to one LIVE-IN care from our team of Nepalese nurses. Tel: 01252 282110 Email: care@poseidon-gp.com Website: www.poseidoncare.co.uk If you would like to advertise your business or service in our Cotswolds magazine, please contact Reachcorina@countrygardener.co.ukTel:01823410098apassionateand affluent audience of gardening enthusiasts Over 100,000 copies distributed every month

OUR KEY TO FACILITIES ON OFFER AT THE GARDENS:

The mellow early days of autumn are perfect for getting out and visiting gardens, so here’s a selection opening for charity in the areas we cover, raising much needed funds for nursing and caring charities. Do check whenever possible before starting out on a journey as circumstances can force cancellations in private gardens. www.ngs.org.uk

Picnics welcome

AMMERDOWN HOUSE

The Grade II landscaped Edwardian gardens surround the 15th century manor house, with extensive plantings undergoing considerable redevelopment by the owners and their head gardener – a wide range of organic horticulture in eight acres. Open for the NGS on Wednesday 14th, 10am-4pm, and Sunday 18th September, 11am-4.30pm. Admission £7.50, children free.

compiled by Vivienne Lewis

This large country garden with beautiful views is spread over two acres with mixed herbaceous and shrub borders laid out in a series of individual areas, some interesting sculptures and water features with informal paths through the grounds and places to sit and enjoy the views. Open for the NGS on Sunday 4th September, 2pm-6pm, admission £5, children free. Visitors with wheelchairs park in front of the house.

SILVER STREET FARM Prescott, Uffculme, Cullompton, Devon EX15 3BA

The garden is 30m x 15m that’s packed with huge bananas, cannas, colocasias, delicate and scented tropical passion flowers, prairie planting, a wildlife pond and two large greenhouses. Rest awhile in the many seating areas. Open for the NGS on Sundays 28th August, 4th and 11th September, 12pm-5pm each open day. Admission £4, children free.

A plantsman’s garden in a rural setting, alive with scent, colour and dynamic planting. Roses, herbs and perennials, enormous herbaceous borders with meandering paths, an eclectic collection of plants and shrubs, designed with the family and surrounding landscape at its heart by Alasdair Cameron as a haven. Open for the NGS on Saturday 10th September, 1pm5pm, admission £6, children free.

THE HOSPITAL OF ST CROSS St Cross SO23Winchester,Road,Hampshire9SD

The medieval Hospital of St Cross, one of England’s oldest almshouses, nestles in water meadows beside the River Itchen. The tranquil, walled Master’s Garden, created in the late 17th century, has colourful herbaceous borders, old fashioned roses, interesting trees and a large fish pond. The Compton Garden has unusual plants of the type imported in the 17th century. Open for the NGS on Sunday 11th September, 2pm-5pm, admission £4, children free. For other opening times and information visit the website at www.hospitalofstcross.co.uk or phone on 01962 851375. Country Gardener

Ammerdown Park, Radstock, Somerset BA3 5SH

BUMPERS Sutton Common, Long Sutton, Hook, Hampshire RG29 1SJ

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Plants usually for sale Accommodation at this venue Refreshments available

Wheelchair access to much of garden Partial wheelchair access Dogs on short leadsUnsuitable for wheelchairs

32 DRIVEALLENSTYLE Yelland, Barnstaple, Devon EX31 3DZ

Visitors welcome by arrangement Coaches welcome consult owners

TOGARDENSVISIT in September

A new opening for the National Garden Scheme on Saturday 3rd September from 2pm-5pm, the Ammerdown garden was a brilliant idea by Lutyens who wanted to link the house with the beautiful Orangery, creating ‘rooms’ of yew, sculptures and parterres, enclosed formal areas; there are clipped Portuguese laurels and honeysuckles trained over wired umbrellas. The kitchen garden is undergoing restoration. Admission £7, children free.

GARDEN VISITS

HAZELBURY MANOR GARDENS Wadswick, Box, Corsham, Wiltshire SN13 8HX

1 SOUTHVIEW Wick Lane, Devizes, Wiltshire SN10 5DR

SUDELEY CASTLE & GARDENS Winchcombe, Gloucestershire GL54 5JD

An atmospheric, very long town garden packed with beautiful and unusual plants, shrubs and trees, many with striking foliage; gravel garden areas, a patio area with conservatory, large potted acers making a tunnel effect, collections of plants in pots; through an old iron arch a winding path leads past herbaceous beds with an old cherry tree. Open for the NGS on Sunday 11th September, 2pm5pm, admission £4, children free.

1 PINE WALK Lyme Regis, Dorset DT7 3LA

GARDEN VISITS

THE RED POST HOUSE Fivehead, Taunton, Somerset TA3 6PX

This beautiful Arts & Crafts garden overlooks a quiet valley on descending levels with terraces designed by Norman Jewson in the 1930s. Enclosed by Cotswold stone walls and yew hedges, the terraces, shrub garden, herbaceous borders and bog garden are full of scent and colour, and there are rare orchid walks. Open for the NGS on Saturday 3rd and Sunday 4th September, 2pm5pm, admission £7.50, children free.

A half-acre walled garden with shrubs, borders, trees, circular potager and topiary, and a further one and a half acres of lawn, orchard with a range of fruits including apples, pears, quince, medlar, mulberries and figs, and a vineyard, the views aligned on Ham Hill. Open for the NGS on Sunday 25th September, 2pm-5pm, admission £5, children free.

COTSWOLD FARM Duntisbourne Abbots, Cirencester, Gloucestershire GL7 7JS

MILLKEYNESTON Tarrant DorsetBlandfordKeyneston,Forum,DT119HZ

Keyneston Mill is the creative home of Parterre Fragrances - a 50-acre working estate dedicated to fragrant and aromatic plants, each compartment of the gardens featuring plants from a different perfume family – floral, fern and citrus. Enjoy a walk around the river meadow and the perfume crop fields where the ingredients for the perfumes are grown, and see the exhibition and distillery. Open for the NGS on Tuesday 13th September, 2pm-5pm, admission £5, children free. For other times and information visit the website at www.keynestonmill.com or call on 01258 786022.

Credit Sue Sayer Photography www.countrygardener.co.uk 33

Ten magnificent and contrasting gardens at Sudeley Castle, surrounded by striking views of the Cotswold Hills, each reflecting a fascinating 1,000 year history, set among the Castle and atmospheric ruins and including a knot garden, Queen’s garden and Tudor physic garden. It’s the only private castle in England to have a queen buried within the grounds, Queen Katherine Parr, the last and surviving wife of King Henry VIII, who lived and died in the castle. Open for the NGS on Friday 23rd September, 10.30am-3pm, admission £10, children £6. For other opening times and information go to www.sudeleycastle.co.uk

A new opening for the NGS on Friday 9th, Saturday 10th and Sunday 11th September, 11am-4pm, an unconventional half-acre, multi-level garden above Lyme Bay, adjoining National Trust’s Ware Cliffs, with an exotic range of shrubs, cannas, gingers and magnificent ferns. Apart from a rose and hydrangea collection, the planting reflects the owner’s love of Southern Africa with succulents and late summer colour. Admission £5, children £1.

What would you like to hide? Is it an oil container, a compost heap or just an unsightly wall or fence? If you have a wire fence, feathery light grasses can provide just the right amount of screening. A long, low row of fountain grasses. Pennisetum alopecuroides ‘Hameln’ along a pathway leads the eye toward an entrance. A hedge encloses an area, blocks a view, or creates privacy. Shrubs such as privets, yews, arborvitae, and boxwoods give a dense, heavy, evergreen statement to a garden. But what about using grasses? They don’t need pruning and are generally hardy. For even more screening, try planting some taller, thicker varieties such as bluestem or moor grass in groups to hide those unsightly eyesores. There may be a short period of time when you cut your grasses back in early spring when you can see the offender, but it won’t be long until it’s hidden again. The potential of ornamental grasses is endless and all you need is a little bit of space and a touch of creativity to achieve some really stunning, varied and beautiful displays. Ornamental grasses can help structure, texture and the sensory nature of a garden and the soft wave of a grass in the wind can be wonderfully relaxing

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Use ornamental grasses for screening

Gorgeous grasses

There was a time once when planting ornamental grasses was thought of as being a rather lazy way of gardening. It was filling large areas of the garden with undemanding and perhaps uninspiring plantings. Things have changed however as more now accept that grasses are versatile, hardy and spectacular, bringing movement, texture and drama to gardens of all styles, nearly all year round. They can be woven through borders, used as a focal point, scattered through gravel gardens and planted in containers. Easy to grow, low maintenance and available in many beautiful shapes, sizes and styles, they are ideal for beginners and experienced gardeners alike. The soft wave of a grass in the wind, and the quiet rustle can be wonderfully relaxing. Ornamental grasses shouldn’t be overlooked for their benefits to wildlife too and you can grow them easily in gravel gardens or in Theycontainers.tolerate a wide range of conditions and don’t need much looking after. Are they the perfect plant? Grasses can act visually like shrubs. Some are arching, others stiff and formal. They have different weights as well, and grasses can be used to define space in a garden. Closely planted dwarf varieties of grass can make a fun and different flower border and soften a pathway or edge. They may continue to provide interest and cover throughout the winter. Intersperse grasses in groups of three amongst your other plants. This not only acts as a filler but can really add depth and interest to your display. Your plants and grasses don’t have to be the same height but what you want to achieve is an overall sense of balance between tall and Trysmall.choosing grasses with a completely different texture to the plants they’ll be near. Think wispy plumes of silver, next to the heads of the round, yellow flowers of the Rudbeckia for example! Try planting a fountain grass with its height and its gently splaying feathers to make a wonderful focal point in your garden. In a limited space, take three different sized containers and plant three different types of grass for a dramatic and unique display.

Go for contrast in colour, in height and in the shape of the grass. Bluey greys can work well with those purple reds and clumps can look good against wispy. Or, for the opposite effect, go for identical grasses in three containers of different heights for a sense of calm and serenity or to break up and soften the harsh, clinical lines of a wall or backdrop. Soften other garden features by planting grasses around them. Pots and other containers will blend much more effortlessly into your display with a little screening from your grasses. Add the end of season colour with your grasses. Bluestem and switchgrass varieties are great for this and look fabulous in the early autumn light.

The potential of ornamental grasses is endless Country Gardener

Lagurus ovatus This is a delightful, award-winning, dwarf variety. Suitable for drying. A hardy annual with creamy-white, soft, furry seed heads like a bunny’s tail so beloved by flower arrangers. As this variety is on taller stems, it likes full sun and well-drained soil. L. ovatus was introduced to cultivation in Britain by 1640 and is widely grown. It was first recorded in the wild in 1791 in Guernsey, where it has long been naturalised. Deliberate attempts to establish it in Jersey were eventually successful in the 1860s. It appears to be increasing as an established alien on sand dunes in the southwest.

Pennistem alopecuroides ‘Hameln’ or Fountain Grass Fountain Grass to give it its more popular name is a much favoured when it comes to selecting grasses. This selection forms an upright mound of arching green leaves, bearing bottle rush spikes of silverywhite flowers that turn to buff or tan as they dry. It is most effective when mass planted, but also useful as a specimen accent in the garden or in containers. The flowers are excellent for cutting, fresh or dried. Plants usually remain attractive well into the winter, the leaves turning bright golden-yellow in the fall. Clumps may be easily divided in spring. Old foliage should be cut to the ground in March. Drought tolerant once established. ‘Hameln’ refers to the German town of Hamelin, most famous for the folk tale of the Pied Piper.

Pennisetum × advena ‘Skyrocket’

Stipa tenuissima This is a very graceful and beautiful ornamental grass. Forming dense clumps of arching, filament-thin, bright green leaves, it bears all summer long a profusion of long, narrow, softly feathery plumes - greenish-white to start with then changing to buff. ‘Pony Tails’ describes the whole perfectly, particularly when the whole plant billows in the slightest breeze. Flowers the first year from seed and is excellent for the border, pot or patio It is now officially known as Nassella tenuissima, and is an incredibly useful plant in the garden, as it combines well with pretty much all other plants – other grasses, perennials and annuals. Dotted throughout a sunny border, it can unify a planting scheme. It’s an excellent choice for a gravel garden, a naturalistic or prairie border, a coastal garden, or a contemporary urban garden. It also works well as ground cover and grows very well in pots. It’s very low maintenance, drought tolerant and is rarely affected by pests and diseases.

This is a magnificent, elegant grass with attractive golden yellow variegated ribbon like foliage that forms gradually spreading mounds of long-lived refined cover in sun or shade. Insignificant flowers. Stunning in pots. Brighter yellow in sun more lime yellow with more shade. Excellent in dry soils and dislikes too wet. It is also one of the slowest growing. It makes a graceful mound of green and yellow striped foliage, sure to lighten any dark corner. After several years, a border of this beauty is a crowd stopper! It now has the RHS Award of Garden Merit. Carex buchananii

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This is an unusual evergreen grass with fine-textured, coppery-brown foliage that has attractively curled leaf tips and takes on a lovely hint of pink in the summer. It has a unique and beautiful colouring and forms a dense mound of foliage which is ideal for planting on the edge of a mixed border so that it’s allowed to trail gracefully over the lawn. Silvery-white flower spikes which bow to the ground under the weight of the seed heads are produced between July and September, adding further colour and interest to the garden well into the autumn months. It is tolerant of a wide range of conditions and looks great when grown as a specimen plant surrounded by green groundcover.

Clockwise from top left: Stipa gigantea, Lagurus ovatus, Hakonechloa macra aureola, Pennistem alopecuroides, Stipa tenuissima, Carex buchananii, Pennisetum × advena

Stipa gigantea Stipa gigantea is a striking evergreen grass, forming a spiky clump of arching deep green foliage from which a huge sheaf of long-stemmed, oat-like flower-heads erupts in mid-summer. When mature, these splay apart to make a wide fountain shape that almost hides the plant. The seedheads dry out naturally on the plant and persist into early winter, where they make a good architectural feature, especially when outlined in frost. The Royal Horticultural Society has given it its prestigious Award of Garden Merit (AGM). It is an excellent alternative to pampas grass as a lawn specimen in small gardens, and is perfect for growing in a border or a gravel garden. Grow in moist but welldrained soil in full sun to partial shade.

Hakonechloa macra ‘Aureola’

Here’s some wonderful options for adding to your garden

This ornamental grass has green foliage with white margins and small, bristly cream-red flower spikes appearing in summer. A gorgeous, great value ornamental grass that looks great planted in a large clump where the flower spikes swaying in the breeze, making it a real eye catcher. For best results plant in a sunny spot in well-drained sheltered position.

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24. Poisonous substance found in the seeds of the sabadilla (9) DOWN 1. This palmetto is also known as Garfield’s tree (5) 2. Alternative name for the cornflower (10) 3. Fully blossomed as of a flower or plant (2,5) 4. Small African tree which produces oily nuts (4)

17. Having a distinctive smell such as a plant (7) 19. English poet (1572-1631) who wrote ‘The Blossome’ (5) 21. The holm oak or holly (4) WIN £100 IN RHS GIFT TOKENS

5. Area of parkland within a city, considered beneficial to people’s health (5,4) 7. Biblical plant that symbolises beauty (4,2,6) 9. Plant genus whose members include birthwort and Dutchman’s pipe (12) 13. Genus of flowering plants found in Northern Brazil (10) 14. Permeated with pine gum or sap; often applied to Greek wines (9)

CROSSWORD 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 WOOGLBEFLERTOPICAL ORRRABIIAEA OORPKFIEVLANCASTRIAN GDCUPVIKIS WONNNALTAAIRSEETPEA GDETNSANN CUCDCDRPEEEASETILES HSEEAALITI OOGOODDESTRNERRIDTT OOOEFLNLIU RCNNDRRURALIESPEYESS GODKDFTKNE MGOCRUETEPEALLSPIEA OORIAIIALI MOOCNCEPTSRANSNAILS UPTIYEPIST GOOHETLYISLEHEATHER WPTYCRGRE OORPTUBERATENECTARUS RNRRRELEKSS NRRRATTEYATTLESAKE Answers from previous, August 2022:37

SPECIALIST GARDEN PRODUCTS SPECIALIST NURSERIES TERRACOTTA WANTED/FORPOTSSALE WANTED OLD RADIO VALVES And Audio Valves. Tel: 07557 792091 CLASSIFIED CERTIFIED GrowersVEGETABLEORGANICPLANTSOrganics,KitleyFarm,Yealmpton,DevonPL82LTwww.growersorganics.comTel:01752881180Est.2003 All propagated and grown in Devon Established suppliers to landscape designers Growers of many plants suitable for coastal areas hedgingincludingplants www.coastalhedging.co.ukwww.seasideplants.co.uk FORTON NURSERY Top Quality Perennials, Shrubs & Trees T: 01460 239569 E: fortonnursery@btconnect.com W: www.fortonnursery.co.uk Forton village, near Chard TA20 4HD Closed Tuesdays and Wednesdays REACH 300,000* LOYAL READERS WITH advertisingClassified classified@countrygardener.co.uk Free Guide & Catalogue on request Discover the Diversity of Hardy Geraniums! We stock up to 200 varieties throughout the year Contact Gary: 01684 770 733 or 07500 600 Gary@cranesbillnursery.com205www.cranesbillnursery.com Stockists of frostproof pots and garden ornaments from Greece and around the world as well as a host of other gifts and bits and pieces Open every day Eastoke Corner, Hayling Island, Hants P011 9LU 02392 637590 The Terracotta Pot and Gift Shop CustomTimberBuildings.co.ukEx-displaybuildingsforsale|Anythingtoorder01935891195StablesGaragesGardenOfficesLogcabins For the latest garden news, events & advice - don't miss COUNTRY GARDENER www.countrygardener.co.uk Autuumcolour IN ABUNDANCE ACROSS 6. Dancing girl similar to fuchsia flower? (9) 8. Somerset vegetable? (5) 10. Vetch or biblical weed (4) 11. Device that convert’s the Sun’s energy into electricity (5,5) 12. Popular name of garden flower Polygonatum (8,4) 15. The mastic tree that produces a gumresin (7) 16. Having branches or flower heads that bend downwards (7) 18. Showy Arctic flower associated with a Northern island? (7,5) 20. Alternative name for Kalmia latiflora, the mountain laurel (6-4)

Welcome back to our popular gardening themed crossword compiled by Saranda which over the past year has become enormously popular with readers. The winning entry to be drawn by us will receive £100 of RHS gift tokens. Completed entries should be sent to Mount House, Halse, Taunton, Somerset TA4 3AD. closing date for entries is Friday, 23rd September. winner of the August issue crossword was Richard Spencer from Exeter.

22. Famous school where Luxmoore, a housemaster, created a special garden (4) 23. Small genus of South American trees yielding latex (5)

The

The

country gardener CROSSWORD

Investing is like gardening in that you need to think ahead to create a plan that will meet your long-term objectives. You must start by planting the seeds and continue feeding and nurturing your investment plan.

Cath PettyferTel:cath.pettyfer@countrygardener.co.ukDevon0183782660 Corina Reay - Cotswolds & Tel:corina@countrygardener.co.ukDorset01823410098 Classifieds classified@countrygardener.co.uk

•Remember:Appletrees require three to nine years for a substantial harvest.

READER’S STORY

Distribution & Stockists Pat Eade Tel:distribution@countrygardener.co.uk01594543790 Accounts and subscriptions Heather Rose heather@countrygardener.co.uk Magazines

My gardening ‘comrades’ on our Dorset allotment and I love your magazine even if sometimes we have to work hard to get a copy.

The Country Gardener magazines are distributed FREE at Nurseries, garden centres, National Trust Properties, open gardens, garden machinery specialists, country stores and farm shops in each county. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or made available in any form, without the written permission of the copyright holder and Publisher, application for which should be made to the Publisher. Unsolicited material: do not send or submit your only version of manuscripts and/or photographs/transparencies to us as these cannot be returned to you. While every care is taken to ensure that material submitted is priced accurately and completely, we cannot be responsible or liable for any loss or damage suffered. Views and/or opinions expressed in this publication do not necessarily represent those of Country Gardener or the Publisher. Printed by Mortons Print Ltd, Morton Way, Boston Road Industrial Estate, Horncastle, LN9 6JR.

Design & Production Aidan Gill aidan@countrygardener.co.uk Gemma Stringer gemma@countrygardener.co.uk

I’ve been tempted to write to you for a few months now, but I’ve not wanted to get into the bad books of some of the guys and gals who garden alongside me. So, taking the advice of my wife, as I do most times by the way, I’m going to be anonymous, which I hope will protect the innocent! It will become clear why this is a sensible option. My gripe is that I think gardeners are these days losing their patience in a big way and by doing so are missing out on the great joy of gardening. I have several pieces of evidence. Some of them are on our allotment. One other involves my son and daughter-in-law. Let’s deal with the family one first. They moved into a new house just outside of Dorchester and had the chance to build a long-term garden - a good sized plot that would allow them to grow vegetables and have borders, shrubs and a lovely garden. They read a lot. I spoke to them about what to do. It would take five years I thought. But they didn’t have the patience. A large turfed lawn went down, a few mature trees dropped in at great expense and lots of decking and paving. That kind of gardening isn’t gardening, of course. It’s landscaping. Gardening is the work of building something over years, not days. And they didn’t have the patience, as simple as that. You can have an ‘instant garden’ if you buy huge plants, but they are hard to settle in and they are more likely to die. It’s usually better to choose smaller plants, and to let them find their feet in your garden’s own microclimate and grow in their own sweet time. What’s more, it seems to me that instant gardens generally don’t seem to have the same magical qualities as a garden where patience and time have been allowed to do their work. I have always been drawn to plants and gardens. As a young gardener, as young as five years old, I struggled with impatience. Even as an adult and as I became a more serious gardener, I wanted results fast. Now, with decades under my belt, I have finally come to appreciate the value of Plantpatience.theright plant in the right place – somewhere where it has elbow room, and somewhere where the soil, the shelter and the sunshine are right. If you take care of plants they will usually grow for you -that’s part of the fascination of gardening. Our allotment also proves my case and if it were up to me there’s at least half a dozen who shouldn’t be allowed to have a plot because they don’t have the soul for gardening.

One Country Gardener regular reader has written to us asking to be anonymous as he criticises his fellow allotment holders and family members for not having the patience to be proper gardeners ‘I learned not to give up on my plants just because they were taking a little while to grow.’

• Fig trees need four years before they yield the first fruit. My point is far too many gardeners don’t think like this anymore. Not round here they don’t! I have three favourite quotes which back up my case I hope in not too sentimental a way.

Time Off Kate Lewis timeoff@countrygardener.co.uk Advertising Sales Ava Bench - Somerset & Tel:ava@countrygardener.co.ukHampshire01278786139

• Tree growth varies by type, but eight to twelve inches per year is common. Starting from a five-foot-tall spruce, expect to wait about 20 years until it reaches 25 feet.

I have tackled some of them about it and the best answer is they ran out of time. They ran out of patience. It is called a growing season and the clue is in the word season. You can’t just stop at the end of May. Patience is a virtue in many aspects of life, but particularly so in gardening. Plants take their own sweet time to bloom, to produce fruit, to become mature. So, gardeners must be patient. I watch as life begins to emerge from the soil. Never all at once but rather slowly, steadily and in its own time. I learned not to give up on my plants just because they were taking a little while to grow. My willingness to wait for my plants to do their thing began to bleed into the way I thought about other parts of my life. To build a successful garden you must plan, prepare the earth, and plant seeds long before reaping the benefits.

Editorial Publisher & Editor: Alan Lewis Tel:alan@countrygardener.co.uk01823431767

• Rhubarb and asparagus should grow for three full years before harvesting the fourth.

‘To plant a garden is to believe in tomorrow’

‘The day you plant the seed is not the day you eat the fruit’

‘A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they will never sit in’

• Raspberries take three years to establish a wellfruiting patch.

Three plots close to mine have been abandoned in midsummer as their owners who were active and interested in April and May sowing seeds, applying compost, sowing, weeding and planting just didn’t have the patience to see it through. The tomatoes have gone wild, the spring onions dried and shrivelled, the courgettes now huge inedible marrows, the leeks dried out and hopeless, the onions the size of marbles. They seem to think that after all that hard work early in the year they can sit back, go down to the plot once a fortnight and expect to reap harvests galore.

‘Gardeners lose patience too easily’

www.countrygardener.co.uk 39

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