home | search | help | contact | The Forums  
Navigation

Text too small?

 


Valid XHTML 1.0!

Valid CSS!


Edition seven - October 2006

 

Moles in your garden? Here's some advice from the RHS..

The next four editions of Gardener`s Diary will be in a slightly different format. While the days are short and the dormant garden is preparing itself for the spring, I will be chatting generally about gardening and in February will resume "Jobs for the month" and the "Spotlight" section.

 

The Complete How to Be a GardenerAutumn and winter have never been my favourite times of year, mainly because of the long dark nights, but now, being in the autumn of my own life, I am learning to love these particular seasons and not to wish my precious time away.

 

I have been mindful of my own increasing limitations in the garden; Gone are the times when I could move mountains -  nowadays it`s more likely to be mole hills.  When we moved to our new house in Nottinghamshire several years ago, with just a half acre of overgrown field for a back garden, it therefore made sense to design a user friendly area, with ease of maintenance and mobility.  We edged the vast lawn with pavers which enables the grass to be mown with the tractor very quickly, with only a few edges to trim. The borders are mainly planted with trees and shrubs for ease of maintenance, and difficult varying levels have been replaced with gentle paved slopes, just in case... The front garden has been designed to give borders planted with mainly  evergreen shrubs, trees and flowers, no lawn, just the parking and path areas. So, although I have a large garden and a husband who dislikes gardening, it`s not all hard work...

 

Batten down the hatches

 

Winter Garden (Horticulture Gardeners Guides)October is a really busy month in the garden, preparing for the long winter months ahead.  It is time to cut back perennials that have finished flowering, remove summer bedding plants, take out any dead growth of shrubs and prune them lightly to make them look neat over winter. Finally, give the borders a good hoe, to make them look well tended. 

 

Fancy trying to make a compost heap?

 

Prepare your lawn for winter now with an autumn feed which will encourage a deeper longer root system, and harden off growth to help the grass withstand the colder weather. You will notice the lawn going a dark green fairly soon after application.

If you are using a lawn spreader for the job, ensure you do it on a day when the lawn is not wet with dew, otherwise the wetness will clog up the spreader.. Apply the feed three days after and three days before the next cut. Do read the instructions carefully to ensure you keep pets off the area until it's dry.

 

Leaves will be falling this month. Sweep them up before they collect in a slippery heap and someone falls over them and gets hurt..

 

Once you`ve cleared away the debris, your garden will probably look a bit sad, bleak and colourless, so nip down to the garden centre to buy some pots of winter plants, already planted up and in flower, to dot around the garden. Or plant up your own containers with the special collections of winter plants you'll find for sale. Try window boxes too - plastic or wood, painted with Cuprinol Garden Shades, underplanted with all sorts of beautiful spring bulbs and topped off with trailing ivies, evergreen herbs and heathers. It`s surprising how a bit of bright colour will cheer you in the winter months. At this time of year I usually treat myself to some colourful cyclamens to dot around the house.. They like it here and flower forever..

 

Check that tree ties on young trees are secure and not too tight..

 

Bird-By-Bird Gardening: The Ultimate Guide to Bringing in Your Favorite Birds-Year After YearDon`t forget to put out food for the birds, either on a bird table or in feeders, and keep them topped up throughout the winter as they will come to rely on you feeding them,  especially in the really cold weather when supplies are short... They'll be grateful for water too!

 

Finally when you`ve put your feet up at night, relaxing with a glass of wine in front of the blazing log fire, you can browse through the seed catalogues that have been delivered, and plan next year`s summer display, with perhaps some extra perennials.  My all time favourite seed company is Thompson and Morgan, who regularly send out beautiful comprehensive catalogues, take seed orders on-line and accept credit card payments.

 

 

****************************

 

    Some web sites of interest to gardeners:

 

www.edenproject.com 

 

The living theatre of plants and people
The Eden Project is a gateway into the world of plants and people. A meeting place for all to discover how we depend on plants and how we can help to manage and conserve them for our mutual survival.

www.carryongardening.co.uk

Gardening is an important part of many people's lives. You don't have to give up gardening because of accident or illness, the onset of disability or the problems associated with growing older. The information on their website is designed to provide you with the information to Carry on Gardening. Carry on Gardening was initiated by the horticultural charity Thrive and is funded by the National Lottery Charities Board.  It brings together information on easy ways of gardening gathered over 23 years by Thrive and research carried out since the early 1970s by Mary Marlborough Centre, Oxford, on tools and equipment for disabled and older people.

 

Alan Titchmarshwww.alantitchmarsh.com

Alan Titchmarsh MBE, TV gardener, writer, broadcaster and thoroughly nice person. Just a few choice words to describe the peoples` favourite TV gardener. See his website....




Thompson and Morgan

A growing resource for gardeners worldwide. The site includes the international online seed catalogues, the young plants catalogue (UK only), the wholesale seeds catalogue, together with the award winning Germination Times and a host of other useful information.



********************


Stargazer Lilies

And some reading material:-

"The Yellow Book 2006" contains information of all Gardens of England and Wales open for charity, from National Gardens Scheme and is available from all good bookstores throughout the UK priced £7.99. http://www.ngs.org.uk/yellow_book.htm

 

Index of previous editions

 


 

 

 

 

home | help | contact | e-mail

Copyright www.Age-Net.co.uk 2000 - 2008