Friday 29 April 2011

Blowing hot and cold.........



We could have had Chelsea Flower Show a couple of weeks ago - the season is so precocious. This week I paid a visit to the cold store. After the heat of the Easter weekend the glasshouse where the show plants take shelter was looking seriously depleted as the flowering stock took refuge in the fridge. Thw warm weekend meant that Ricky spent mostt of it on the nursery - watering three 3 times a day and keeping careful watch over the Chelsea flock.


Rhododendrons in tight bud in the early hours of morning can be well in flower by midday. We can't get any more - so these must be held back for the show. The cold store is a large warehouse fridge - with hard, rather dreary lighting that helps the plants to keep their colour. Cherries in there since early February still think its winter, but will bloom within hours when brought out into the warm. Most plants like the azaleas and rhododendrons are put in when the flowers are opening. This seems to be the best stage for storage as Ricky has learnt over his many years doing the job.

The big challenge now is to find enough space for all the plants we need to hold back. Even a hundred roses are in the cold store - that's the first time I can remember doing that. Usually we are trying to coax them to produce buds in as much heat as possible.

The heat and reulting heavy growth means that some acers are losing colour. We need enough good foliage colour to hold the exhibit together. Also purple and yellow leaves soon lose colour in the Pavilion so it is important to start with as much colour as possible.

Ricky moves some of the Acers into a sheltered spot outside on Tuesday and we also decide to move out some of the herbaceous - things like Erysimums, thymes, santolinas and golden feverfew are also better out in the open at this stage - or so we think. Then of course on Wednesday night the temperatures drop big time - frost on the grass and on the car on Thursday morning is not a welcome sight - however we seemed to get away with it.


Royal Wedding day today and they promised rain. So far its dry, bright, cool and with that light drying wind that never did any garden any favours. What will the next two weeks bring? Who knows. For all those plants in cold storage it shouldn't make too much difference. Their challenge will come when they re-emerge into the outside world!









Monday 18 April 2011

Flowers, fragrance and filming...........

The wisteria is in full flower on the front of Ampfield House - Hillier Head Office. The front door is open and that deliciously sweet fragrance drifts in on the warm spring air - that's what I call real feel good air conditioning. A great start to the week - had the team here from The Scotts Miracle Gro Company - Paul, John, David and Sarah. Gill organised the day and we started filming clips for www.lovethegarden.com where Chelsea visitors will reveal what makes them Feel Good About Gardening. I kicked off the filming introducing the theme for the show - - horrified to see the picture Pip took of me - doesn't look as if I feel good about anything - I was just concentrating - honestly Pip talked about how she liked to use the garden as a place to relax after work and the importance of plants like Exochorda 'Niagra' to those with small gardens. Since the magazine went out to members this week sales of 'Niagra' have soared. The frothy white flowers are irresistibly appealing when the world seems to be full of glorious spring blossom. Down on the nursery we were lucky to catch up with Ricky for a Plantsman's insight into Chelsea and how preparations are going. the plants look terrific but they are certainly thirsty. The only plants refusing to play the game this year are the foxgloves. These look like cabbages - ridiculously healthy with lots of foliage but few signs of flowers. I am a bit disappointed in these as its the first time I've really planned to use them in a specific location. Oh well - that's just part of the joy of gardening. The azaleas and rhododendrons are showing colour - it seems even before your very eyes. As the weather is set warm more and more will move into the coldstore as each day passes. I'm never very keen on plants spending too long in the fridge. Although they gain a little eternal youth while they are in there they age pretty quickly when they come out. It's a bit like the tale told in that novel I spoke about last time!.


Thursday 14 April 2011

The Spark Ignites..............

It's funny how things turn out. However unprepared I feel for Chelsea, and however vague some of my plans, suddenly something happens and inspiration arrives. This year it happened only yesterday. I had heard that my good friend Jim Keeling was up to something exciting with clay and gold leaf - and yesterday Sue at Whichford pottery e mailed me an image. It wasn't what I was expecting, but wow! - what a stunner.


It was described as a gilded Cypress - but it certainly not some fluffy conifer but a truly, stunning Van Gogh creation in 3D gold. Had I not been told it was a cypress what would I have seen? Energy, emotion, an Olympic flame, a flame of eternal life. My mind immediately wandered to the wonderful H. Ryder Haggard story 'She'. Some may remember the scene where She has bathes in the flames, deep in the mountains, and gained eternal youth. Now wouldn't that be a press story at the foot of the monument in the heart of the Hillier Chelsea exhibit?


Whatever a visitor sees, and wherever his or her mind wanders, this is going to be a focal point to surpass them all, and it fit beautifully with the whole Feel Good About Gardening theme. I could never have designed it as part of the garden - it just arrived and I know it will work. For me that's magic because that's often how real gardens evolve. You plant something with little thought as to location and what's around it and it just works. Another time to you make a very considered decision and have a clear idea of what it will look like and the reality is nothing like the vision. That's the magic of a garden!

Friday 8 April 2011

Limbering up for Chelsea



The sun has been shining all day, and those Chelsea plants are moving quickly. The Rhododendron 'Horizon Monarch' we looked at the other day are now showing lots of colour and the leaf canopy on the acers is thickening by the hour. I caught up with Ricky this morning - he seems on good form but is a bit concerned about the length of time that some plants will spend in the coldstore.

We also caught up with a few of the Chelsea staging team to take a few shot of us limbering up for Chelsea. Now's the time to get both the plants and the team in shape to ensure peak performance at the show! I have great confidence in both!


Managed to find time to capture a few images for my first lecture in the My Garden School Course - Shrubs - the foundation of good planting. (visit )In this spring weather those spring flowering shrubs are really excelling themselves: ribes, spiraea, magnolia even potentillas and lilacs are blooming already. I hope this does not mean we'll have an earlier gap in the season this year.


Meant to get the nuts and bolts of the two ponds, steam and exercise trail nailed today but it hasn't happened yet. That warm sunshine is just too distracting - will have to get down to boring construction details next week otherwise I really am cutting it fine.


Hopefully the garden centres will have a bumper weekend - certainly the nursery has been operating beyond maximum capacity this week - working well into the night, and sometimes into the early hours of morning. Garden Centres everywhere are welcoming a sales boost after the dark days of winter and everyone is determined to make hay while the sun shines.


Tuesday 5 April 2011

Things are Moving .......................


The spring flowers are certainly bursting forth in the garden, and magnolias seem to have escaped frost damage so far this spring - despite a sub zero start to Monday morning.

My first tulips are out - I particularly like this vibrant Synaeda King, its glowing orange pointed blooms are glorious with rich blue hyacinths and that sparkly green and yellow Narcissus 'Rip van Winkle' . Despite the activity in the garden I've been struggling to get excited about Chelsea. So today I took a trip down to the nursery to take a look at some of the show plants.


Things are moving even faster than they are outdoors. Roses are showing buds, and even some of the rhododendrons which arrived at Brentry today ready for close scrutiny and cold storage if necessary are showing signs of colour. Horizon Monarch is always one of the first but one I really like to have for Chelsea with its soft clotted cream blooms and excellent olive-green foliage.


Some of the perennials, such as the aquilegias, Cynara cardunculus and Angelica gigas are incredibly well advanced, whereas the foxgloves are still leafy rosettes with little sign of spike. Cordylines, astelias and acers all look great and I am particularly pleased to see Acer palmatum 'Shaina' in leaf. This is a compact, upright form with slender lobes to the deep red leaves. I think this is going to be really popular for pots and containers.

Just from a quick look at the plants today I picked up a few ideas for colour combinations. I really liked the Cordyline 'Sundowner' with Astelia 'Westland' - That pink and pewter theme could be combined with the darker Acer 'Shaina' and the silver leaves af the cardoon - spike, sculptural, soft yet bold - Maybe, just maybe I'm starting to feel good about Chelsea. Watch this space - but in the meantime check out My Garden School. This is an exciting new on-line learning project - take a look at my Love your Lawn course......... http://www.my-garden-school.com/course/love-your-lawn/