CHOOSING THE SUMMER FLOWERS
This is a
great time to look ahead to the summer months and plan which flowers we will
grow in our tubs, beds and hanging baskets. It is very easy to leave it a lot
later, then pop down to our local garden centre and see what mature plants are
available and buy in as needed. That is a more expensive option, and where is
the challenge of trying to grow your own plants with your own selection of
seeds. I have a fair few tubs, hanging baskets and annual flower beds as well
as always finding plenty of bare patches needing brightened up with a few
annuals, so I start with a flower seed order of annuals at the beginning of the
year.
I also
retain a large collection of mixed bedding tuberous begonias, purchased about
fifteen years ago with new colours added to each year. They dry off easily in
autumn and get stored in the garage over winter. Growth buds start to swell up
at the end of February, when I then box them up into compost and get them
started into growth. They are quite slow, so I can keep them under a table in a
warm room for a few weeks before they need light, as it is still too cold in my
unheated greenhouse.
I also
retain a collection of geraniums purchased about the same time and overwintered
as small cutting on a sunny windowsill. Geraniums are quite hardy, so do not
need too much heat and can get hardened off and put into my greenhouse at the
end of March. A small greenhouse heater is available just in case a late frost
threatens.
For many
years I also kept a good range of Busy Lizzies flowering in summer, then
growing them over the winter as a flowering house plant. In spring I take cuttings to bulk up the
numbers for the summer plantings. However difficulty arose from the attentions
of red spider mites and greenfly which were difficult to control without a
chemical insecticide available, so they now get purchased as small plug plants
from garden centres in spring.
Beds and tubs
Geraniums
and begonias are my favourites for colour and impact, but supplemented with
African marigolds and Canna and Brugmansia dot plants to add the exotic look. I
also use petunias, nemesia, Impatiens (Busy Lizzies) and trailing lobelias in
my tubs to spill over the edges.
Hanging baskets
Red or
white geraniums are brilliant as central plants in baskets and are very
reliable. They are kept company with Nemesias, petunias, trailing lobelia and
Impatiens. A hanging basket with one colour of Impatiens planted in the sides
as well as in the top is a magnificent site when in full flower and totally
covering the basket as a round coloured ball.
Gaps in borders
This is
where I play around with a few annual seeds such as Cosmos, Star of the Veldt,
Livingston daisies and a whole range of poppies including, Ladybird, Shirleys
and opium poppies. Some of these (poppies) can be broadcast over prepared soil
and raked in, though others (Cosmos and Livingston daisies) are better sown in
small cellular trays then transplanted once they are a decent size.
Seed sowing
Start
sowing now with Lobelia, African marigolds in March, then in early April most
others can be sown. I sow most half hardy and some hardy plant seeds in seed
trays then prick out into cellular trays once they are big enough.
Use
proper seed compost rather than general purpose compost, as most composts are
now very low in peat with a range of other organic matter replacing it. Not all
plants grow well in these new mediums. I have been getting very poor
germination with peat free or reduced peat composts so experiment to find your
own best brand or add extra grit to improve surface drainage. Some plants are
very vulnerable to damping off, especially impatiens, petunias and lobelia, so
give a watering of Cheshunt compound to young but mature seedlings if you feel
they could be attacked. Liability to botrytis increases in cool low light damp spells
of weather, like all of last year.
Plant of the week
Pulmonaria commonly known as lungwort, but has over
another dozen common names as it can be very variable in appearance. The blue
to pink flowers bloom very early in spring on a low growing herbaceous plant
that will associate very well with yellow doronicums and snowdrops and crocus
all flowering about the same time. It is very easy to grow as long as it never
dries out as it likes a moist, but not wet soil and will be happy in shade and
partial shade. It does not have deep roots so propagates easily from dividing
up the clump. The spotted leaves go dormant in late summer or earlier if a dry
spell goes on too long.
END