A GREAT YEAR FOR TULIPS
This
spring has been brilliant for tulips. The weather has remained cool with just
enough moisture so tulips have flowered for a long time. Flower tubs, beds,
borders and other spare land where tulips have been planted have all been a
blaze of colour for ages.
Whilst we
wander around the garden enjoying this display we must also take the
opportunity to assess each variety and make notes so we know what we will be
ordering next autumn.
Last
autumn I bought in a range of dwarf double early tulips to be planted amongst
my main flower bed of mixed polyanthus which are quite low growing so a short
stemmed tulip would give a better display. I mixed Abba a red tulip with Double
Price, violet purple, Monsella a yellow and Purissima a taller white fosteriana
tulip. The mixture worked very well but was let down by the very poor range of
colours of my polyanthus. It was definitely not what was shown on the seed packet.
However I
got quite a surprise at the fantastic scent from my white Purissima tulips.
They had always been sold as scented but I had never really given it much
thought. This year it was very strong and quite exotic.
Next
autumn I will buy in more scented tulips in a wider range and see how they
compare.
I grew a
fair bit of Myosotis Blue Ball (Forget me nots) so selected the single early
yellow Yokohama the dwarf early pink Peach Blossom and some bright scarlet
Greigii Red Reiding Hood which would all go very well against the blue bedding
myosotis. The idea worked fairly well, though mildew affected my myosotis and
killed out some plants. Fortunately I had some spare pansies to replace them
with so there were no gaps.
It is
good to change the flower schemes each year so I have bought in some wallflower
seed for my main display bed for flowering next spring. These grow quite tall
so my tulip selection in autumn will include a range of the taller Darwin
Hybrids.
As the
spring flowering bedding plants and tulips go over to be replaced with summer
flowering geraniums, tuberous begonias, nemesia, petunias and impatiens nothing
will be wasted. The best colours of my polyanthus will be lifted and lined out
on the allotment so they can grow on for a year then be ready for next years
bedding. Other bedding plants will be composted. All tulip and hyacinth bulbs
will be lifted carefully and I try to keep them growing a wee bit longer
somewhere until they are ready to be dried off. I keep them in a cool outdoor
area so they don’t dry out too much. In
mid summer they will get cleaned up and the bigger bulbs separated from the smaller
bulbils. The bigger bulbs get reused in bedding schemes or planted in some
spare piece of ground needing some colour. The bulbils get planted in borders
where they will naturalise over the years and form large bold clumps of colour
such as at the front of my allotment plot.
I put all
my old hyacinths in between clumps of summer flowering herbaceous plants such
as flag iris and oriental poppies as they give this border some colour in
spring, then die down when the herbaceous plants need the space.
Plant of the week
Cytisus praecox Allgold is the best bright yellow broom.
The species praecox is a lemon yellow colour. These brooms are very easy to
grow as long as the soil is well drained and the plant gets plenty sunshine. It
will grow to about three or four feet tall, and although it is not long lived,
only lasting six to ten years it can be propagated by semi ripe cutting towards
the end of summer. It is excellent for dry stony banks. It can get a bit
straggly in time so better to prune about a third of all shoots after
flowering. It grows well amongst drifts of red tulips and the blue grape
hyacinths which will all flower together.
Painting of the month
Taybridge from Broughty Ferry is a large acrylic painting on
canvas. I will be showing this painting with many others at the Angus Open
Studio event at the end of this month.
Artists from all over Angus will be displaying
their paintings and crafts in numerous venues and studios. A preview of works
by members will be held in Inverquharity Castle from 10th to 20th
May with proceeds going to the charities Dyslexia Scotland.
I will
then be displaying recent paintings in Old Ladyloan School along the seafront
in Arbroath together with other artists from 22 to 26 May 2014, open every day
from 10am to 5pm.
END