SUMMER TUBS AND BASKETS
Summer may have been
a long time coming, but the end of September went out in a blaze of colour
responding to the dry, warm, sunny weather. The summer flowers should have been
going over, but they are trying to make up for the lost season. Several
petunias that had survived the cold summer put on a bold display as did the
impatiens which has sulked all summer. However, now is the time to assess just
how the summer flowers have performed. So before they get pulled out and added
to the compost heap to be replaced with our spring flowering plants, take stock
of the best plants and varieties to grow in 2016.
Geraniums and
tuberous begonias have been my star attractions this year. Geraniums have been
in flower from late spring till mid October and I am loath to remove them, but
I have pansies, polyanthus, wallflowers and tulips all eager to get planted.
Both red and white geraniums had a great year, but one tub with a mixture of
cerise pink geraniums planted with shell pink impatiens and deep purple
petunias were let down badly as the impatiens and petunias just did not grow
this year, until the end of September. However every year is different so I
will try out this combination next year hoping that the summer comes in a wee
bit earlier. Dark blue and purple petunias can be very attractive in a good
year and the blue petunia has the added bonus of a great scent.
Begonias were a bit
late in coming into flower, but then they put on a dazzling display. My red and
orange varieties were particularly impressive so they will get prime locations
next year as individual colours in each tub rather than mixed to increase the
dramatic effect. My tubers must be approaching twenty years old, but they are
very easy to keep over winter, and when they get too big I just cut them in
half in spring when I can see the shoots begin to grow.
Both geraniums and
impatiens will be propagated from autumn cuttings and grown indoors over
winter. The impatiens makes an excellent flowering house plant, and can be in
flower almost up till Christmas in a mild year.
Fuchsias are another
plant that just loved this cool sunless summer. Southern Belle is used in my
hanging baskets by the entrance doorway, and Mrs Popple grows freely in borders
established years ago. In a cold winter it may die back to ground level, but
then in spring it bursts into life. It was a mass of flowers in mid summer,
producing loads of ripe berries which we collected and put through the juicer
for a tasty drink. It had a wee rest in early September, but by the end of the
month with the late arrival of a week of summer weather brought out more
flowers in a dramatic burst of colour.
African marigolds
and annual calendulas provided the yellow garden colours, but they could have
been better in a different year. Marigolds really need a hot dry sunny summer.
I’ll think twice about growing them again next year. Cosmos grew from seed left
in the ground from the previous year providing a nice splash of pinks and
mauves against fresh green feathery foliage.
Lobelia is another
dwarf annual that keeps appearing all around the garden and if it is not
interfering with other plants we just let it grow to provide a deep blue
relaxing colour.
Poppy Ladybird and
Californian poppies also appear everywhere, but they can overwhelm the garden
so we give them some space but don’t let them take over. Grown together the red
and yellow flowers compliment each other.
Wee jobs around the garden
Once fruit bushes go
dormant and lose their leaves they can be propagated easily with hardwood
cuttings. Red, white and blackcurrants and gooseberries are all pretty
foolproof. Take current years shoots about nine inches long and insert at least
half of it into the soil outdoors having forked over the ground to loosen it up
and aerate it. Prepare the cutting with a basal cut below a leaf joint and the
other cut at the top above a bud. Space out about four inches apart and after
rooting in spring grow on for the rest of the year. They will be ready for
lifting and planting out the following winter.
END