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Visit
4
to the feature when
Lee and Noel went along with John to buy the
plants. See
the plants they
purchased and
Noel and John planting the first plant, the
Yucca.
Well I have had fun, literally at Noel’s
expense. Cherrie and I helped select the plants
and Noel and Lee paid for them!
We all met at the local garden centre. There
were lots of impulse buys at the front entrance
but Lee was past those in a flash. Straight
to the shrubs and climbers. Attention was
paid to the height and spread of each plant
and season of flower. Lee wanted a Japanese
maple and was set on Acer palmatum ‘
Atropurpureum’ but those available had
recently been repotted. The clever girl settled
for a beautiful Acer
palmatum ‘Garnet’
which will, in spring, have red-purple leaves
as deeply cut as those of ‘Dissectum’.
to
this week's feature.
The incredibly sweet scented Sarcococca
confusa, in flower, was added
to the trolly. Hamamelis
intermedia ‘Arnold’s Promise’
with fragrant, spider -like golden flowers
was included. Skimmia
japonica ‘Rubella’
with its evergreen, red edged leaves and red,
all male flowers was snapped up. We thought
it was all over bar the paying and headed
off for a much needed coffee. Lee managed
to sneak in Gaultheria
procumbens, complete with bright
red berries. It is a little gem and well worth
the price.
There are already Christmas presents to plant.
The Yucca gloriosa,
Potentilla ‘Red
Ace’, Choisya
ternata and Leucothoe
‘Red Lips’.
It was a rotten day for planting. The date
was decided by our lovely producer and it
was blowing a gale with horizontal rain.
Noel had dug the bed and set out a big board
to stand on. It is easier to work off a solid
surface rather than loose soil. It also prevents
soil compaction.
The plants were spaced according to their
ultimate size. There will be gaps for a few
years but these can be planted with fillers
such as bulbs, annuals and small herbaceous
perennials. The superb view of the sea has
been allowed for with only the potential towering
flower spike of the Yucca gloriosa to detract
the eye.
The ground was lovely to dig and each planting
hole was made twice as large as the plant’s
rootball. A handful of bone meal was worked
through the soil, while Lee handed me the
plants, Noel dug the holes, together we back
filled with soil, keeping the plant at the
same level as in the pot. The soil was firmed
and Cherrie raked the surface over for a finished
job - team work!
Noel looked a bit funny when I asked him to
water the plants to settle the soil round
the roots.It hadn’t stopped raining
all day.
It was then off with the boots, then into
the warm for tea and chocolate biscuits.
back
to seaside garden homepage
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