South Wales Echo

Garden centres are throwing open their doors and for frustrated gardeners all those shelves bursting with blooms are a sight for sore eyes

- Wallflower Bowles Mauve

GARDEN centres are bursting with blooms in anticipati­on of summer For gardeners, whether it’s your job or your hobby, it’s been an extraordin­ary week. Imagine getting a can of cola and shaking it and shaking it some more. Inside the pressure is building up and you know what is going to happen when you pull that tab. The froth will explode.

For gardeners, the pressure has built up through the most glorious spring. We’ve been stuck at home with perhaps solely our own plots to enjoy.

And now within the space of a week we are allowed to start to work again (with social distancing), we can visit garden centres and other appropriat­e suppliers, and all around us people are talking gardening.

The Chelsea Flower Show is being run virtually, the BBC has presenters talking gardens from their own plots, and we are enjoying the surge of plants that are suddenly blossoming and available to us.

It appears to be a striking act of normality to be allowed to go and buy pots of colour to decorate our homes. And across the country gardeners

Colourful: have been queuing with trolleys, loading up boots of cars with bags of compost and trays of planting. I visited my local garden centre to see what was on offer and what was doing well.

The place was awash with flowers and colour. Everything you needed for hanging baskets and containers was on display – begonias, argyranthe­mums, fuchsias, bedding verbenas and calibracho­as all waiting for new homes to settle into. There were simple terracotta pots planted with instant mini gardens – pink geraniums planted with the deliciousl­y scented Dianthus ‘Pink Kisses’ and a trailing Blue Bacopa to complete the picture. So if you’re looking for inspiratio­n, there’s plenty to admire. Here are some plants that stood out for me as good performers for the summer.

The wallflower section beckoned me over with its perfume.

The queen of wallflower­s is ‘Bowles’s Mauve,’ an evergreen perennial that in milder areas seems to have flowers all year round.

It does run out of steam after a couple of years but it is easily propagated from cuttings so you can replace it. A variety called ‘Fragrant Sunshine’ caught my eye – lots of bright yellow flowers and the smell was really gorgeous. This would be ideal along a

Bright idea:

Vibrant: path in a sunny spot.

I also spied Salvia ‘Sensation Blue,’ a compact sage which is packed with blue spires of flowers.

Sages are easy to grow, no-fuss plants with aromatic foliage and are good for beginner gardeners.

They will flower to the end of September, attracting bees and butterflie­s. They’re drought tolerant once establishe­d, so if our run of good weather continues these will do well.

Another good variety was ‘Rose Marvel’ with pretty rose pink flowers which will bloom repeatedly without the need to cut them back. Both these sages are nemerosa types which mean they are hardy in the UK so won’t need lifting.

Geums are cheerful plants that will forgive you if you forget to look after them and will keep delivering flowers

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Fuchsias
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Geums

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