It’s a blooming glorious time to be a gardener
When warm sunny days coincide with a proliferation of flowers, pollinating insect activity increases. This is good news for gardeners generally but more so for those who are fruit growers. Such was the case last week with a diversity of bee species making most of the calm conditions.
An increasing number of blooms have appeared of late alongside existing spring flowers in the gradual build-up to an anticipated glorious May display. What a welcome sight they are. Polyanthus, primula and wallflower continue to impress and it’s heartening to know that each can be saved when their stint is over. We prune the wallflowers and root some stems from the cuttings. The other two are divided into sections and transferred to a spare piece of land until autumn.
Bulbous favourites narcissi and anemone certainly have staying power. We have well-established groups of daffodils still performing and by now accustomed to the after-show treatment; off with their seed capsules to conserve energy, a liquid feed to boost their
bulbs for next year and allow their leaves to fade naturally.
Narcissi are divided into groups (divisions) and a few of these are represented by cultivars in this garden. I love the dwarf types because they only reach between 15 to 30 centimetres and are generally first to flower, often in February. For example ‘February Gold,’ ‘Peeping Tom’ and ‘Jack Snipe’ are popular varieties in the cyclamineus division.
Daffodils also offer fragrance with beauty if you plant up a few pots of ‘Paper White’ (tazetta group) in autumn and bring them in from the cold for winter/spring display. Best choice for garden fragrance is the Poeticus type. We’ve had ‘Actaea’ and ‘Pheasant’s Eye’ (white petals with yellow and orange cups respectively) in the garden for years, and the April/ May divide is a time they never fail to please.
Muscari (grape hyacinth), fritillaria, bluebell and tulips are the latest bulbs to join our display. Two fritillaria species, the snake’s head fritillary (F. meleagris) and crown imperial (F. Imperialis) are well known for their pendulous blooms. Both have just started to perform. Meleagris is a front-of-border or raised bed plant that stays below 30 centimetres. It’s well suited to a wildflower meadow, with drooping, chequerboard petals.
By comparison, the crown imperial is a giant standing at 90 cms. The popular colours are ‘Rubra’ (red), ‘Aurora’ (orange) ‘Maxima Lutea’ (yellow).