Times Colonist

Unseasonab­ly cold, moist April brings lengthy bloom period for spring flowers

- HELEN CHESNUT Garden Notes hchesnut@bcsupernet.com

Amid the horticultu­ral wailing over a month of unseasonab­ly cold temperatur­es and drenching rains, expression­s of delight have emerged over the extended bloom periods of many spring flowers — thanks to the same cold, moist conditions.

The daffodils have stayed in lovely flowering condition for longer than usual, A flowering plum (Prunus blireana), usually in bloom through March, seems to have been flowering forever.

My largest camellia, near the back lawn and next to a path through the back garden, has been loaded with bloom for weeks, as have a seed-grown, single-flowered camellia and a Magnolia stellata, also grown from seed.

The large camellia is due for a significan­t pruning, post-bloom. I’d like to do a little judicial taming of its dimensions, for esthetic reasons and also to reduce my own work in caring for it. A smaller plant almost always requires less maintenanc­e.

A compact rhododendr­on called Shamrock has billowed forth with a cover of pale lime green blossoms at the base of the large camellia. The poor little plant had come close to being smothered by the camellia before I removed the larger shrub’s lowest limbs and thinned out its stems.

The “see-through” garden. Over the past few years, with help, I’ve managed to re-shape other shrubs near the big camellia in the same way. They grow across the centre pathway, in a large bed beside a stretch of lawn next to the back house wall. They are mostly rhododendr­ons, with another camellia, and a few other shrubs.

Removal of the lowest growth, together with a little thinning, has allowed a light and airy look to replace the previous darker, more congested feeling to the space.

People I know who have not been to the garden for a while have expressed surprise at the difference and pleasure at being able to see through plantings to the far side of the back garden.

Most like the “new look” and every day I relish the clear view I have from the back of the house through to the entire lower half of the back garden. The upper half, at the end of a gentle slope, houses the vegetable plots and fruiting plants.

Horticultu­ral rehabilita­tion. The weather delayed many plantings, but the amount of plot-tending I’ve been able to do while waiting for improved transplant­ing conditions has been rewarding. In this large garden, there are a few areas that have long required a serious horticultu­ral interventi­on.

In an old perennial and shrub bed I’m slowly uncovering the campanulas, garden phlox, heliopsis and other plants amid a sea of self-sown flowering onion seedlings and other weeds. As top growth begins to elongate in the perennials, I’ll be able to find suitable spaces for a few interestin­g new plants.

GARDEN EVENTS

Cactus show and sale. The Victoria Cactus and Succulent Society will hold a Spring Show and Sale on Friday, May 6, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday, May 7, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Church of the Advent, 510 Mt. View Ave. in Colwood. Saturday, May 7 plant sales: Compost Education Centre, 1216 North Park St., Victoria, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. All organicall­y grown plants.

View Royal Garden Club,

10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at View Royal Town Hall, 45 View Royal Ave. Cash only.

St. Michael and All Angels Women’s Guild Plants, Pots and More sale from 10 a.m. to

1 p.m. at 4733 West Saanich Rd. in Royal Oak. Tomato plants, flowering pots and baskets, strawberry baskets, vegetables, annual and perennial flowers, garden-themed items.

Ladysmith Saltair Garden Club, starting at 9 a.m. at Ladysmith Aggie Hall, Symonds and 1st Ave. (at the roundabout) in Ladysmith. Annuals, perennials, shrubs, herbs, vegetable transplant­s, house plants, grown by members. Mother’s Day gift plantings, experience­d garden equipment. Master Gardeners on site.

Conservato­ry tour. The Victoria Conservato­ry of Music Mother’s Day Musical Garden tour on Saturday, May 7 and Sunday, May 8, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. will feature 11 beautiful gardens. Two-day pass $40. Details of the tour and list of ticket sale outlets at vcm.bc.ca/ victoria-garden-tour/.

Mother’s Day Tea. Abkhazi Garden and Teahouse, 1964 Fairfield Rd. in Victoria, is hosting a Mother’s Day Tea on Saturday, May 7 and Sunday, May 8 with three sittings, at 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. By reservatio­n only at 1-778-265-6466. Most of the garden’s rhododendr­ons will be in full bloom.

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 ?? HELEN CHESNUT PHOTOS ?? Left: To create a “see-through” look into other parts of a garden, these rhododendr­ons have had their lowest growth removed. Right: A compact, mounded rhododendr­on blooms at the base of a large camellia.
HELEN CHESNUT PHOTOS Left: To create a “see-through” look into other parts of a garden, these rhododendr­ons have had their lowest growth removed. Right: A compact, mounded rhododendr­on blooms at the base of a large camellia.
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 ?? ?? This single-flowered camellia is a “mystery” plant, grown from a seed passed from one gardener to another, with no informatio­n attached.
This single-flowered camellia is a “mystery” plant, grown from a seed passed from one gardener to another, with no informatio­n attached.

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