Bees are abuzz in the borders
Mother Nature has been doing her best to ‘magically’ infill all the blank spaces in my garden with foliage. There’s been a succession of tulips coming and going and it never ceases to surprise me how many different varieties there are. Each individual bloom’s shape and colour fascinates me. A couple of the late-flowering tulips are absolutely off the chart! My all-time favourite is ‘La Belle Époque’. Who can resist these peony-petalled cups that change colour with age, starting life bright apricot and fading to a romantic antique pink, planted against a backdrop of vibrant blue forget-me-nots?
I’ve purposely planted my back border with pollinator-friendly plants and let some ‘weeds’ go a little wild. Along the back is a trench of stinging nettles, which can provide habitat for around 40 insects and are an essential food source for the caterpillars of peacock and small tortoiseshell butterflies, as well as making fabulously nutritious nettle tea for the plants and me.
The back border contains some fairly invasive plants but they’re a hit with the pollinators; Vinca minor alba, cow parsley, creeping buttercup, honesty, comfrey, buddleja, mint, forget-me-nots, dandelions. And the red-tailed bumblebees have been enjoying the variegated yellow archangel (deadnettle). When I sit here quietly, it doesn’t take long before I’m surrounded by insect activity.
Onthe opposite side of the garden I’m excited to introduce our new grasses border. It was originally our wild garden but had gone completely feral so it was time for a change. The plot hosts Miscanthus sinensis ‘Zebrinus’ (zebra grass), M. sinensis ‘Morning Light’, Carex oshimensis ‘Everest’ (Japanese sedge),
Carex buchananii ‘Red Rooster’ and our muchloved clump-forming bamboo, which has been desperate to leave its pot for the last year or so! Hoping to also add Hakonechloa macra and Stipa tenuissima ‘Pony Tails’.
I’ve planted our Ginkgo biloba tree in the ground! This 20-yearold was grown from seed by a Japanese friend and finally has its roots down. I’ll have to keep a careful eye on its growth or it’ll grow taller than our house.
In other garden news, our Pulsatilla vulgaris (pasque flower) has put on a spectacular display, kale ‘Redbor’ has been left to seed and is covered in stunning yellow flowers and I’ve harvested our first crop of rhubarb ‘Early Timperley’.
Fred, our cat, has found himself a new favourite spot. In this warm weather I find him curled up in the dry remnants of soil in the potting tray, catching the last rays of afternoon sun. A smart spot for a snooze. I wish I could curl up in there, too!
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