Sunday Express - S

HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER

Summer may be over but the autumn’s scarlets, golds and greens are a joy to behold. Here’s how to give your own patch a glow up

- Alan Titchmarsh

Just when you think the gardening season is gliding gracefully to a close, nature lays on a stunning last-minute firework display of orange, gold and scarlet leaves to end the season with a colourful bang.

Autumn is at its most spectacula­r when seen on a large scale at stately gardens and arboretums, so now’s a great time to go garden visiting. The traditiona­l stars of the autumn landscape are big trees such as parrotia, liquidamba­r and the maples – but there are many more. My favourite is the katsura tree (Cercidiphy­llum japonicum), which has pink-tinged fiery autumn foliage that produces an improbable whiff of toffee apples. And several London parks feature pride of India (Koelreuter­ia paniculata), a bushy tree whose pinnate leaves turn from green to orange and back to yellow as bunches of fruits ripen to a pinkish shade.

Great chunks of autumn colour turn up in large stately water gardens. Look for great drifts of Darmera peltata, with orange leaves that look like saucers on sticks, or swamp cypress – the conifer that turns golden yellow in autumn before shedding its leaves in a most unconifer-like fashion.

Real autumn colour enthusiast­s will often make a pilgrimage to New England to see American hillsides aflame with red oaks and bold sugar maples. But you can put in some small-scale autumn colour in your own back yard.

On the tree and shrub front, you’ll naturally want to keep things small. Some Japanese maples known for stunning colour (such as Acer palmatum “Osakazuki”) are thought of as slow-growing bushes, but given time they’ll turn into proper trees. So if you don’t fancy taking them out, stick to smaller species.

Acer palmatum “Dissectum” – with its elegant, lacy leaves – is so slow growing that in most gardens it only reaches about 3ft to 5ft, and you can keep it at this size almost indefinite­ly by growing it in a tub. All sorts of dwarfish Acer palmatum varieties are suitable for this sort of cultivatio­n. When you’re growing for autumn colours, choose cultivars that have green leaves in summer as they put on the biggest colour change.

Pot Japanese maples in equal parts John Innes No3

and peat-free ericaceous compost since they dislike lime, and keep them well watered in summer. Grow them in a wellshelte­red corner in light, dappled shade so the leaves don’t scorch. They’re fussy, but in the right spot can be spectacula­r.

For a more easy-going shrub with great autumn colour, it has to be the spindle. The leaves of Euonymus europaeus “Red Cascade” turn pink, red and gold just as its bunches of small-lobed shocking-pink fruits split open to show orange seeds. The effect is loud but somehow it works. If you have a chunk of wild garden, then go for Euonymus alatus instead. It has larger leaves with similarly striking colouring and makes a bigger bush.

But don’t imagine coloured leaves are all there is to autumn. You can have remarkable late flower borders if you set aside an area especially for plants such as Sedum spectabile “Autumn Joy”, Michaelmas daisies and schizostyl­is. A well-tended dahlia bed will continue flowering late into autumn, and shrubby salvias – the large herbaceous sort – are real stars of the season.

If you don’t have room for an autumn corner, you can still add seasonal colour by carpeting the ground under trees and shrubs with autumnflow­ering bulbs such as hardy cyclamen, colchicums and autumn crocus – choose sunny areas with well-drained soil.

It’s too late to plant autumnflow­ering bulbs now, but you can plan a few good splashes of home-grown autumn colour for your garden for next year.

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 ?? ?? The katsura tree’s fiery autumn foliage is tinged with pink
The katsura tree’s fiery autumn foliage is tinged with pink
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 ?? ?? Euonymus europaeus bears bright pink fruits
Euonymus europaeus bears bright pink fruits

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