Six On Saturday: On Random Gardening

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Starting a new garden is always exciting; daunting too. And our particular garden, being a hundred years old, had traces of many a planting disaster venture. More recently, though, all had been overgrown, and invaded by rampant phygelius (Cape fuchsia), ground elder, vagrant raspberries, bindweed and Spanish bluebells. The two front garden beds (south-east facing) were covered with concrete slabs and Spanish bluebells.

Most of it had to go.

1: Because we’d had to rent between selling one house and buying another, Iโ€™d brought only a handful of plants from our Much Wenlock garden. Among them was yellow toadflax (Linaria vulgaris), a favourite flower since childhood when Iโ€™d first seen it lighting up the verges of the Shropshire Hills. Iโ€™d grown it from seed, bought on-line from Jekkaโ€™s Herbs. Now, by some pleasing accident, it seems to have grown up with some purple toadflax.

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When we moved into The Gables, just under a year ago, my most pressing concern was vegetable growing. I knew we would miss the produce from my allotment plots of 16 years (if not the heavy labour), so tackling the most weed-infested areas to make beds for food crops was my first priority. My thinking here was that these beds would be cleared every year, so repeat ground elder and bluebells wouldnโ€™t be quite the same bother they would be in shrub or herbaceous borders.

I made a start last summer, but then the following months were mostly too wet and cold for gardening. And then in spring the house roof had to be taken off and rebuilt. And then the building work on the rear extension began, all of which saw parts of my territory invaded, first by a mountain of broken roof tiles and battens and then by piles of construction materials. There were times, too, when I couldnโ€™t reach the projected vegetable plots in the back garden, it being uphill from the house, other than by climbing a ladder. All of which means that bed making efforts were piecemeal and, in the end, things (vegetables, herbaceous perennials, herbs, developing shrubs) were planted out wherever there was a space at the time.

2: But itโ€™s all alright. Everything is growing all over the place. I have yellow courgettes at the front door, which is actually quite handyโ€ฆ

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3: The front garden bed is also yielding some very nice Charlotte potatoes (despite going in very late). The building debris and old mortar from the lifted slabs seem to have provided some good drainage in our heavy-ish soil:

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4: In the spring Iโ€™d sown some marigold (calendula) seeds, obtained from the Bishopโ€™s Castle seed bank (local growersโ€™ donations) and theyโ€™d germinated prolifically. So I planted them out all over the garden, front and back, because you canโ€™t beat marigolds for their spirit-lifting qualities. And now we have masses of golden heads, which of course are edible too:

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5: And on the eating front, since spring weโ€™ve done rather well with all manner of greens, but most particularly the Romanesco cauliflowers, which I havenโ€™t grown before. They are much sweeter than white caulis, and if you cut them and leave the stalk, they sometimes produce more sprouts. They donโ€™t need much cooking either.IMG_5574

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6: But best of all, are signs that the runner beans are thriving. I have three varieties growing together: Emergo (white flowers), Painted Lady (red and white as in featured photo), and St. George (red):

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I mean to say, what could be lovelier than this Painted Lady bean flower. And then to think: there will be beans!

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Six on Saturdayย  Jim at Garden Ruminations is the host. Please pay him and his splendid garden a visit.

46 thoughts on “Six On Saturday: On Random Gardening

    1. Cheers, Ark. It’s very delicious. If you’ve not grown caulis before, when you plant them out, you need to make sure they are very firmly heeled in otherwise they don’t make a good flower.

  1. Ah, you do have the greenest of fingers Tish. I can’t believe how much you have done so far and of course the veg are the stars. Nice to see you join in with the sixers. Hope to see you here more often.

    1. Ah, now that is a very big question, Margaret. I do have a vague re-planting plan, with perhaps raised beds at the back, intermixed with a few fruit bushes and shrubs. We’ll see.

  2. I love Marigolds (or cempasรบchil in Spanish). The Aztecs believed that the heavy scent of the cempasรบchil is how, during the Dia de los Muertos celebrations, your ancestors could find their way back. There are always marigolds at my houses, even when I lived abroad. And, the produce – marvelous. I got no veggies this year, but the birds are leaving us a few grapes and the figs are doing well….

    1. Trade you some greens for a few figs.

      And as for cempasuchil, that is so touching and very fascinating, their scent leading the ancestors home. I shall regard mine with fresh eyes now. Many thanks, Thom, for that golden nugget.

  3. I am so impressed with your super healthy looking produce Tish. What a pleasure to have them at your back door and not have to walk to the allotment now. Your 100 year old home must have so much history. Have you traced any of it?

    1. Hello, Pauline. Appreciate the veggie praise.

      As to the house, it was built by a prominent local builder, George Nicholas. Put up on a piece of ground belonging to the much older smithy and adjoining pub called the Hit or Miss, which he apparently owned. When the house was built the next door Union workhouse was still operating. It’s now a care home. We’re hoping to learn more from locals as we go along.

      1. What an interesting history for you to research. Really amazing when I compare it to over here. Houses are considered to have reached their use by date by about 50 years and many are then demolished and the present trend is to then build enormous โ€œMacmansionsโ€ that take up almost the whole section, leaving no room for a garden.

  4. I love runner beans! You would be surprised how many people I meet who think they are an ornamental plant and that you can’t eat the beans! I love them in a curry. In the heat of the summer they won’t set pods, but we have had a coolish summer so I might just get lucky! I love a garden that is everywhere! Mine is a jungle.

    1. It is being very obliging, Sarah. I think the soil must be 100% better than the Sillurian clag on my old allotment plots, despite efforts to improve them.

    1. No, I’ve not tried those beans. As for runner beans, they don’t care to be too hot, and can stand a bit of shade. My father always opened a big trench in winter and it was filled with all the kitchen waste. Well rotted manure/compost would be good too or anything to retain moisture and give the plants plenty to get their roots into. Mulching through the summer helps too.

      I did make a trench first for my beans, but mostly I think they’ve really liked this year’s cool, wet weather.

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