Friday, 18 April 2014

Grass cutting and the art of mowing

This week at Heale has been another scorcher and I need to take my health more seriously! I think I got a bit over done one day and am now the proud owner of a new hat for the future.

Grass cutting and edging was the theme this week and am sure it will be for many more. I learnt a lot from watching Michael, he taught me how to cut around the edge first and then get your stripes. I got to practice on the Peto Pond lawns and some of the private garden as well using a Petrol Cylinder Mower. Noisy thing and it can run away from you if you are on a hill but very effective and good to use.
Michael mowed the croquet lawn diagonally this week and it looked beautiful. His advice, start in the centre of the lawn, choose a focal point in the distance and off you go!








I also got to edge using a line and half moon edger. Great practice and my best friends one day were the grass edgers that have their own personality like a Stork or Pelican, to me! Much progress weeding and tidying in the Kitchen Garden. More Leeks to harvest and more veg going in the ground.

The Sweet peas needed attention already, choosing the strongest stem and tying in and pinching off the tendrils.

Michael introduced me to Euphorbia x pasteurii this week, flanking the doors to the house, very lush and strong right now. Next to one of the Euphorbia's was a Melianthus major in flower, a structural plant with striking foliage.









The Pelargoniums in the greenhouse need a good water daily as they are flowering now and the other Greenhouses need twice daily attention coming into growing season now.

Just as I was leaving the garden a visitor asked me a question and I could actually answer it, so very happy about that. I am hoping things go in the longer I am there.  I find it easier by my second day actually but then of course I have a break before coming again.

I have loved every second again this week, what a place to spend time! I am learning all the time and it is great to watch other Gardeners and listen to their knowledge. I have borrowed a book this week about Vita Sackville-West (Garden Book) so hope to get stuck into that and learn about her ethos and how she liked plants to self seed and not too much tidiness.




Friday, 11 April 2014

Birthday and Sweetpeas

Well what a time to start at Heale, Spring and sunshine and growth. It was my birthday this week and I got to spend it planting my favourite flower, Sweet Pea against canes, single cordon. I have never done this before and as I am still between amateur and professional I am used to planting them willy nilly and enjoying the chaotic result. This is Heale and I am now learning to plant strictly to a line, even spacing, the same number of each cultivar, with fab names like "Purple Pimpernel".

Each plant is very carefully tied to the cane with a wire, careful not to crush the stem. Every week during growing, twice a week we will be pinching out and removing tendrils and creating huge long stems and big flowers, which are used in the house.

I spent most of my time in the Kitchen Garden for two days, tidying, weeding, turning soil, and harvesting crops. We had Leek, Cavalo Nero, Purple Sprouting Broccoli, Beets and Celeriac. We also planted out Salads and Broad Beans, different varieties again to lines using a string. The Broad Beans are grown in double lines to allow a string either side of the plant to hold it up as it grows. We have sown Radishes too.

We cut down the Santalina within the Buxus edging, to promote new growth and it looks much better.

A great week again, it is so peaceful. The garden is in the Valley so the mornings are misty and full of cobwebs and the sun slowly burns through leaving vivid colours and a very warm garden - I got burnt in April! - the Prunus Shirotae, Mount Fuji is stunning right now, buzzing with Bees, heavy white blossom filling the tree branches. It is all I can do to stop looking at it and taking photographs but must get on, must get on!

I ended my week with the boys coming to see me with Birthday cake! Lucky me. They then played hide and seek across the little bridges of the Japanese garden, rushing past Bamboo and Spring Bulbs. Magical.

















Friday, 4 April 2014

Blossom

Another week has zipped by at Heale, this week I mainly remember blossom. The Cherry trees are so beautiful and they are all emerging right now, whenever I look up to the noise of a plane, I am reminded.

This week we trimmed the Lavender hedging which looks much neater. I had a go with the Hedge Trimmer, it takes a while to get into the swing but it is very creative really, kind of sculpting the plant with the blade. Noisy too but the ear defenders put you in your own world. The hedge will always be Vera to me now I know which type she is so I shall talk to her on the way past.

We also needed to do some work in the Japanese Garden, a big walnut tree came down over winter and lots of debris and mess from the floods. I pruned some Wisteria and tidied and raked. The sound of the water is lovely over in that part of the garden, it feels very different to the rest. The Petasites I saw in my first week have grown a lot and the Magnolias are starting to emerge. A huge one, Apollo, is really pretty.
 I got to meet and feed the Pigs and Sheep too this week, they live over a little bridge across the river, very three Billy Goats Gruff. The Lambs are on their way....





This week I also helped to get the canes ready to support the Sweet peas in the kitchen garden, we used a garden line and made sure the canes were a distance from the Buxus hedging. That many Sweet peas will smell amazing when fully going.



I weeded some borders in the kitchen garden with a hand fork, lots of Shepherd's Purse really going for it. A lot of Bees, as the main flowering plant at the moment is Pulmonaria, great plant.
The kitchen garden is getting ready now as the new Gardener, another Michael, started this week and he will be doing a lot of work in that area. Really great time to see Heale coming to life.


Saturday, 29 March 2014

Sunshine and Dawn

This week at Heale the sun shone and made everything come alive. I spent my two days with Gardener, Dawn, who gave me lots of advice and crucially allowed me to follow her around all day! In addition, she too was once a WRAG and so she was very aware of what I should be learning and also what experience she could give me. Sadly, Dawn is leaving to pastures new but it was a pleasure to meet her and discuss her role for the past year.

We started with weeding the terrace borders at the back which took a while and leaf blowing to make it all very tidy. Main weeds are the usual suspects, Shepherd's Purse (seems to be everywhere and going mad), Chickweed, Dandelion... Hoeing the soil, you realise how compacted it has become over the Winter and you pretty much take the top layer with you when you weed.

We continued in the Veg plots, again much to do and very satisfying once you get to look back a the soil. As strange as it sounds, I do love a good weed!

We sowed some seed one day and Dawn took me through her process of preparing the compost mix, John Innes 2, with Vermiculite and General Purpose all sieved and ready to go, we managed Nicotiana, Fennel, Dill. We spent some time caring for the Greenhouse plants and planted out some herbs within the cut flower patch, Mint, Parsley, Coriander, Oregano, Rocket and Sorrel, looking good.

We also watered and cared for whole a Greenhouse full of Pelargoniums, lots in flower, gorgeous things and very happy ticking along.

It is amazing how much you can learn in a couple of days but so much knowledge is taken for granted when you are immersed in the garden every day and I am soaking it up.

Wishing Dawn all the best, it is a shame our paths crossed for such a short time!