a garden for Melanie
- At March 5, 2012
- By Rachael
- In Gardening, Village life
8
In spring, a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.
Being a gardening blogger (albeit one with a blogging habit a little like my gardening habit, ie leave everything in autumn, forget about it, then return when the sun shines with renewed enthusiasm) my fancy turns to thoughts of flowers and bees and ooh, gorgeous sunshiny days and the smell of earth and mud under the fingernails.
My friend Melanie (she writes a rather wonderful just-reached-a-million-hits blog as well as being author of several books and one of my favourite people) is venturing into the world of gardening for the first time. So rather than email her, I thought I’d share my thoughts here and you can all have a look. So here you are, M. Just for starters:
First of all, Clematis: Dr Ruppel (I love the blousy, seasidey stripey flowers) and the elegant Niobe which would both grow beautifully in containers or in the ground, depending on how portable you want your garden to be. Clematis are really easy to grow, and give a new garden height and satisfying splodges of colour which make you feel like a proper gardening sort.
Pretty Aquilegia Black Barlow which will self seed year after year and fill your garden with beautiful flowers (which won’t come back true, because aquilegias are contrary beasts). and I think you’ll love Eryngium Alpinum Blue Star.
Depending on your slug situation (I bet you’ve never thought about your slug situation before, have you? Welcome to gardening) hostas are utterly beautiful and also likely to make you feel murderous. Cracked eggshells and copper tape round the pot and incantations by moonlight and coffee grounds and oh, there are a million other things that will help stop slugs having a midnight feast. Well actually they won’t at all, but it’ll make you feel good. Either that or don’t grow hostas. Some people seem to be able to grow huge hulking ones. I bet they use evil blue pellets of doom, though. They’re meaniecats, as child no4 would say. So this Fragrant Blue is a good one to try. And the Prunella Grandiflora Rubra is lovely, too. No idea how it grows, but I think you’ll like it.
Roses. You have to grow lots and lots of roses to fill your garden with scent and bees and beauty. This Black Baccara is utterly gorgeous and will smell heavenly. And after years of loathing them I’ve grown fond of Dahlias but they’re another slug magnet, so if you buy them as tubers rather than established plants (which is cheaper) you’ll need to keep an eye out or they’ll be there one day and completely gone the next.
Look at that. It’s an email to a friend that’s masquerading as a blog post. But hey, it’s a blog post.
























Susan Mann
Stunning pictures and such gorgeous flowers x
Rachael
<3 x
Marina Sofia
Oh, and thanks for introducing me to Melanie’s blog. It’s a wonderful read!
Marina Sofia
Hurrah, you’re back! I was getting a little bit worried about you and checking regularly, just in case my email was not receiving your updates or something.
What beautiful suggestions for the garden. I am finally moving to a house after months of searching and, although it’s rented, am thinking of introducing some of your suggestions. Would they work in flowerpots?
elaine rickett
You have made some good choices there, but although I love hostas, my garden is much too ‘sluggy’.
Mari
Yay! She’s back at long last, it’s simply ages since you last popped into my inbox, what a delight this morning.
I started our garden last year and these tips are marvellous, have jotted down the long names and now have to source them
Thank you and keep on writing!
BucksWriter
I’d add some heuchera as an indestructible edging to borders and a few ferns if you have shady spaces!
Melanie
Ahh, thank you so much, loveliest Rachael. xxx
I am SO excited about gardening! I have no idea what I am doing but so far it has involved moving pots around, using a trowel while reminiscing to my children about my days studying Archaeology and looking at pictures of flowers on websites.
So far, my list includes honeysuckle, roses, peonies (my absolute favourite flower), a LOT of lavender, red geraniums (so that I can pretend that I am in Paris) and roses with flouncy French names. I’m definitely adding dahlias and clematis to the list now too! Thank you!