Showing posts with label white flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label white flowers. Show all posts

07 August, 2021

Six on Saturday - 7th August 2021

 Introduction

Well, it's a pretty soggy Saturday here in SE London. Even with that, there are still new things popping up in the garden. Without further ado, then, I'll welcome you to my tenth #SixOnSaturday series, inspired by The Propagator.

Single red nasturtium flower with a backdrop of variegated leaves

1) Nasturtium

Wonderfully easy to grow from seed, reliably undemanding, and always colourful, I'll often poke a few seeds into little blank spaces. This is a tumbling one with variegated leaves and I absolutely love it. 

Single white flower with orange parts at it s centre

2) Japanese anemone honorine jobert

I love these late summer flowers which pop up as other things are starting to fade, particularly now that I've got them under control. Their original planting place was at the back of a border and before I started paying serious attention to the garden, they'd spread not only to the front of the boarder but under the path and to a neighborouing border! Some digging and dividing later, and they are now back where they should be. Meanwhile, new plants have been established and placed elsewhere in the garden for that late summer interest. 


Daisy like flowers

3) Erigeron

Another discovery via a member of our gardening club. Jolly little daisies which start off white and then fade to pink. It seems to have a really long flowering season. I have one scrambling through a pot along with some Bidens and the combination is very jolly

Toad on a brick wall surrounded by campanula flowers

4) Pest control

Say hello to one of the night pest patrol brigade. Our garden is home to a veritable army of toads - I counted at least ten of different sizes recently. Given the size and number of slugs and snails that I still find, the toads are in no danger of going hungry. We re-established the pond a few years ago and it is very pleasing to see younger generations of toad out and about.  A few years ago we had one that took to over-wintering in the outside loo. It gave me the fright of my life when I first encountered. Thereafter, we co-existed quite happily. 

Bright upright canna flower

5) Canna

This has not flowered for two years, despite careful overwintering, and masses of lush deep brown leaves. I'd threatened it with the compost heap if it did nothing this year and lo, two huge stems are emerging as are these fantastic orange flowers.  I'm not sure they will get to reach their full splendour in this rather persistent rain but I'll keep my fingers crossed. 

Flowerhead made up of lots of tiny flowers

6) Buddleja 

Another late flowerer is the Buddleja. This one one is the common "davidii". I've taken this close-up pic which shows how each of those large conical flowers is in fact made up with lots of tiny flowers each with an orange centre. No wonder the butterflies love them. 

That's all for this week. This weekend is looking like a perfect one to catch up on the ironing! Check out the participant guide if you want to join in.


12 June, 2021

Six on Saturday - 12th June 2021. White.

Today's #SixOnSaturday is written at my patio table as I watch the new Great and Blue Tit fledglings being introduced to our very popular bird feeder. They are noisy, needy and inquisitive. Wafting over me is the scent of jasmine which has just come into flower. It is still showing the scars of the exceptionally heavy frosts of earlier in the year but happily, has still put on a show. I've decided to give myself a little challenge this week and only write about white things. As it turns out, I've had to leave a number of plants out with that self-imposed restriction, possibly even enough to make a second white-themed offering. 

Alium multibosum

1) Allium Multibosum

Standing easily a metre high, and feeling higher because it is in a slightly raised border, this beauty comes into its own just as the Ceanothus begins to fade. It is one of a growing number of aliums that I now have dotted around the garden and this year I'm scrutinising them for longetivity as well as bee magnetism and form. This one certainly makes the shopping list again next year. 

Sweet woodruff

2) Sweet Woodruff - Galium odoratum

I first came across Sweet Woodruff in the garden of friends. They too were surrounded by trees. Up to that point, there was little that I thought I could grow under some of our trees but when I saw the carpet of white under theirs I was delighted. They gave me a cutting and twenty or more years on, it continues to thrive. 

Jasmine

3) Jasmine - Jasminum officiane

I love how the delicate pink tipped buds open up to reveal the scented waxy white flowers. This too, we planted at the foot of the upright concrete pillars that support the fence. One of the plants is just outside the back door  and there really is nothing quite like the scent that greets you as you open the door of an evening. It feels all the more precious now because, as a result of Covid, I spent months first completely without my sense of smell and then, as it began to return, with only the scent of smoke. As I sniff the air now, I'm reminded of the gift of health. 

Pyracantha

4) Pyracantha rogersiana

Long arching spiky branches which at this time of year are festooned with puffs of bee-heaven white flowers. It is a plant that does double duty as during winter the white flowers are replaced by masses of bright orange coloured berries that are food for many types of bird, sometimes comically so as a heavy pidgeon makes an ungainly attempt to extract berries from the underside of a long and springy branch.

5) Mock orange - Philadelphus coronarius "aureus"

Philadelphus / Mock Orange takes me back to my childhood as it was one of the plants my parents had in the front garden. It is only recently that I've acquired this exquisite variety with its lime green leaves. We have a local "Open Gardens" weekend as part of our local festival. Its a great way to meet garden loving locals and to quiz them about which plants thrive in their gardens. We were greeted by a fantastic mound of scented lime green when we visited one garden. By the time we'd seen it a second time we'd looked up. On the second visit we were allowed a couple of shoots both of which survived rooting. These are the first flowers from one of those rooted shoots. 

Lemon blossom

6) Lemon 

I'm new to lemon trees, acquiring my first one late last summer. It very nearly didn't make it through the winter as I took it inside whereupon, inspired perhaps by the warmth, it first threw up loads of new shoots only then, despite much misting and watering, to drop most of its leaves. It is back outside again happily flowering and shooting away. As with the jasmine, the lemon flowers start off as pretty pink buds, opening up to white flowers. I'm keeping fingers crossed for some fruit. 


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