Thursday 27 February 2020

The Resilience of Nature

Rain battered container
The weather this February has been a challenge. Not only has it restricted access into the garden but the plants have also been challenged by everything the storms have brought to the Pennines; severe winds, exceptional rainfall and last night  snow. It also happens to be snowing as I write this entry, there is no doubt some Spring improvement in conditions will be most welcome. Of course there are many other regions of the UK completely submerged by flood waters. For the sake of those whose homes, land and businesses have been inundated let us hope for a let up in the weather sooner rather than later.

Baptism of fire for the new tree
Plants in the Pennine garden have to be selected to survive in hostile conditions. Wind, rain, snow and subzero temperatures will occur every year. But the unrelenting sequence of  bad weather has been daunting. The fact that nature is resilient is both a blessing and a wonder.

Hardy little Tete a Tete 
Resilience is also a more engineering-oriented, quantitative measure that is often used to assess the rate at which a system returns to equilibrium following disturbance. This view typically assumes that a system has equilibrium conditions and a single state to which that equilibrium applies. However, many ecological and social-ecological systems may spend more time out of equilibrium and in a number of possible (‘alternative stable’) states. With the changing climate patterns affecting the Pennine garden, we must realize and anticipate that these abnormal challenges are now the new normal. So we will adapt and embrace......

..... so why are Hecate and Mili hiding indoors?


What good is the warmth of summer, without the cold of winter to give it sweetness?
- John Steinbeck, American writer (1902 - 1968)





Friday 14 February 2020

Tibetan Cherry

The best time to plant a new tree is in the winter-spring window of opportunity when a bare rooted specimen is dormant, available to buy and most straightforward to plant (not being laden with foliage). Perhaps my favourite tree is the Weeping Copper beech, the Giant Redwood or the Tibetan Cherry. A Copper Beech has been long established at the front of the house by the drive, a Giant Redwood is not terribly practical, so the Tibetan Cherry was the obvious choice for an addition to the Pennine garden.

Consequently, a fine specimen was ordered from Ashridge Nurseries. It was delivered yesterday, in immaculate packaging and condition. This nursery sells trees not based on their height (so no leaders have been artificially left to grow) but by girth of the trunk. Although the tree could be safely left for up to 10 days before planting, I took the opportunity to get the cherry into the ground while we had a break in the weather between the Atlantic storms.

Planting a tree is not complicated but there are selected top tips
~ do not plant too deeply, try to keep to the depth that the plant had been previously grown up to
~ but do make the planting hole sufficiently wide, never have roots curled around the edge of the hole
~ do not use lots of improved soil matter or compost, otherwise the tree roots will not search for nutrients beyond the confines of its planting hole
~ do ensure the trunk sits on a slightly mounded piece of earth to ensure after a good watering (with rain and not tap water) the tree does not sink down into a sump of poor drainage
~ do stake low down the trunk, at 45 degrees and braced against the prevailing wind, and remember to tie the tree to the stake and not the stake to the tree

   



 Finally, but certainly not least in the Pennine garden,  think about what protection might be needed. 

Most gardeners will get away with a proprietary spiral  tree guard, or similar. But because of the constant threat of hungry deer, I enlisted the help of a good friend, who happens to be a gardener with an eye for practical design and engineering skills to match. He also has some pretty handy DIY gear too! So the young sapling now has what I hope will be an effective protection, fingers crossed!

The Tibetan Cherry

The Tibetan Cherry or prunus serrula, is a small to medium-sized, so hopefully will sit well in our garden.  It is mainly conspicuous because of its very decorative mahogany-coloured bark, which also leads to it being called Mahogany Barked Cherry. Because of its peeling bark it is also called Paperbark Cherry. It blooms in spring with small, white flowers and turns colour beautifully in autumn.  It can be grown as a multi-stemmed but to remain in keeping with the cherry trees at the top back of the garden ,I intend to keep this one as a short stemmed tree with a wide crown.  It will reach 8m  possibly a little more in due course.

One day it might look like this specimen we viewed at RHS Harlow Carr.



Wednesday 5 February 2020

Glow in the Dark Snowdrops

While I am well aware how regularly snowdrops have feature on these pages before I cannot resit adding another note about their charms. especially after dark. The brilliance of their white petals can illuminate the garden at night. Sadly, we do not really get a good view from indoors but the fact the mossy bank were the snow drops appear is by the front door means that we do see them regularly. The porch light comes on when entering the house and this positively makes the snowdrops glow in the dark.

I would imagine virtually any garden would benefit from a small or large drift of "naturalized" snowdrops, particularly if they can be seen both during the day and after dark. They are also minimal effort to maintain once established. So they are a top tip for the labour saving gardener.

Monday 3 February 2020

Melancholic Charms

View Looking Towards  St Johns
 This might not be the busiest or prettiest time of the year in the garden but it certainly has a peculiar melancholic charm. Cold temperatures, rain showers and high winds have conspired to reduce our time outside, consequently, when I do make a foray up the garden it is all the more pleasing. The prospect of cold wet paws means that I am more often than not on my own but it is quite hard to explain to Hecate and Mili just what they are missing.

Snowdrops
Of course, there are those tough little plants that are already making a good showing. We currently have a bonny display of winter aconites under the weeping copper beech tree at the front and of course there is the annual snowdrop display, now approaching its best, which stretches from the curb side up to the front door. This is the first year that the aconites have really done anything other than just sprout leaves. I hope this will now be a regular annual showing as we have been patiently waiting for 3 years! Consequently, I think they deserve the plant of the month award.

Winter Aconites

Sadly there is always the need to patrol for winter damage. The wind has blown down several fence panels and the badgers are still digging up the lawns. Top tip: keep on top of the maintenance work while you can, the busy spring months will soon be upon us. This might not be a labour saving tip but it is a sensible way to spread the efforts across the calendar year. So as tempting as it might be to find some indoor jobs, wrap up and get outside.

Badger Scrapings