Thursday, 24 May 2012

A post about gardening...

Well, I can indulge myself if I want occasionally can’t I? It doesn’t all have to be about… well, whatever it is about, so today I’m going to write mainly about gardening.

I’ve been gardening all my life. As a very small boy I made landscaped gardens on the top vegetable plot. Scale models made out of dirt, a little like sandcastles, but bejewelled with pink roses plucked from the black trellis that enclosed the small area of concrete that joined the front and back gardens outside our back door (which was actually a side door). It is where our old dog Trixie used to play and sleep in the shade, it was there that her puppies jumped and ran for a while.

A few years later I was taken over by rockeries. I loved to weed and dig with my trowel, making the spaces between the buried rocks all neat and clean, moving the rocks around to make them as mountainous as possible. I remember turning over the stones and watching the spiders and millipedes wriggle away, the slugs just sticking slimily to the cold, grey stone. I love rockeries to this day, almost preferring rocks to plants.

I enjoyed it so much that I took gardening jobs at weekends and summer holidays throughout my teens, so when I eventually got my own garden I knew how to make things grow. Growing from seed and cutting is a joy when it works, a pain when it doesn’t - but generally I’m fairly successful.

For a while I was mad about bonsai, then aquilegia. At the moment it’s climbing half hardy annuals, the simpler ones – nasturtium, canary creeper, ipomoea, cathedral bells (if they take) and sweet peas. I’ve grown them in pots to train up my garden arch and to stand on the outside kitchen window sill. I’m hoping for a tumble of colour down the hand-made red brick of the Victorian wall.

My back yard at home’s a place of pleasure, the garden of my cottage in Wales a joy whenever I get there, but not as it has been in other years. Gardening takes time.

So, the fine weather continues and the plants in my little yard love it, growing visibly by the day. Over the next few weeks I expect great things, a mass of unthemed colours – oranges, reds, yellows and blues, deep green and light green and a dozen other hues. Even the sunflowers I save from the florist’s bin have sunny smiles and my seed-grown cucumbers are potted out in the cold frame.

I’ll keep you updated on my trailers. I’m hoping for a hanging garden of babble-on.


9 comments:

  1. Jamie Morden on facebook: I'm useless at Gardening, I pull out the Flowers and keep the Weeds. Get out my electric hedge cutter and my Garden becomes a sacrifice to the Gods! No clue or patience unfortunately...didn't you have a bonsa in your office in Manchester? I only went there a few times, but seem to recall it.

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  2. Sharon Taylor on Facebook::
    I garden like you Andrew, this evening I was taking cuttings of shrubs, dividing the calla lily for friends and best of all potting up the rooted cuttings of Grandad's mint as taken from Aunty Sheila's garden and sent by post to me wrapped in wet kitchen roll - I can't wait for such a simple plant to establish in my new garden, so that there is a little bit of Grandad there to give me inspiration xxx

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  3. Tim Preston on Facebook:
    Flippin 'eck, where's Peter Rabbit?

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  4. Andrew Height Yes I did Jamie.For a long time I had red hot pokers from grandad's garden at Hattton in my garden in Birmingham and then here. But as with all things... I also had one of his cactuses until last year when a rare cold spell in Wales took it from me. I'm going to ask Dad what he has. And Tim - My small garden at the back of my overly-roomed house has six foot walls around it and there is no grass for rabbits

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  5. Lindsey Messenger on Facebook:
    i remember the massive rockery in kings close. i think i might fill my pots with red white and blue flowers, i remember dad doing this for the silver jubilee..

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    1. Yes - it was huge Lindsey - try red geraniums at the centre and blue and white trailing lobelia around the edges - it'll look great with the height of the red and the blue and white hanging. Now your dad was a gardener, a true professional. I bet he and Robin Gibb are at the Prebendal as I write this having a chat.

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    2. Lindsey Messenger thanks great idea. ah yes they could be. I read in newspaper that Robins funeral will be in Thame!!

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    3. Take some pics when you have them potted.

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