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Gardeners Live in the Future

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

I sometimes wonder whether we gardeners ever live in the present. In the winter months we are looking at seed catalogues and dreaming of the results in summer and autumn. Early spring we are and again dreaming of things to come. Here we are in July with everything coming to fruition after the hard work and what are we doing? Looking at what we need to plant to give an autumn show.

When you walk around the garden every day it is easy to miss the new things happening, they sort of creep up on you. This week we had three days of cool wet weather that only really encouraged me to quickly water the hanging baskets and containers.

Read more about Living in the Future and Enjoying Surprises

Geraniums, Petunias, Roses and Wonderful Garden Perfume

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

The petunias planted into the hanging basket and containers are coming on well, bushing out nicely from the base and should provide a beautiful show as the season progresses.  The suffered a little slug and snail damage when first put out but, fingers crossed, they seem to be coping well now.

The hardy Geraniums or Cranesbills are still providing much colour in the garden as are the [TAG-TEC]Roses[TAG-TEC]. My very large hardy Fuchsia is wonderful again this year and will be flowering for months to come. I admit that it has grown much larger (more like a tree!) than I imagined but it is in a spot where it does not matter and looks really good. The day lilies are beginning to bloom, they put on such a great show each year and their strappy leaves add so much to the texture of the border.

Perfume is so important to me in the garden and the Philadelphus (Mock Oranges) and Roses are doing a fine job.

Read more of this week’s garden diary – The Taming of the Shrew | It Is a Good Job It Is Summer

June and The Flower Garden

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

It is June and everything in the is starting to flourish, especially the weeds!

Spring Flowering Plants and Bulbs

If you have not already done so cut back dead bulb but do wait until the foliage dies down naturally as cutting back too early can lead to no flowers next spring.

Lift and divide overcrowded clumps of bulbs after they have finished flowering, overcrowded bulbs may stop flowering.

Cut back clumps of spring and early flowering perennials. Hellebores and Pulmonaria produce new and attractive foliage and stay more compact.

Cut back the flowered stems of Euphorbias back to ground level leaving the more attractive foliage. Take care not to get the milky sap on your skin as this can result in blisters.

Summer Bedding Plants

A great way to produce a good show of bedding is to sow hardy annuals directly into the ground. There is the possibility of your garden landscape scheme not turning out as you have dreamt as there is always the danger that one of your sown varieties fails. It is a good idea to have back ups sown in trays whether that be hardy or half hardy annuals.

The hardy annuals sown outdoors should now be thinned out. Do this if practical in two or three stages at fortnightly intervals. Final spacings should be between 4-8in (10-20cm) using the higher figure for tall or spreading plants and the lower figure for smaller plants.

If you have not sown under cover and the weather has not been perfect for early sowings it is not too late to direct sow for the garden seeds of a few fast growing, late-flowering hardy annuals such as Clarkia, Calendula (pot marigolds) and Godetia. I did this in my first ever garden and was very pleased with the result.

Use annual bedding to fill gaps in herbaceous borders.

Plant out and cannas and if there is no longer a danger of frost.

If you have not already done so it is time to plant out your summer bedding and seed-raised plants. Always make sure they are well watered in, keep moist during dry weather and try to water an area wider than just where you have planted your young, succulent and delicious to eat youngsters. It can help to put slugs and snails off the scent where just damping the area where your plants have just gone in gives them excellent conditions to slide in and munch.

Containers, window boxes, garden pots and tubs can be planted up with summer bedding. They may sulk but if well watered in and covered with horticultural fleece on a cold night and they will soon establish and race away.

For more timely tips read The Flower Garden in June

Vegetable Growing in The June Garden

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

It is June and the vegetable garden is beginning to burst forth. Promises of things to come.

Peas

Early sowings of peas may be ready for harvesting depending upon your location. Gently press the pods to check if the peas have swollen to a size ready for picking and after cropping cut off the top of the plants but leave the roots in the ground to fix nitrogen from the air into the ground.

Peas need staking and this can be achieved with pea sticks, netting, or pruned twigs from the garden. Netting is practical but somehow does not look as natural in my opinion as twiggy supports.

Maincrop peas can be sown now.

Potatoes

If you have planted early potato tubers they may be ready or almost ready for harvesting. As a guide many are ready when the plants come into flower. When digging them up take care not to damage or skewer your potatoes with your fork. Avoid this by inserting your fork some distance away and lifting the soil carefully.

For maincrop potatoes Keep a close and regular check and earth them up as required which should result in 2 inch or 5 cm of shoot showing above ground or the compost in your container.

If planting through black plastic check regularly for slugs, the cool damp conditions under the plastic are an ideal home.

Celeriac

Celeriac can be planted out in June. It is many years since I discovered this vegetable and started to grow it regularly. Easy to grow and excellent in soups, a vegetable on its own or mashed into potato.

More Vegetable Garden in June tips

Wildlife Ponds and Water Garden Ponds -Where to Start?

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

So you have discovered the delights of having a wildlife pond and would like to have one in your own garden or back yard. We can greatly improve our garden’s biodiversity by including a pond and what is more it does not need to be large. If we can only accommodate a small pond we will be providing a lifeline to many creatures and give ourselves a wonderful opportunity to observe nature in action and close at hand.

 

During the past century many ponds have been lost in the countryside and it is important to preserve those left. It is just as important for us gardeners to provide ponds wherever and whenever it is possible and safe to do so.

 

What Can We Expect To See?

 

Pond favourites have to be frogs, toads and newts which can breed in quite small amounts of water as long as the pond has at least 24in or 60cm at its deepest end. At first glance it may seem that a is devoid of life but look closer and you will see little eyes just above the surface of the water weighing you up. Those eyes belong to the same creature that will be causing the dense planting in your garden to move, frogs searching out slugs to eat. Unfortunately fish have a habit of feeding on many other forms of pond life so their introduction in ponds for wildlife is best avoided.

 

Larger ponds quite possibly may attract mallards, moorhens and coots, as well as swallows and house martins which pick off insects from above the water surface and use muddy areas for nest building. Ducks are entertaining but can make quite a mess around the pond and garden. Grey herons can also visit small ponds and will soon polish off any fish you have in there unless you provide protection. 

 

Then there are the smaller and numerous inhabitants that are crucial to the biodiversity and health of your pond will. This may include pond-skaters, water beetles, snails and caddis flies and if you are lucky the beautiful damselflies and dragonflies.

 

The next steps when considering Wildlife Ponds and Water Garden Ponds

We Solved The Hole in the Lawn Mystery

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

The hole in the lawn mystery, some long lost book by Agatha Christie or one of Enid Blyton’s Famous Five adventures? No, something has been digging little holes in my front , not deep, not that big but each morning there are more. Opening the curtains one night before heading for bed, there was the culprit just visible in the filtered light coming through the hedge from a street light.

It is hard to know where to start this week writing about the garden, so much is happening.

In the I have nipped out the leading shoots of my dahlia seedlings so that they bush out, the cucumbers are taking off and the peppers have germinated at last. The petunias and alyssum that I pricked out have started to move on at a rate but the basil is very slow.

Outside in the garden the Exochorda The Bride is still starring, over 6 feet tall and wide it is stunning. The first rhododendrons are in flower, light pinks that were here when we arrived over 20 years ago and Rhododendron Luteum which has to be one of my favourites with its yellow and beautifully scented flowers. The tiny sweet scented violets are everywhere, again they were here before us and seed themselves everywhere but are a joy rather than a problem. Bluebells in their full glory and blue mists of forget-me-nots that seed themselves every year, I know some that think this a problem but for me they seem to complement all around them and if in the wrong place they are so easy to pull up. The same can be said for Bowles Golden Grass or to give it its proper name Milium effusum ‘Aureum’. The late Geoff Hamilton brought this to my attention many years ago and I struggled to find a specimen way back then when I suppose grasses were not such a design item as they are now. I would not be without it as it is an absolute ray of sunshine in the garden and goes well with most colours, one exception being yellow. I let mine seed and transplant it to wherever I think appropriate or just leave it where Mother Nature decided it would look best. The magnolia is still in flower and the pink apple blossom with its delicate scent has shown itself.

More on the garden and The Hole in the Lawn Mystery

Spring is a Little Late this Year

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

Looking at my notes from last year the weather at this time was hot, very hot for the time of year. My were romping away and other seedlings demanding attention as they grew at an amazing rate. Then guess what happened? The weather turned colder, a lot colder. The tomatoes continued to look very healthy but took ages to set fruit. Bedding plants that had raced away could not be planted out into the border as it was too cold and some had to have the growing tips nipped out to hold them back and help them to bush.

When will Spring arrive this year?

Flower Garden Tips for April

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

Spring Flowering Bulbs

Dead-head or remove any fading flower-heads from primroses and pansies to encourage further flowers.

The foliage of daffodils and other spring flowers should be left intact but faded heads should be picked off. Do not be tempted to tie up the leaves of flowered daffodils to make them look tidy as was once the fashion, leave them to die down naturally so that all possible nutrients can feed the bulbs and help good flowering next Spring.

Keep a keen eye on the compost in pots of spring bulbs to ensure they stay moist, water well if it has dried out.

Clumps of spring-flowering bulbs benefit from a sprinkling of fertiliser. Bulbs naturally “clump up” and compete for any nutrients available in the soil. A bit of help will help them perform better for you next year.

More Gardening Tips for the Flower Garden in April

Mrs Speckles Gives Birth and the Garden Bursts into Life

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

I sowed the seed of Dahlia Coltness Hybrids a couple of weeks ago and they were ready for pricking out. If you have not tried dahlias from seed then do have a go. A packet of will cost you less than a corm or potted up corm from your local and you will get about three dozen plants from your sowing that will flower this year. The bonus of course is that you can lift the resulting corms in the autumn ready for replanting nest spring.

Mrs Speckles has given birth. I saw her making a nest in our large rhododendron and I noticed that Speckles was coming as usual to ask for his dried fruit but when he had his fill he was taking a beak full round to the front of the house. I layered a dogwood last year and it had produced a very health root ball. I lifted the little shrub and carried it around to its new position at the front of the house and as I passed the rhododendron I spotted Mrs Speckles sitting on her nest in her “you really cannot see me” pose. I will avoid that route for a while, not wishing to cause her unnecessary stress.  Speckles is going to be a very busy blackbird again.

This week my anemones have burst bud and the first forget-me-nots and grape hyacinths have shown themselves, not to mention more magnolia and rosemary flowers.

There just seems to be an air of optimism everywhere in the garden at the moment.

Buying a lawn mower online

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

Buying a online has never been easier.  Easier that is if you know what you are looking for. 

Mowing the is an essential part of lawn maintenance and comes high upon any lawn care tips that you might read along with lawn edging to complete the job. 

Small Lawn

Which range mowers you consider depends upon the size of your lawn. 

If you have a postage stamp sized lawn it may be worth considering turning this into a flower bed as small spaces can be quite difficult to manoeuvre in when cutting grass. 

If this is the only sitting out area you have with no room for a paved or decking sitting area then keep the grass and buy a small push mower.  Alternatively go for a modestly priced hover mower. 

Read more about buying a lawn mower online for other lawn types.

Gardening advice for the flower garden in March

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

ideas for garden maintenance are many for this time of the year. Many gardening questions are asked about what needs to be done with perennial flowers at this time of the year.

Of course it is not just flowering plants that need attention, when it comes to maintaining a garden in readiness for spring and summer, and autumn for that matter, we have to consider the requirements for ornamental grasses, bulbs and climbers.

Put in the work in the garden in March and you will reap the benefits later and realise how worthwhile all that effort was.

List of tips in Gardening advice for the flower garden in March

Lawn Mowers for Sale Online

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

Buying a online has never been easier. Easier that is if you know what you are looking for. Mowing the lawn is an essential part of lawn maintenance and comes high upon any lawn care tips that you might read along with lawn edging to complete the job. A good lawn mower can help you to achieve a great looking sward but is only one part of your lawn care programme. You need to tackle any problems such as weeds, poor soil quality, soil compaction etc. that you will find listed in any lawn care tips. Full article: Lawn Mowers for Sale Online

Start your garden by picking the best spot

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

What are the main factors that will influence our choice? The greatest determining factor is the sun. Nobody would have a north corner, unless it was absolutely forced upon them because while north facing borders are great for ferns, hostas and some wild flowers they are not the easiest to plan for the novice.

The ideal spot is a border which is south facing where the sun gives light and warmth for much of the day. A with a south facing aspect ideally should have rows of vegetables and flowers running north to south so that the plants receive the sun’s rays all the morning on the eastern side and all the afternoon on the western side. See the full article at My Garden is My Space

Creative things you can do with vegetables

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

If you are totally lacking a or balcony, you can use more decorative pots or containers.

If you place your vegetables correctly in your flat, they can act as decorative pieces as well as great food. The key for decorating with vegetables is to get creative. Wrapping a vine from a vegetable plant around a post or railing can make a nice accent.

Just be sure indoor plants are getting plenty of direct sunlight. Just remember, instead of concentrating on how your small space limits you, think of the fun and creative things you can do with vegetables in the area you do have.

See the full article at My Garden is My Space

Vegetables That Grow in Small Spaces

The Hydroponic Garden Guide - How to grow without soil

You are probably still thinking “what kind of could I possibly grow in such a small space?” While there are certain fruits and veggies that grow in small spaces, like strawberries, the real key is picking the right variety of vegetables to grow. Many vegetables have smaller versions that don’t need as much space as their full size counterparts.

When picking plants to grow, look at how much room they need to have and how far apart they need to be. Seed companies are introducing new smaller varieties each year. A good example of a good cropper that you can train upwards and produces small fruits big enough for one meal is F1 hybrid Green Fingers which is described as an early cropping, high yielding baby cucumber that can be grown outdoor or inside.

No matter whether your containers are outside on a paved back yard, on your flat or apartment balcony or inside your home, they are totally reliant on you for water and food. Food will soon run out of the compost in your containers so you must feed regularly with the appropriate soluble fertilizer.
See the full article at My Garden is My Space