2020 East Lambrook Manor Gardens – Early Spring Plant Fair

Saturday 28 March 2020, 10am – 4pm East Lambrook Manor Gardens, South Petherton Somerset TA13 5HH. 22 of the South West’s top nurseries. Visit eastlambrook.com for details.

  • Avon Bulbs
  • Beans & Herbs
  • CB Plants
  • Cotswold Garden Flowers
  • Desert to Jungle
  • Elworthy Cottage Plants
  • Gardener’s Delight
  • Hardy Way Perennials
  • Hilltop Nursery
  • In Clover
  • Long Acre Plants
  • Mill Cottage Plants
  • Millwood Plants
  • Mrs Mitchell’s Kitchen & Garden
  • Pennard Plants
  • Phoenix Perennial Plants
  • Picket Lane Nursery
  • Roseland House Nursery
  • Shady Plants
  • Wild Thyme Nursery
  • Margery Fish Plant Nursery

Meeting Reminder: Sat 22nd – Stephen Griffith – ‘Abbotsbury – Past, Present and Future’

Saturday 22nd February – 11.00am

Stephen Griffith – ‘Abbotsbury – Past, Present and Future’

Stephen first arrived at Abbotsbury Subtropical Garden in the aftermath of the great storm of 1990, when hundreds of trees were lost.  As Head Gardener, he set about repairing the damage and discovering the history of the garden.  He has since travelled the world in search of new plants, bringing his finds back to thrive in the shelter of Abbotsbury’s microclimate.  Now its Curator, he will guide us around the garden and perhaps inspire us to experiment with more tender plants ourselves.

Plants for Sale will be provided by Desert to Jungle

abbotsbury-tourism.co.uk

Reminder: Coach trip to the Orchid Festival at Kew Gardens

Hello: Tickets are available for the Kew Coach Trip. If you wish to visit Vellacot please add that by hand to the booking form.


Wednesday 4th March

Coach trip to the Orchid Festival at Kew Gardens

Combined coach and entry price is £36.00 for those aged 60 and over, and £37.70 for everyone else

Immerse yourself in the tropics this winter by exploring the wonders of Indonesia through Kew’s iconic 25th annual orchid festival.  Rainforests and volcanoes will be brought to life inside the Princess of Wales Conservatory through an exotic array of vibrant orchid displays.

Over 5,000 species of orchids can be found in Indonesia, alongside the staggering wildlife found nowhere else on earth.  This year’s festival is a celebration of the cultural and natural diversity that is scattered across the country’s archipelago of 17,504 islands, and the scientific discovery being made by Kew’s intrepid scientists.

As well as visiting the orchids, there will be plenty of time to enjoy the rest that Kew has to offer.

NB – As Kew tickets have to be pre-purchased, there will be no refunds for illness within the last week.  The coach will depart from Hankridge Farm, Taunton and there will also be a pick up at Great Western Rd car park (free) in Clevedon.

Kew Orchid Festival

Young Propagators Society

Jane Hunt came across an interesting new enterprise on-line, the Young Propagators Society (YPS).  Here is their description of the society.

This society was formed with three intentions; to aid the dissemination of propagation knowledge through the generations; to encourage more young horticulturalists into propagation and nurserymanship roles; and to inspire learning of all areas of the natural world. Our focus is on smaller scale but specialist and scientific knowledge of propagation. Alongside the YPS magazine, we will also have a Facebook group for discussions on propagation, and we hope to have an annual symposium of workshops and talks.

 

Happy New Year and Three Reminders

Happy New Year to all, here are three things to start the year with:

Reminder 1: Next meeting on Saturday 18th

Saturday 18th January – 11.00am

David Usher – ‘Gertrude Jekyll: Her Plants and Designs’

David was Head Gardener for 15 years at Hestercombe Gardens, near Taunton, where he restored the gardens to Gertrude Jekyll’s original design from the many drawings that were available to him. This talk covers Jekyll’s career, from her beginnings in horticulture to the designs which made her one of the most influential women in the history of British gardening.

Reminder 2: Plants for Sale

David Usher will not be bringing plants for sale, Sue Applegate has been invited to come and sell plants. She will be bringing a selection, including some bare-rooted peonies.

Reminder 3: Subscriptions

Subscriptions for 2020 are now due. £5 single and £8 joint.

PoTM: Hardy Cyclamen

Plants are opportunists. For every seemingly impossible situation there is something: perennial, tree seedling, grass, that finds that niche just the perfect place to spend its life. Many of us gardeners find dry shade particularly difficult to fill, but of course there are plants that thrive in such a spot: many of them very beautiful.

Hardy cyclamen are well suited to arid conditions. They prefer shade, and those that flower in the winter months are the most welcome in our gardens. Cyclamen coum starts into growth early in the New Year. It originates in the Caucasus and is completely hardy here. Its fat, pink little flowers sit atop rounded leaves; sometimes dark green, sometimes exquisitely silver.

The much less widely grown C. repandum is a larger plant altogether, that prefers draining, humous-rich shade, flowering in April and May. It remains dormant for much of the year, so it can seem suddenly to sparkle when the scented pink flowers pop up beneath an acer in its fresh spring-green livery. The scalloped leaves appear with the flowers. Cyclamen repandum comes from the Italian Mediterranean so in colder gardens in the UK they can be subsumed by a late frost.

Cyclamen hederifolium, the ivy-leafed cyclamen, is native to Southern Europe and Turkey, and seems to be completely at home in our gardens. It starts flowering in August, and continues throughout the autumn. The leaves are beautifully marbled and remain until early spring to accompany snowdrops, species crocus and winter aconites. It is a wise gardener who buys C. hederifolium in leaf. Each intricate leaf-pattern is unique to each plant.

The flower colours vary from deep wine-red, to pink, and red-nosed white, painting the ground beneath the trees in pools of colour.
The flowers develop hard, round seed capsules with a point on a coiled stem, the better to corkscrew down into the ground. But to thwart their intentions, armies of ants march to pillage the sweet-coated seeds and carry them back to their nests in triumph. You can almost feel the seeds winking. They have succeeded on both fronts.

In due time, from the ant-tunnels amongst the tree roots, or maybe the lawn or the garden path, the seeds germinate and produce plantlets with well-marked leaves and eventually the typical red, pink or white flowers. And if carefully chosen by the gardener these good parents will produce good offspring.

Sally Gregson

January 2020

http://www.millcottageplants.co.uk

Lyme Regis: A Screening of Five Seasons: the Gardens of Piet Oudolf

Beat the winter blues and transport yourself to beautiful gardens in New York, Chicago, the UK and Holland. A 75- minute documentary on the internationally renowned Dutch garden designer.

Sunday 12 January at 3pm, The Marine Theatre, Lyme Regis; bar opens 2pm. All welcome.

Tickets online at https://tiny.cc/ulrhs-film – £6 plus £1.06 booking fee

See our website at https://ulrhs.wordpress.com for details