Galanthus elwesii |
A gardening journalist the other week wrote about flowers open
at New Year; every year he counts how many types of plant, including weeds, in his
garden have at least one flower on New Year’s Day. His total this year was lower than usual,
despite the continuing mild weather, probably because it has been (and still
is) so miserably wet. It prompted me to
go out and take a look round our own plot, albeit a few days into January, and
there were more flowers than I had first thought. It does depend a bit on what you count as an ‘open
flower’; I discounted a single bloom of each of Geum rivale and Welsh poppy
(Meconopsis cambrica), both of which were really the sad half-mummified remains
of autumn flowers rather than fresh blooms. But it
was interesting how many plants were actively flowering regardless of the mist and
murk. Of course there were the usual
winter suspects: winter jasmine (Jasminum nudiflorum), Mahonia ‘Winter Sun’ and
Viburnum x bodnantense ‘Dawn’ (also Viburnum tinus ‘Gwenllian’, which has
lovely dark blue berries as well as flowers, but only one viburnum can be
counted – we’re totalling general types of plant, not varieties). There are also some isolated flowers on the winter
honeysuckle (Lonicera purpusii), but fewer than usual thanks to the assiduous
attentions of three bullfinches, a handsome male and two elegant females, who
find the buds irresistible. A little
out of sight and out of mind are two other early bloomers, the rosemary and
sarcococca (sweet box); I must find a better site for the latter where we can
enjoy its scent. The first snowdrops,
Galanthus elwesii, are out, as are the primulas by the drive entrance, and at
least one viola left over in a pot from last year’s plantings is still in
flower; so too are a couple of stems on the senecio (now called something else
by the botanists, I forget what) and two tiny blooms on the little red
chrysanthemum in a patio pot. More
surprisingly, the ‘Gertrude Jekyll’ rose still has a few buds, one of which
opened fairly satisfactorily when cut and put in a vase indoors. There are flowers on several of the ‘Baron
Solemacher’ alpine strawberries that are scattered around the garden, and let’s
not forget all the daisies in the lawn, and clumps of meadow grass between the
paving slabs (grass is a flowering plant too). The hellebores are well in bud but not yet in
flower, so weren’t counted.
Viburnum tinus 'Gwenllian' |
Hellebore in bud |
I make that 14; I must repeat the exercise next year for
comparison.
What I did do on New Year’s morning was to count the number
of bird species that put in an appearance over the course of a leisurely breakfast:
16, not counting the red kite that cruised by overhead. I hope they stay around for the Big Garden
Birdwatch later in the month, though the windfall apples are now all eaten and
so the number of blackbirds – at least 15 at one point – has reduced
substantially, and the regular skirmishes between the mistle thrush and his
enemy the fieldfare have stopped. But
spring is in the air – two of the robins have paired up and a blackbird has
been occasionally heard singing on dry afternoons.
Coriander, dill - and daffodil shoots |
The weather hasn’t been good for gardening; even the
greenhouse isn’t tempting me out much. I
have managed to get the shallots planted and broad beans sown (and covered up
with fleece to prevent the squirrel from digging them up; he has a lot of
hazelnuts buried in that area), and made a start on pruning the apple trees,
doing a little out-of-season thinning on the cordons and tidying up the smaller
tree before starting on the big tree – still more to do there. Meanwhile the garden has little to offer on
the edibles side other than the cooking apples in store, some remaining leeks
and various herbs; the dill and coriander that I sowed in the big patio tubs,
on top of the miniature daffodils, have produced a small but welcome harvest
(and the daffodils are starting to push up between them). With the weather as mild as it is, and not
much cold in the medium-term forecast, I’m tempted to try sowing some seeds
early, although that might really be pushing it; February is still to come, and
anyway the ground is so wet that it might really not be a great idea. On top of the rain we are now having a very windy week; not much sun forecast before the weekend.
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