Dahlias
Judith spoke about her love for Dahlias for their form and colour. Her preference is the Bishop series rather than the pompom shapes. Originating from South America, a friend of the Bishop of Llandaff brought the flower over in the 1920s and named it after the Bishop. Since then, there are many different “Bishops” including the Children.
Judith’s Dahlias: The orange Flaxton, the red Murdoch, the purple Bluetiful and the single yellow |
Judith recommended The Gardener's Guide to Growing Dahlias (Paperback) by Gareth Rowland and a Plant Lovers Guide to Dahlias by Andy Vernon
From the discussion, we heard that some members had successfully sown Dahlias from seed, how some wrapped the tubers in newspaper until March and some bemoaned the attraction of slugs and snails so they grew them in pots. Valley Gardens in Harrogate and Golden Acre Park have a range of Dahlias well worth a visit.
Dahlias in Valley Gardens, Harrogate
Discussion
Suzanne led the discussion about plants that do well in our gardens in the extremes of weather we have been experiencing. She had recently visited Beth Chatto’s gravel garden which was started in 1990 and is never watered. A rainfall table showed that while July 2022 had zero rainfall, 2023 was the wettest on record. Here are found Mediterranean plants including Thymes, Lavender, tall Verbascum bombyciferum, Yucca, Eryngium, Stipa gigantea, Sedum telephium all growing happily.
Members agreed that this year, only the pots needed watering regularly. Others had noticed some plants flowering later and others earlier than usual with Agapanthus doing especially well.
Display Table
Sue G’s brought a Salvia, the pink form of Amistad
Dorothy’s yellow bouquet: Cosmos, 2 x bedding Dahlias, French Marigold and Begonia |
Dorothy’s Eucomis which is overwintered in the greenhouse |
Judith Hellfire dark purple phlox maculata, Cosmos and a dark purple Anemone |
Ann: Persicaria, Golden Arrow, J S Calienta and Fat Domino |
Peter tested our knowledge on his contributions: Phlox zaluanskia, Asarina procumbens, Agastache, Stokesia, Passiflora, Freesia laxa, Fuchsia gartenmeister bonstedt, Heliotrope and Persicaria campanulata
Next Meetings
1st September - visit to Cliff Bank Nursery
September 15th – Willow Weaving with Sue Dengan
No comments:
Post a Comment