Now that we’ve finally had a couple of frosts at the Priory,
The Priory tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera)
I feel that I have permission to start tidying away.
So I’ve been carting stuff off to the compost bins or bonfire site.
Bishop of Llandaff – weary
In the topical border, the freezing temperatures have collapsed the tender plants
into a soggy, exhausted (and, if you ask me, melodramatic) heap.
And this toad lily (Tricyrtis hirta) only had time to flower because I moved its pot indoors.
Tender fuchsias, dahlias and Colocasia esculenta
Many of the plants, including fuchsias (F. ‘Gartenmeister Bonstedt’) and the colocasia won’t survive hard frosts and I have transplanted them to the heated greenhouses. I’ve left most of the dahlias in the ground but a few – which I wanted to re-site – I have lifted for drying and storing.
other plants left in the bed (marked with canes) warm and toasty. (The ‘straw cages’ protect the stems of Musa basjoo).
It sat squeezed between two large oaks, you see and would always have been stunted by them. I removed it with the chainsaw.
September 2013
Speaking of chainsaws – the tree surgeons have been again. You might remember that the main island on the west pond had become congested and that seven alders were crowding out the one weeping willow.
I’ll leave you with another shot of the tulip tree. It isn’t a display that lasts very long (soon I’ll be raking up each of those leaves), so let’s make the most of it.