I love Allium time of year. Daffodils and tulips, having riotously heralded spring, are nearly over, and now these purple explosions are starting to take center stage. This is Allium ‘Purple Rain’ which is a glorious cross between A. cristophii and A. ‘Purple Sensation’. It’s a bit wilder than Purple Sensation, but it still has relatively well behaved leaves that won’t clobber everything around them. It’s supposed to flower in June, but along with everything else this year, it’s starting to open much earlier. Have a look at Avon Bulbs for more exciting bulbs to experiment with come autumn. Alliums feature in this week’s Podcast. We’re talking flowers here. Bulbs, annuals, biennials and perennials. When designing or rejuvenating a garden, our goals is always to create successional planting so that there are ever changing scents, blooms and foliage throughout the seasons. Smaller urban gardens demand extra creativity to keep on supplying year-round interest, and bulbs are great for adding highlights into beds and pots throughout the year.
Annuals are another great way to add delightful splashes of color to a border or to fill in gaps before perennial plants grow into the space. They grow, flower, set seed and die, all in one year. Above is one of my faves, the Californian poppy (Eschscholzia californica). You can start off seeds in April, under cover, to flower that year or in August/September for flowering the following summer. Along with many annuals, this is a great self-seeder, so although the plant only lasts for one season, it will pop up in profusion year after year unless you weed it out!
Sweet peas have to be the scent of summer. A few of these beautiful blooms will fill any room with a glorious perfume. Definitely aroma therapy all in one flower. Again, these are hardy annuals, so can be started off under cover in autumn or under cover in early spring.
And I couldn’t talk about annual flowers without mentioning nasturtiums. Both the vibrant blooms (in reds, yellows and oranges) and leaves are edible with a great peppery bite, and again, once planted, they’ll pop up for years to come. Have a look at Chiltern Seeds for loads of different varieties to try, including “Blue Pepe’ bred especially for its tasty leaves alone!
Honesty (lunaria annua) is a wonderful plant for lighting up a woodland corner, or for adding Spring interest to a tree pit (as above). It’s a lovely biennial (supplies leafy growth in year 1, then flowers, sets seed and dies in year 2) which comes in white or a variety of pinks and then produces wonderful seed pods. Above is the early stage of seed pod production. The pods continue to ripen, forming a papery outer layer. Once this is gently prized off, a thin, magical, translucent, mother-of-pearl layer remains, with the seeds attached. Collect the seeds and sprinkle to flower in following years, and you are left with gorgeous, airy seed heads, much admired by flower arrangers. Once more, Chiltern Seeds have some great varieties to sow for the future. Plant now and they will flower next year!
And above is the dusky pink perennial Digitals mertonensis with gorgeous wide blooms. This is a short-lived perennial that return for a few years before fading away.
And then more perennials, that come back year after year. Blimey, the world is your oyster. Wether you like planting tasteful whites and blues together or a creating riot of colour, you can spend a whole lifetime honing your choices of what to plant where, and developing luscious plant combinations. Above are some Agapanthus with Geranium Rozanne.
How about the lovely wild mix of floaty fennel and flappy Inula, seen here at the most marvelous gardens at Bryan’s Ground near Hay-on-Wye.