Colour in the garden at last! With the warmer temperatures and welcome sunshine, plants that have been in bud seemingly for weeks are finally in flower. Mrs McGregor’s cutting garden is full of much needed material and blooms are being put to use in vases!
But Dahlias last better in water and I have to admit to being very fond of them. There is a huge range available and next spring, I will be visiting my local Notcutt’s garden center to choose from the range of tubers available in packs. For now, we have a few dark leaved favourites in the cutting garden including the bright red ‘Bishop of Llandaff’, ‘Bishop of York’ with warm golden yellow blooms and ‘Mystic Illusion’ which has cool, lemon yellow flowers with attractive rounded petals. All of these are loved by bees and hoverflies as well as some butterflies.
Other flowers that have done well include annuals, such as the royal blue Cornflowers and mixed pastel colours of Larkspur, both of which add a country house feel to a vase when arranged in blowsy bunches. We have also included some perennial Geranium phaeum varieties in the cutting garden. All of these early Cranesbills make excellent cut flowers lasting well if they are picked with a few of their nodding buds opening their reflexed petals to reveal the pointed star like center. Geranium phaeum has darkest purple flowers but we also grow G. phaeum var. album with greenish white flowers – easy to associate with other colours in arrangements.
As well as the Dahlias which will flower for months, there are plenty of other blooms to keep the vases full right through the summer and into autumn, including Gladiolus, Penstemon, Solidago and Achillea. Many of these plants are loved by bees and butterflies, so the cutting garden serves two purposes – providing color for the house as well as food for pollinating insects.
Happy, colourful, gardening everyone!
Mr McGregor