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What's Looking Good In August 2021

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by shiney, Aug 1, 2021.

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  1. Logan

    Logan Total Gardener

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    • shiney

      shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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      This Hebe flowered last year, non-stop, for 14 months but took a break in late Spring and has started again now. The bees and wasps love it but seem to get on OK here.
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      This Shasta is on our front verge and we have had to remove 3/4 of it as it was blocking the view when driving out. This is what's left
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      The bronze Fennel is also spreading like mad and we keep having to dig out young ones. Luckily we have been able to sell most of them
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      The Inula also need some hefty control and we cleared a lot of it in the winter. It just thumbed its nose at us and carried on spreading
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      We gave the Sysirinchium it's early summer chop after it had finished flowering and has started again
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      The Verbascum chaixii also had its early summer chop after flowering and is coming back again everywhere
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      Crocosmia is also becoming a bit of a thug but we have dug out quite a lot, together with Jerusalem sage, Alchemilla mollis and hardy Geraniums and filled the car and took them to a charity garden centre where they teach gardening to people with learning difficulties. It's much better than binning them.
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      Forgotten the name of this one
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      This is the Phytolacca (Pokeweed) that disappeared quite some years ago and suddenly reappeared this year about 6ft from the original. It has flowered and now going to seed
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      • shiney

        shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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        We have quite a few Hydrangeas (whites,pinks and reds but no blue). The plant to the left of it is Jerusalem sage (Phlomis russeliana) but the mauve variety. We have lots of the yellow (spreads like mad) but just this one patch of mauve that doesn't seem to want to spread. It is much more floriferous than the yellow but a bit on the pale side.
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        Behind the Hydrangea is the Lysimachia atropurpurea just starting to flower in yellow. In a week or so's time the leaves will start turning a dark purple. An interesting plant but it spreads with root runs
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        At the end of last year we planted a couple of Clematis alongside these two supports and they are now doing very well
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        Raspberries have finished (very poor crop) and blackberries not brilliant this year but other fruit is doing well. I have picked a hundred pound or more of golden plums (now just about finished) and haven't yet got my fruit picker out to get up to these - so some have rotted. The tree is getting on for a 100 years old.
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        Pear trees are doing well with the Williams the most advanced
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        All the apple trees are also doing well despite the frosts in April
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        With some of the eaters ripening nicely
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        • Sheal

          Sheal Total Gardener

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          The apples and pears look like a good, healthy crop this year @shiney. :thumbsup:
           
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          • JWK

            JWK Gardener Staff Member

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            @shiney that pink fluffy flower looks like thalictrum
             
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            • shiney

              shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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              @JWK Thanks, that's the name :thumbsup:. We have three different types in the garden and I just couldn't bring the name to mind! :doh: it must be :old: :heehee:. We have the one in the photo, one that grows about 5ft high and very bushy and Elin that grows about 10ft. The others finished flowering ages ago.
               
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              • shiney

                shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                @Sheal thanks :) The apples and pears always do well. We don't feed them but keep them well pruned each year. The Williams pear came from Belgium and the Conference pear (my favourite) was bred from it in the late 1800's just down the road from us by Thomas Rivers. All our fruit trees are over 70 years old as the back of our garden was part of a fruit nursery.

                The back of all the neighbours' gardens were also part of the nursery but we're the only ones that have managed to keep the trees. Most were either taken out by the owners :scratch: or weren't looked after properly with a few being lost to the hurricane of '87.

                We have had all our apple trees identified by the experts and have some older varieties. They come to the old Rivers Nursery in Sawbridgeworth each October to identify apples for people and part of the old nursery is preserved and looked after by a Trust and the local council. The rest of the nursery is a hospital and retirement homes.

                We've only lost a few of the originals that were here when we moved in 50 years ago. We took out the cherry trees as they weren't doing too well, the birds always got them first anyway, and the experts suggested that we removed them to give the apples more space. We also removed the Cox's Orange Pippins that had started dying.

                We freeze a lot of the apples and also sell a lot for our charity. :blue thumb:
                 
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                • Sheal

                  Sheal Total Gardener

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                  An interesting read @shiney. :) They're certainly doing well considering their age.
                   
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                  • Sheal

                    Sheal Total Gardener

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                    My neighbour has a large area covered in Rugosa Roses and they're full of hips. Blackbirds will be feasting on them shortly.

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                    Buddleja 'Sugar Plum'.

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                    Deutzia 'Strawberry Fields'. Wrongly supplied to me earlier in the year, it wasn't worth the cost of sending it back so it's being given a chance. That's ash on the ground behind it.

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                    Cotoneaster 'Berried Treasure'

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                    Ribes. It should be 'Sanguineum' but came from the same supplier as the Deutzia so it's dubious whether it's right. I'll wait until it flowers.

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                    All the shrubs above were newly planted late Spring so I'm pleased with the growth so far.

                    Potentilla Fruticosa 'Daydawn'. I have three of these and they're struggling in my sandy loam - more sand than loam. :doh:

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                    • Perki

                      Perki Total Gardener

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                      A disappointing summer for me in the garden, the weather has cause a lot of plant to collapse. The dry weather then the sudden wet late July through August seem to of caused the plant to surge growing a lot of lax green growth which soon collapse when the wind blows and the fine rain sits on it . I bought a load of steel rods 6metre lengths I need to cut and bend, I hope not to buy plant supports for the garden ever again.

                      I took some pictures the other day .
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                      Eupatorium is a big beast, shame its leaning on my other plants . they supposed to be some white vebascums somewhere in there
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                      Dahlia Jack black
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                      • noisette47

                        noisette47 Total Gardener

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                        It's beautiful, Perki!
                         
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                        • Perki

                          Perki Total Gardener

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                          continued
                          The hot border , can't see my Achillea terracotta and knophofia mango and lobleia they possibly buried under something else or the slugs got them ethier way I am not happy :gaah:. Don't think I'll bother with tithonia again its all foliage no flowers.
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                          Echinops Tiech :rolleyespink: something , much bigger than I thought I am going to have to move it to the back garden to compete with the Eupatorium .
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                          • Victoria

                            Victoria Lover of Exotic Flora

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                            I think it looks great @Perki. Lots of colour. I like the combination of orange Begonia and dark blue Million Bells is it?
                             
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                            • Cordy

                              Cordy Super Gardener

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                              Great photos and interesting plants there @Perki Is that the Pennines in the background ?
                               
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                              • Logan

                                Logan Total Gardener

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