Back to my usual Six on Saturday timing, which I like to think of as fashionable late but some might call tardy. This is not due to lack of enthusiasm for the task at hand, quite the contrary. As the year ripens there are more and more lovelies which beg to be featured. On a downward trajectory however is the time I have to share them with you, because, well, I am out there with them! But if our very own Compulsive Propagator has time to look after his ever expanding menagerie of SoSer as well as his dealing with his even more expandinger family of plants, I can take the time to chuck half a dozen pictures of my garden residents your way. Phew, that was a rather long sentence! Today I have decided to feature members of my garden crew that for some reason or other have survived despite the odds.
First we have a pelargonium looking splendid in its shady hideaway. It has spent the winter snuggled beneath a Phlomis fruticosa which will have protected it from the worst of the northerly gales, but not all. A tender sun lover that has survived a winter exposed to the cold winds and thriving in heavy shade. No one ever said it would make sense.
Next a diddy unnamed hosta which was a gift from a friend. We keep our hostas in pots in the vain hope that they will be protected from the munching molluscs. This safe haven usually lasts a couple of weeks before the cunning plan is discovered and the nibbling begins. Not this little one though, it has avoided any unwelcome attention. As you can see by the “mulch” of licheny mossy stuff, it hasn’t been particularly well cared for. I do water it though. Sometimes.
On to Eschscholztia californica ‘Red Chief’ that has come through the winter similarly unscathed. It is the wet that is more likely to toll the death knell for the california poppies, rather than the cold. This one is planted on the edge of a wall and has fared well in its well-drained position. This is the first flower of the year and although it looks a little dishevelled is the same rich colour that I remember from last year.
A couple of years ago I rescued a pre-planted tufa container of alpines from the Death Row area of a garden centre. Although I was full of good intentions, I am sorry to say it was out of the frying pan into the fire as it has been ignored ever since. Today there are both a Lilliputian erodium and this bluest of blue lithodora flowering. Seriously, I don’t deserve this forgiveness. After I took this photo I half-heartedly pulled out some weeds and then forgot it again.
Now we have a wonderful fern that I bought last year called Pteris umbrosa. I was well aware at the time that it was tender, like many of my plants, and would need some extra winter protection, also like many of my plants. Unfortunately my ability to protect all these Softy Walters is lacking. A huddle together of pots, a drape of horticultural fleece, and for those small enough and special enough, room in the plastic greenhouse. When I eventually remembered to remove the fern from the frozen front of the house, this was placed in the “huddle and drape” category. It subsequently became a little singed (read “crispy”). A few weeks ago I repotted it and cut off all the fronds, whispered a few platitudes and for this pampering it has kindly rewarded me with some fabulous new fronds. Next winter I will do better. Possibly.
Lastly we have Geum ‘Blazing Sunset’ which I was surprised to find poking its head up above the surrounding vegetation. I was sure this had copped it last year, flowered itself to death, which I am sure is a fine way to go if you happen to be a geum. But I was wrong, and it has reappeared in all its glory, much to my joy, as I do love a geum.
There we have it, another six, another week. You have got to love a survivor!
Yes, we love them all 🙂
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I think the “mulch” of licheny mossy stuff really shows off the hosta rather nicely. I’ve never been able to grow the red variety of Californian poppy. Tried several times from seed. Failed each time. Seeing yours I’m tempted to try again.
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Thank you, perhaps it even deters the snails, or is that too much to ask? I don’t think the poppies like being moved so perhaps sow them where you want them to flower. Not that I did that but they do always struggle after they have been pricked out. Good luck!
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Languishing mini Hosta, tick. Neglected still in it’s pot a year on Pteris umbrosa, tick. I could have written your six myself. Well I couldn’t because for reasons unknown I don’t have a red Escholtzia, an oversight that needs fixing.
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Great minds………… 😀
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hmmmmm. . . . or just stick with the normal orange.
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Tony is a purist, that is just fine, he is a little closer to the original than most of us. 🙂
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It is the state flower!
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I am sure the snails in my garden abseil in from a great height to chew on my hosta. I keep finding the beggars hiding among chives, dead tulip foliage, my Cornish hedge and even behind the slate house name sign! If I am not tracking snails I am pulling out bindweed…
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It has been raining this morning and I am sitting here wondering what the little blighters are up to out there, I can almost hear them …….
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🤣
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I know better than to question your impeccable taste in color. I just cannot get used to all these variants of the common classic California poppy.
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I don’t do it to annoy you, I just forget you are not a fan. Sorry!
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Goodness; there is no need to apologize. We all have different tastes.
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It’s always a buzz to discover a survivor. I love your Geum. I’m waiting to see if mine have survived the desperate heat of summer and whether they’ll flower as prolifically this year. I like the poppy too. Mine were all a disappointing egg-yolk yellow.
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It is! I don’t think that geums are particularly long lived, but I have no scientific evidence to back that up. 🙂 Hope yours makes it through.
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The hosta looks lovely with its green collar. Love the red geum and eschscholzia and that gorgeous fern.
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Thank you 🙂
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No one ever said it would make sense struck a chord with me. I have lost things that I thought would be hardy and yet a few feet away something tender has survived. I have just succumbed to a hosta this week and a roll of copper tape! I love a survivor and yours are all fab.
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Thank you, good luck with the hosta!
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I too have a mini hosta in a moss filled pot and a Pteris, although mine is a couple of years is the pot, went in the greenhouse under the bench as no room and seems to have given up. Maybe molly coddling isn’t that good for them and they are tougher than we think. After all we used to grow camellias under cover many years ago and we don’t now
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I often think about those closetted camellias! They used to roll them out every summer didn’t they. There are many factors involved, many of which we can’t control so I think we sometimes just have to take a risk and if necessary pay the consequences. 🙂
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Red Eschscholzia !? I have never seen one. For me, they have always been orange. An error to correct and add some for sure !..
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If you can’t find any seed over there I will send you some. 🙂
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Ooh!… 🤗 I’ll look for them here and I will tell you. Tks.
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Started Geum from seed this year, forgot to label the
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…the trays, now I’m not sure what is what. Everything just gets planted this weekend and we’ll hope for the best!
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I’m sure it will be a lovely surprise!
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Love the colour of that pellie. You undoubtedly don’t remember urging me to get some of my own, because you seem the type of person well practiced in leading others to perdition. Rest assured, you were successful w/me in said venture, & I soon should have some to share on a Saturday. They may very well fit into the survivor category, as I haven’t a clue what I’ll do w/them in the winter. Maybe drape & huddle.
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That made me laugh, I am always surprised that anyone pays any mind to anything I say! 😀
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They seem to be thriving on neglect. My container hostas are unmunched. Those in the ground, not so much!
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