Six on Saturday – The Moment

August: ready or not here we come!  Soon there will talk of cool nights and shortening days, but let us not wish our lives away.  There is plenty of time left to fret about watering and dead heading and whether we have fed our tomatoes enough or are the slugs and snails attacking whilst I take five minutes to read The Garden magazine, was that an aphid I saw, should I have staked the delphiniums, and such like.  As the Six on Saturday rules stipulate, and you know me I like to follow any rules to the letter, the following photos represent what is happening in my garden right now, unless you are watching on demand when the moment may well have passed, or on crystal ball when it is possibly yet to happen.  Pop on over to our very own Grand Magician to catch up with other SoSers from across the known universe, enchanted by his evil spell, trapped in his web of deceit.  Sorry, I may have got a little carried away.  I love him really.

First we have what I like to call The Giant Mutant Orange Tomato.  It is the spawn of The Giant Mutant Fasciated Tomato Flower.   Soon we will dissect it to reveal its alien innards.

Already inspired by Jim’s post last week and further prompted by trays of sempervivum appearing at our local Lidl awaiting to be mistreated by uncaring employees, any resistance on my part was futile.   There was no doubt that it was a sign from the horticultural gods, and who am I, a mere mortal, to defy them. In order to doubly placate them, I bought two packs, just in case someone else I know would like some.  Spread the love and all that nonsense.  However I have decided that I am not going to tell anyone that I have them so I can keep them all.   Perhaps inspired by the horticultural demons.  But I have grit, I have compost, now all I have to do is plant them artistically.  Which is where it might all go astray.

I discovered something new today, and it is another name change.  This time it is our beloved hedge bindweed.  I may be late to the party, but apparently Convolvulus sepium is now Calystegia sepium.  Who would have thought it?  I was trying to photograph a bee feasting on the honeysuckle and as my camera swung in an attempt to capture it, horror of horrors it nipped into a bindweed flower.  A weed in my garden.  Unthinkable!

Kniphofia ‘Tawny King’ is planted in a position possibly a little too shady for optimum flowering, but in spite of that it is making a sterling effort.  Not terribly “tawny” at the moment, perhaps it will darken as it matures.

I bought plugs of this Begonia ‘Glowing Embers’ months ago, the idea being that I grew them on and then passed them on to one of my clients.  They staggered along, one foot in the compost bin, for weeks, not good enough for anyone else.  I planted them in the barrel in the front garden and left them to it.  “Sink or swim” I told them, and they have eventually decided upon breast stroke.  I would have preferred front crawl.

Finally we have Grewia occidentalis, the African Starbush.  This beauty is not frost tolerant so will join the queue for preferential treatment come winter.  As we are not thinking about that just yet, living in the moment, we can just enjoy the fabulous flowers, of which there are many to come.

All done, until next time!

34 thoughts on “Six on Saturday – The Moment

  1. Damn! You just reminded me I planted a kniphofia out the front a couple of years back and I haven’t seen it this year. Probably another planting space, as we gardeners call dead things.

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  2. My kniphofias flowering is already over but I must admit that adding more like these yellows would be nice ! Thanks for sharing the Grewia. A pretty flower. I will google about it.

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  3. Mmm… not so sure about the alien tomato, you’ll have to let us know what it tastes like, if you survive. I agree with you that we should embrace August and all it offers, though I do find it a slightly sad month. The African Starbush is so pretty and new to me and I must go visit a Lidl store to see what bargains they hold.

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  4. I love the grewia, and laughed, well, chuckled, well, smiled at the bindweed. A great friend famous local farmer was here for drinks not two hours ago and she started on about her bindweed! It’s EVERYWHERE!!!

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  5. I will join the queue of people praising the grewia. The kniphofia also caught my eye and I have every sympathy for you concerns over the artistic planting of the sempervivums. It’s a challenge, but it looks like you have some good plants there.

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  6. I’m in love w/the African starbush but’ve told myself I’ve nowhere to keep it during winter.Please do not correct me. That tomato’ll prove interesting to slice, but it does look yummy. Wonder if it’ll effect the way your hair grows . . . My knophifia did fekal this year, mostly because the animals played dig-em-up w/them. Yours looks very happy, even if it’s in a little bit of shade.

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    1. Thanks, I just know it will fine, I took it off the plant as it was so heavy it couldn’t cope, and also no more flowers were appearing! Now the mother plant is putting on a bit of a spurt and hopefully soon there will be new flowers. 🙂

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  7. I nearly picked up a tray of sedums at lidl, but realised I would not be able to carry them carefully along with the rest of my shopping…..I think my priorities have gone wrong. Nice Six.

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