Open Gardens

Julia visited some local Open Gardens on Saturday. If you are interested in others there is a website here which details all the national ones.

One was clearly the result of spending thousands on hard landscaping and plants straight from the garden centre. I don’t know why you would do that on our street as the house prices don’t justify the cost of expensive garden work, and on our side of the street (as this one was) the gardens slope away from the house and face North.

If I’d been a gardener when I moved to Nottingham I wouldn’t have bought this house. Nor would I have slabbed the front garden to save work. However, plants still manage to grow in the front garden, as you can see from the poppies.

The plants were all planted in buckets because the soil, it seems, is so poor. That is strange because our soil, just a few hundred yards away is quite good. It wasn’t bad when we moved in and with compost and hoed weeds, falling leaves and leafmold it has improved over the years.  It could be a lot better, but we are best described as sporadic gardeners. Having worked as a self-employed jobbing gardener for 10 years I have to confess to neglecting my own garden dreadfully.

The plots were built up using sand when they built the houses eighty years ago, and the underlying geology is sandstone, so the soil tend to be a bit light. However, it is well drained and easy to work, and does respond well to feeding. There were allotments here before they built houses so it was hardly a barren desert.

I did, however, bring back a lot of compostable debris from my work as a gardener, so it all worked out well in the end.

That, I think is where many gardeners go wrong. Spend money on hard landscaping and plants and you will get a garden you can show off. Spend time on the soil and you will get a garden where you can grow things.

Next year I suspect this gardener will have to buy more plants from the Garden Centre to fill her garden again. One thing she won’t have to do is mow the lawn (or compost the cuttings) because the “lawn” is astroturf.

We will, once again, be cutting things back in a desperate attempt to keep ours looking vaguely like a garden. We will also return to planting calabrese and kale in the flower beds. It seems to do well and the pigeons don’t spot it like they do when you plant it in a vegetable bed.

In contrast to the posh garden there was another, where kids were playing. The owner kept apologising for this but Julia told them that was what gardens are for.

They were just doing it to help raise funds for local charities and show what an ordinary garden looks like.

It takes all sorts, and they are both valid uses of a garden, depending on your ambitions and lifestyle.

We had Hummingbird Hawk Moths in the garden a few years ago. We also had a nesting Blackcap. This year we had Painted Ladies.  You don’t get that with a tidy garden.

Red Valerian, like poppies, grows vigorously from cracks in the paving. It is a great food plant for moths and butterflies, though it’s a bit of a weed and not seen in the better sort of garden.

18 thoughts on “Open Gardens

  1. jodierichelle

    I’m with you and Julia in my gardening practices and opinions. I work hard at it and want it to be natural and sustainable as well as beautiful. I also want the kids and dogs to feel free to tromp and explore everywhere (which they certainly DO).

    Reply
  2. Laurie Graves

    So true about the soil. At our transfer station—a.k.a the dump—we can get free compost, and we have loaded it on the beds. Looks like black gold, which, in a way, it is.

    Reply
      1. Laurie Graves

        Right? We are lucky. And for those who have a truck and want a lot of compost, it’s $20 for a truckload. Still a great deal. Because we have a Honda Fit, we go many times during the spring and bring small containers. Eventually, we get enough.

      1. tootlepedal

        I think that Kenneth Williams got there first with that quote. He played a gardener called Arthur Fallowfield in the BBC radio comedy series Beyond Our Ken and his answer to any question was, “The answer lies in the soil.”

      2. quercuscommunity

        I don’t recall that character, though I do remember Julian and Sandy and Rambling Sid Rumpo. None of them, as I recall, had any advice on gardening.

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