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New shoots everywhere

Thursday, March 23, 2017 5:10
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(Before It's News)

Latest post from MARKSVEGPLOT – a blog about food and gardening in England”

The sap is rising and the plants in my garden have sprung into action in no uncertain terms!

A couple of weeks ago I pruned my Rose bushes, and they are responding vigorously:

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It’s the same with the Dogwoods:

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I haven’t pruned the Cotinus, which is still recovering from a near-death experience in the Autumn of 2015, but it’s not hanging back – it’s covered with little black buds splitting open to reveal new red leaves like these:

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Even my Rhubarb is beginning to show a certain amount of promise. It always starts off with small leaves, but normally goes on to produce some huge ones later on.

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The site where my Rhubarb grows is far from ideal, being partially shaded and very close to a massive Leylandii tree in my neighbour’s garden. That tree sucks up all the available moisture and has rendered the nearby soil very dry, which is not good for Rhubarb, so a couple of years ago I moved it into a big deep container filled with rich home-made compost, in which it has rebuilt its strength very nicely.

Elsewhere in the garden I have another issue – something is eating the flowers on my Fritillaries:

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I have looked carefully to see if I could find the culprits, but in vain. I have in the past seen Lily Beetles attack the seed-pods of Fritillaries that have finished flowering, but I’ve never seen whole petals eaten like this.

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In the raised beds there’s more welcome news. The Radishes I sowed alongside my Broad Beans, only a few days ago, have germinated:

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In case you’re wondering, the grey thing at the right of that photo is the frame of the protecting cloche.

Since I’m writing today mostly about shoots, I think the PSB qualifies too, doesn’t it?

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As some readers will know, I have two “Early Purple Sprouting” plants, one grown from Mr.Fothergill’s seeds, and one from Marshalls. The contrast between these two plants is very marked. This one is the Mr.Fothergill’s one:

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And this is the Marshalls one:

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I’m going to finish my post today with a photo of something that is finishing, instead of starting: a Hellebore.

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My Hellebores have done better this year than previously. As the plants mature they produce more and better flowers. I think the fact that we have not had much heavy rain during their flowering period has helped, because the blooms have not had so much of a battering.

To read more articles like this, on Gardening and Gastronomy, please visit * http://marksvegplot.blogspot.com/ *



Source: http://marksvegplot.blogspot.com/2017/03/new-shoots-everywhere.html

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