Green Thumb Article Logo
[Valid RSS feed]
Email:    Pass:   
 

 

Members
   
select
Login
select
Submit Articles
select
Submission Guidelines
select
Benefits
select
Earn Money
   
Publishers
   
select
Benefits for Publishers
select
Terms of Service
select
RSS Feeds
 
Categories

Annuals (29)
Beneficial Insects (14)
Biodynamic Gardening (3)
Biointensive Gardening (2)
Botanical Gardens (4)
Bulbs (corms, tubors, rh (17)
Community Food Bank (1)
Community Gardens (1)
Companion Planting (4)
Composting (21)
Container Gardening (55)
Diaganosing Plant Proble (2)
Edible Flowers (7)
Fall Gardening (22)
Flower Gardens (97)
Fruit Trees (44)
Garden Furniture (23)
Gardening Books (31)
Gardening Equipment (63)
Gardening for Beginners (140)
Gardening For Profit (13)
Gardening Humor (21)
Gardening Tools (28)
Gardening Zones (7)
Greenhouse Gardening (22)
Growing Sprouts (2)
Health and Nutrition (101)
Herb Gardens (49)
Horticulture (53)
Hydroponic Gardening (13)
Indoor Gardening (31)
Landscape Gardening (154)
Mulch (8)
Non-Profit Organizations (3)
Perennials (61)
Permaculture (2)
Pest and Disease (56)
Plant and Tree Identific (13)
Plant Propagation (38)
Prunning (29)
Raised Bed Gardening (5)
School Gardens (8)
Seeds (43)
Soil and Fertilizer Mana (31)
Spring Gardening (16)
Square Foot Gardening (1)
Succulent Plants (4)
Transplanting (1)
Trees and Shrubs (172)
Urban Gardening (7)
Vegetable Gardening (55)
Water Gardening (3)
Water Management (39)
Weed Management (24)
Wild Edible Plants (1)
Winter Gardening (18)
 
Stats
Total Articles: 1712
Total Authors: 1439
Total Downloads: 2545985


Newest Member
Craig Sowards
 
Endorsements
 
Arbico-Organics

 

When My English Garden Went to Pot!

   (Read 500+ times)
By Arlene Wright Correll

It took me 5 full years to develop a true English Garden and by that time I had just turned 70 years old, my two teen grandchildren grew up and went into the service, the local teen helpers I was able to previously hire also left their homes. There was no one left but me and my garden was getting away from me.

Basically my English garden is not just one garden it is about 5 or 6 of them spread out all over Home Farm Herbery.

After that last frustrating summer and the beginning spring of the next year, I decided to cement over the main cottage garden in the rear of our home. I was able to hire the last 2 teens in our neighborhood to help with about 8 days of cleaning out areas and running the cement mixer. Eight days was all I could get because one of the brothers was leaving for college, so we were working like crazy.

The main idea was to develop an area where I could put in as many containers that would give me the same wonderful feeling I had enjoyed in the previous years, but with a lot less work.

When the work was completed, I started on my English container garden and it was a joy last summer. Now we are in the middle of winter and I am thinking about spring again and what would go into the containers.

I had thought I could save many of the containers and their contents by putting them into the greenhouse with heat lights. That worked fine until we had a tornado hit Munfordville village about 5 miles from here. It did about 4.4 million dollars of damage and the side winds that we got, took a big chunk of our greenhouse roof, thus letting in the cold air and destroying all those lovely pots of flowers.

This has caused me to seriously consider giving up gardening, but I just cannot. So here I am again looking at the catalogs and thinking about what can go into containers to give me back my English garden look.

For those of you considering the same type of garden here are some of the plants I am considering for 2006.

For sunny spots that get the sun all day long I am going to try some of the following:
• Achillea
• Agapanthus bulbs
• Antirrhinums
• Argyranthemum
• Brachycomes – tiny daisy like flowers
• Diascia fetcaniensis
• Feverfew
• Herb plants with silvery leaves e.g. Rosemary
• English Lavender , I have several big tubs of them, beside some in the ground that are several years old, but there and many of my favorites from the many varieties available, so I will put some more in.

The best varieties to grow if you are making potpourri are L.Angustifolia – Munstead, deep purple and growing 12 to 18 inches and is often considered the best one! L.Angustifolia - Hidcote, which grows to 24 inches
L.Angustifolia - Folgate, which grows to 20 inches.
• Nemesia
• Nepeta or catmint
• Pale flowered pelargoniums
• Penstemon – the paler flowered varieties
• Petunias
• Pinks – that will add a marvelous scent to your display
• Salvias
• Sedum spectabile – will attract butterflies
• Sutera cordata – hangs down over the edges of your pots
• Sweet peas- dwarf ones
• Trailing Verbenas to hang down over the sides of the pots
• And of course those lovely, lovely geraniums in all different variety.

For containers that will be place in places that get a half day of sun I am going to consider the following:
• Aquilegias or Grannies bonnets
• Astrantias
• Cornflowers
• Forget me nots
• Fuchsias
• Nigella or Love in a Mist
• Roses
• Scabious
• Trailing Lobelias
• Violas

For places that will receive light shade most of the day I will fill my pots with the following:
Places that are in light shade all day
• Begonias
• Ferns
• Heucheras
• Lily of the Valley
• Nicotiana

This year I will consider some climbers in pots and some of them will be
• Clematis – the shorter varieties
• Climbing roses – not rambling roses which are too vigorous
• Ipomoea
• Lonerica periclyemenum
• Sweetpeas - Lathyrus odoratus- good for scent

Because this year I will not have a vegetable garden, I will consider a few pots of tomatoes, and some other veggies.

I did enjoy the less work last summer for the containers I did make up. There were about 30 of them. However, they still require watering, a little more fertilizing than the gardens did and small weeding out, because no matter what you do, wherever there is a square inch of vacant dirt, a weed will find its way in.
Well, I am looking forward to the warm sun and the dirty hands and perhaps repairing the greenhouse. Happy Gardening!

Author Bio Box: Arlene Wright Correll

Author PhotoResources: Excerpted from “Food For Thought Series” by Arlene Wright-Correll
For more gardening or cooking information click http://www.learn-america.com/ and click on Arlene’s Books you can download or buy my gardening & cook books. All my royalties from the sale of my books go to the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and we thank you for your attention to this site.

Article From GreenThumbArticles.com - Organic Gardening Articles
Submitted on: 2008-03-01 08:11:50
Number Times Read: 508
Word Count: 838
Search by keyword tag ► container gardening
Didn't really find what you were looking for?

 
Endorsements
 
Related Articles

HTML Ready Article

Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard to use on your websites, blogs, ezines and newsletters.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual