Wednesday 4 April 2012

And we shall have snow



And we shall have snow...

Fairies at work again

No wonder the English talk about the weather all the time. Last week basking in temperatures higher than Athens and this week the wind-chill factor brings snow and ice. And this in April - a month associated with sunshine and those delicate rain showers that help spring clean the borders and put a shine on the faces of even the most sceptical of shrubs.
 
Tiny leaves of epimediums
Plants pushing their way skywards are warmly welcomed into the bosom of April whose bounty knows no bounds. In the extremely dry right-hand border of the garden under the old holly tree the epimediums are beginning to show. Perfect ground cover, they spread like wildfire and produce delicate, pale yellow flowers which contrast well with dicentra spectabilis, commonly known as Bleeding Heart because of the drooping, heart-shaped flowers, which appear at the end of April and continue unabashed until the end of June.

Dicentra just beginning to show
Clematis armandii


April sunshine brings out the best of the evergreen clematis armandii at the bottom of the garden, with its wonderfully 
delicate flowers smelling appetisingly of vanilla. 


This is a vigorous climber which needs to be kept in check but which will flower a second time in September if you are very fortunate.



Likewise the graceful small tree amelanchior, full of blossom now in April, which also rewards us later in the year with the most wonderful autumn colour.

Amelanchior in the snow



A miniature Japanese flowering cherry holds forth in my minute version of Vita Sackville-West’s ‘white garden’, a companion plant for the wild garlic leaves whose sword-like leaves are just beginning to thrust through the undergrowth. 



Elsewhere the borders are springing into life. Pale colours dominate currently – white and lemon and gentle pink – but soon they will be transformed with forget-me-not blue in abundance and the azure shades of the bluebells with their heady perfume.

Eat your heart out Jo Malone!

2 comments:

  1. Great images. The snow adds to the beauty of it all. Your garden is like the tardis - once we ae inside it grows bigger and bigger and more and more complex. w

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  2. Time Lord Pablo commands and I obey. GW

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