Napoleonic, WSS & ECW wargaming, with a load of old Hooptedoodle on this & that


Monday, 20 April 2026

Hooptedoodle #496 - Got to Get Ourselves back to the Garden

 It's a year since we planted our brave new shrubbery on the site of the legendary Roland's Hedge (which was wrecked in a storm so long ago that I now can't remember which one). The flowering shrubs have come on well, so now we have reached the time for Phase 2 of the Roland's Hedge Memorial Project - the planting of the perennials.

I've been looking forward to this, with just a faint buzz of apprehension. Planning has been thorough - Matty the Heroic Gardener put together a monster plan - words and pictures - of what we should get, and where it should go. All colour-coded and touched in with felt-tips - how big, what colours, when do the flowers appear - all of that. Nothing could possibly go wrong.

Planning is all well and good, but actually doing it is still a little scary. Well, it's been done - the days are accomplished.


 
I brought in a couple of loads of hardy perennials - for a week I kept them safely out of the wind, and watered them devoutly every morning

 
Then, last Tuesday, the great planting went ahead. At present, you have to look for the new wee fellows in among the shrubs, but it should all be a riot of colour when it gets established

 
We are still on a gentle watering every morning



 
We are keeping the gates closed at the moment - we have a history of passing deer coming in for a munch...
 


 
This is a further sub-project - we had some helleborus in pots at the top of the steps, and they took a beating during the recent monsoons and gales, so they have been moved to the old herb-garden. The flowers should be white, but are currently brown - let's see how this goes. Our herb-growing days are in the past, so some nice, tight little alpines will go in the pockets. The patio paving needs to be re-pointed - I regret this may have to be a forthcoming project too

 
We have a pieris (mountain fire) which was planted last year - they have a reputation for being easily discouraged by the cold, but it has done well. An interesting plant - the new leaf growth is red, which fades to green, so you get a good idea of how things are going


And, in tribute to my borrowed title for this post, here's a version you may not have heard before - Symphonic Joni:


I confess that I am more than a little shaken to realise that this late retrospective album of Joni's work (arranged and conducted by Vince Mendoza) was almost a quarter of a century ago. Next time, I promise myself, I'm going to try to pay more attention. 

 

10 comments:

  1. Your various beds all look wonderful so far. Please do share more photos as and when things are further along. And yes. Deer are evil creatures, contrary to all appearances, for a variety of reasons. Where do I start?

    Kind Regards,

    Stokes
    (Michigan, USA).

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    1. Thank you Stokes. They also fill the woods with ticks, but let us not speak of this.

      We have had the odd visit from horses in the past, but horses are normally locked in somewhere else, so this is less common. The horses belong to someone; the deer are actually in charge - they run the place. Absolute immunity.

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  2. Your garden looks lovely, grand job of planting and indeed should provide a riot of colour when it all comes together.

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    1. Thanks Donnie - Matty had a long morning here last Tuesday, but he plants them with love and understanding. Daily waterings will continue for a week or two - some of them - epimedium and some of the geraniums, are looking a little shaken after their adventures, so I talk to them...

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  3. The garden is looking great. We also have Pieris, one of my favourite shrubs, particularly when it is simultaneously red and white. We aren't quite as far north as you, but they seem to survive the wild climate of Yorkshire OK.

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    1. Hi Martin - the big Memorial bed faces sort of north-west, which is not ideal, but the garden is very open now that the overgrown trees have come down, so these new chaps will get full sun from about 1pm in the Summer.

      I was a bit worried about the Pieris last year, because it took a bit of a bashing when it first went in, but it seems happy enough now. Some of our shrubs have really surprised me - we have a good variety of Hebes, which are a delight, though they do need attention to keep them neat and focused.

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    2. Redoubtable hellebores! I too am very partial to Hebes, but have never worked how to prune them without doing more harm than good. I hope you have better luck than I.

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  4. I received an email from Prof De Vries, who is a keen gardener, quizzing me about what plants we have in the border - I am putting together an Official Reply for him. I shall attach the usual disclaimers, since I get out of my depth very quickly on this stuff (I think I had extra German classes during botany).

    He also asked me about the song, with which he is unfamiliar; I have tried to avoid thinkiing it might have been after his time. I saw a TV documentary about Woodstock recently - not a time that I remember with any huge affection, to be honest, but it is interesting to consider that we thought Nixon was a dreadful individual to be the US President. How little we knew.

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  5. Lovely to have a walk through your garden accompanied by Joni. My wife loves her Pieris.

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    1. Jim, you are very welcome. One of my Spring jobs for this week is to scrub the garden table back to regulation standard - then I can offer you a cup of tea!

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