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Wednesday 12 July 2023

Gardening on the edge.....

 


I thought gardening at Sandside was tough enough but there I at least had the shelter of the old stone dyke, and some shrubs. In my new house and "garden" life is a little tougher for any plant!  I had wanted to move to a smaller house and tiny garden.  Well I got the small house, but it sits in an acre plot.  This is mainly a VERY rough meadow - with vole tunnels through it, long clumpy grass, and a variety of tough wildflowers!

The previous inhabitants made a gravel garden around the house - inspired no doubt by Derek Jarman's garden at Dungeness   It has sedums and succulents, as well as sea campion, self heal, Welsh Poppies, columbines, teazels, and lots of plantain!  It actually needs quite a bit of weeding which has got a bit beyond me but it seems happy enough!

Across from the gravel garden is a small patch of mown grass - I had 7 Northern Marsh Orchids blooming this season which I was delighted with.  Then there are two beds of wildness, and the rest is truly feral!  In a more sheltered spot I have some pots of perennials and alpines.  Some more alpines and sedums on top of the gabions too.

I planted lots of wildflower seeds in the Spring, but it was a very cold spring and then a period of very dry weather so very little has germinated.  I am hopeful for next year!  Anyway, here are a few photos of the "garden". Suggestions for plants that withstand wind and very sandy soil welcome!

This is one of the wilder beds - as well as the ubiquitous daisies it also has cranesbill, some achillea/yarrow and I've planted more, also planted some verbascum.





The forget-me-nots have finished flowering as has the red campion.


The two feral beds are by the garden cabin. I am loving the teazels springing up everywhere.




Self seeded into the gravel garden too.  Sedums filling the gabions...


There are paths cut through the meadow, and cranesbill and daisies spill into these areas, along with hogweed (not the giant kind!)






Wildflower "self heal" is growing in abundance too.


Among the many grasses in the meadow there are damper bits and here grow clumps of flag iris.


And then there is a small seating area with pots and a feral border....






And pots with alpines...




And Reggie and the Alpines (good name for a rock group maybe?)


Then there are the alpines on the gabions....





And water in the garden - a pool for the insects and birds, plus any passing hedgehog


And the start of a tiny pond...


And finally!  Button in the catio!!



5 comments:

  1. It looks lovely! The wildness suits the setting perfectly. Would love to hear more about the tiny pond.

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  2. It looks fabulous, anything too manicured would probably look terribly 'false' in your coastal setting.

    Beware the Teasel! Fabulous wildflower and mine are much loved by the Goldfinches but damn, when they seed themselves in a place they like they can become absolute thugs. Oh, and well done on the orchids, it was not a good year for them being so dry at the 'wrong' time.

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  3. It looks magical, and I love teasels too, they just seem so robust ... I guess they would have to be so far North. It looks like a wildlife haven and a very beautiful one at that.

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  4. The flowers are really lovely...pops of color here and there that are so pretty. And it looks like you have so much open space around you...to me, that's the best...enjoying the peace & quiet with lots of room for gardens, and to simply to enjoy the quiet beauty. Perfect! Mary

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  5. The TV gardening programme Beechgrove did a lovely piece last year on the difficulties of gardening on Orkney - not just the wind, but the salt spray too. Also in the RHS Magazine this March another long informative article of gardening for an extreme climate (centred on climate change and growing on rubble in the driest part of England). Quite inspiring so it will be lovely to see how you manage your acre - a real blank canvass.

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