Monday 28 March 2016

It's time to weed!

I've finally started what I put off for the whole of last year - weeding!
Last year I convinced myself that it would do me good to walk away from any gardening for a year because the tediousness of it was starting to make me not enjoy being out there anymore. A few years ago this would have been unheard of, I had less garden to tend and it was so easy to keep it looking immaculate but then over the years I've added another garden, a veg area and a polytunnel area and trying to maintain it all myself was just taking its toll. After spending another year just trying to keep on top of it while also mowing acres, looking after animals, keeping a house and accounting, I decided I was either going to a) completely gravel/pave/deck everywhere and just have pots b) dismantle the poytunnel and veg area and just let the weeds take over or c) simply take a break from it all and just see what happens.
I chose C - thankfully.

The weeds are awful - to be expected, but awful. I get alot of couch grass with runners that run like tentacles everywhere and the dreaded creeping buttercup. I don't mind any weed except creeping ruddy buttercup.

When I first looked at this trowel in hand I almost walked away.

BEFORE


AFTER

BEFORE

AFTER


BEFORE
AFTER


Only now can I see that I can actually cram alot of new plants out here, which is a good thing really as I have approximately 400 in my polytunnel that are now getting quite depserate for a life outside their pot.

This though made me smile with happiness when I saw it. I have a Cordyline growing that is self seeded and has done so well until a couple of winters ago when a wishing well fell on it and snapped it right at the base. I managed to stand it upright and bashed a scaffold pole into the ground to tie it to. Then I mulched it with thick straw round the base and covered the straw with slate to keep it in place. The Cordyline appears to have survived which is amazing but now it has babies - twins no less. I thought the green leaves were from a flag iris that runs rampant in this bed but nope - they're definitely coming from the Cordyline stem.



I've been keeping an eager eye out for signs of my Peonies survivng the winter in the ground and sure enough 'Sarah Bernhadt' appears to be waking up.


I'm not sure what's going on with this pot grown Camellia in the polytunnel though. It has flowered a couple of times but nothing last year and nothing this year. It's in ericaceous compost that is topped up each year and I keep the watering right but it just doesn't seem to be thriving.



6 comments:

  1. That is good news about the cordyline. Creeping buttercup is the number one enemy here, too!

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    1. that dreaded snap when you realise you have the weed and left the roots :( Awful weed isn't it, my thoughts are with anyone that has to weed this thing out Wendy lol.

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  2. You have been busy. Did you experience job satisfaction?

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    1. most certainly did Sue :) and I tried not to dwell on the fact that all that weeding equates to only 1/3 of the garden :(

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  4. It looks so great after the weeding and cleanup! I really need to get out there and do some spring cleanup, but the chilly weather and busy schedule are deterrents. I also end up having so many internal debates about whether things are seedlings that are sprouting or weeds, so I tell myself that I will just wait to pull them up and see. (Of course by then the weeds will probably start running rampant.) That's so great your Cordyline is coming back!

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