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Gardeners World 2025 Episode 5 (S58E5)
# Bill Duncalf
#David Leighton
#Gardeners World - Season 58
#Geoff Hamilton
#Percy Thrower
#Peter Seabrook

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TV
Transkript
00:00Hello, and welcome to Gardener's World.
00:30Would you believe me if I told you this is our fourth year in this garden?
00:36And if I go back to when we moved in, the soil in general was absolutely lifeless.
00:43No worms, just felt dead.
00:46So I've mulched and mulched and mulched for those first three years,
00:51until last year the herbaceous perennials all got slightly taller than they should have done,
00:56full of nitrogen, so a little bit soft.
01:00So this year I'm backing off.
01:02All those areas that contain herbaceous perennials I'm not going to mulch.
01:07But things like my shrubs, so this, Cotinus cogria, my roses, my trees,
01:12they're all going to be mulched.
01:14What that will do, keep the weeds down, lock in moisture,
01:17but at the same time it will give that plant some goodness.
01:20So what I've done is I actually put about 50ml of well-rotted manure,
01:26but what you want to do is not put it too close in around those stems,
01:31because if you start to build soil and compost in around any wooded stem,
01:36you'll start to rot the plant.
01:38Now, I've got plenty of this to get on with,
01:42but why I'm doing that is what's coming up on today's programme.
01:47Rachel is in the West Country, enjoying the glory of magnolias.
01:53If you've got a small garden where you can let the tree go skyward,
01:57but it's confined in terms of the space around it,
02:00this could be the perfect solution.
02:01We are off to Northampton to meet a couple
02:06who have worked wonders with their back garden.
02:10What we've created here is a mini rainforest.
02:14Adverley takes a tour of an English landscape garden.
02:18That still has the power to amaze.
02:21The first wonder you encounter is this, the crystal grotto.
02:28We're off to Cornwall to meet a man
02:30who has fallen head over heels for Crocosmere
02:33and knows a thing or two about growing them.
02:38If you put a bright red Crocosmere or yellow one
02:41at the end of the garden,
02:42your eye is drawn right the way down to it.
02:45Plus, I have someone special to introduce you to.
02:48Right, we're going to have a little walk around the garden.
03:13Just to explain the layout,
03:14you come in the front gate,
03:16you come up these series of gravel steps.
03:18This side, you've got this sort of mini meadow
03:21with pear trees dotting through,
03:23at the moment full of bulbs.
03:28So interestingly, we have big space at the front,
03:30but, you know, we do go on to the road.
03:33So it wasn't necessarily a space you come and sit in.
03:35So for me, this was always going to be the veg garden.
03:39But I wanted interest throughout the year,
03:41so it's very much set up as an ornamental kitchen garden.
03:43So all the time, when you're looking out the windows,
03:46you've got something to enjoy and look at.
03:50So now we're going round the back.
03:53So as you go in,
03:56you've got this tiny sort of little secret courtyard,
03:58but it's all driven by green,
04:00so it gets cooler, calmer.
04:02There's not much in the way of colour.
04:04At the moment, the tree ferns are all cut
04:07and folded in themselves just to protect them.
04:10We can now wander round to the back.
04:13And the back really is very much built in layers.
04:16So when you're down on that bottom terrace,
04:18you're 2.5 metres lower
04:21than you are when you get up to the greenhouse.
04:23But it's got a wide garden,
04:25so you've got these sort of series of rectangles.
04:28This is the main sort of social family area.
04:31My little unkept lawn with the mowing around,
04:35seating at one end,
04:36and my office and the outside kitchen there.
04:40So you've got whip.
04:42So as we go up,
04:43that archway coming off the garage,
04:44it just sort of breaks the space again,
04:47draws you through,
04:48and now we're up into the gravel garden.
04:50And I think with gravel garden,
04:52well, instantly, look,
04:53I'm back out in the sun.
04:55So if you imagine, again, in the summer,
04:57this beautiful place to sit,
04:59we lower the seating so you're in the planting.
05:03And then you've got this big border
05:04that goes all the way round,
05:06and that makes this area feel really quite intimate.
05:11When you're moving from area to area,
05:14not just thinking about how you want it to look,
05:16but how you want it to feel.
05:18If I take you back to the front gate,
05:20you go from a meadow,
05:22and then that working garden,
05:24getting your hands in the soil,
05:25how good it is for you.
05:26You come round the side,
05:28it's quiet, it's peaceful.
05:30Then you come on to the main terrace,
05:31you're starting to liven it up.
05:33It's family.
05:34Next one up, it's social space,
05:36weekends, cooking, being together.
05:39And then as you get up the garden,
05:40it just becomes slightly more peaceful.
05:43Do you want to go on there?
06:00Good boy.
06:01Good boy.
06:03Right.
06:04Pruning this elder,
06:06which is Sambucus nigra thundercloud.
06:10Incredibly wonderful dark foliage,
06:13flower that appears sort of deep red to start with,
06:16softens off as a pink,
06:18and then later on in the year,
06:20you get the berries.
06:21So as far as pruning it,
06:24you could cut it hard back to the ground
06:25if you just wanted foliage.
06:27But as you can see,
06:29I've got flowers starting to form,
06:30so they form on last year's growth.
06:33So I'm going to try and get a balance
06:35between keeping some of the flower
06:36against creating new foliage.
06:39If you read about this,
06:41it would tell you that it grows up to four metres.
06:44And if you've got a smaller garden,
06:45you say, well, I can't grow that.
06:47But because you can quite brutally prune,
06:50you could buy something like this.
06:53So what I'm going to do
06:54is just going to start to reduce some of these,
06:56which is losing some flower,
06:59but keeping others.
07:01And again, you know, it's now growing.
07:04A lot of the time it will tell you,
07:06you know, to do this pruning
07:07through its dormant period.
07:10But because they are tough as old boots,
07:14I'll get away with it.
07:15And remember, it's not just, you know,
07:17things like these elders you can do it with.
07:20You could look at things like the dogwoods.
07:23I mean, over there, I've got a cotinus,
07:26the salixis, so the willows,
07:28even some of the eucalyptus,
07:29and, you know, and other shrubs
07:31will very much take that pruning.
07:34So if you're down the garden centre
07:37and you're looking for a particular shrub
07:38for a particular look,
07:40and it says it grows to a certain size,
07:42just do a little bit of research
07:43because you might well find
07:45that you can prune and simplify.
07:48So what I've done is taken the crossing branches
07:52out of the middle.
07:54Then what I've done is tried to create a framework.
07:56And then when you're pruning,
07:58I'm cutting literally just above those buds.
08:03Right, I've got a bit of clearing up to do.
08:06But while I'm doing that,
08:07we're off to Yunkers Nursery in Somerset
08:10where Rachel is enjoying some spring colour.
08:18At this time of year,
08:20it's lovely to see buds on trees
08:22and the odd green leaf peeping through.
08:27But some trees go really bold right from the start,
08:31and amongst this sea of bare branches,
08:33there's suddenly masses of colour,
08:36like magnolias.
08:43Most magnolias flower early in the year,
08:46before their leaves appear,
08:48and create this beautiful blast of colour.
08:53Older varieties of magnolia were often huge,
08:57much too big really, for the average garden.
09:00But more recently,
09:02cultivars have been developed
09:03that are not only smaller,
09:05they come in a welter of beautiful colours.
09:12Their flowers range in shape, too,
09:15from the globe
09:16to strappy petals
09:18and even one known as a cup and saucer.
09:25Twast and Yonker grew up in this family business,
09:27which grows and propagates
09:29all its shrubs and trees on site from scratch.
09:33And there's also two acres
09:35where they trial and display
09:37many fabulous magnolia varieties.
09:39What do you think it is that you feel makes magnolias so special?
09:49Well, they have a wonderfully long period of interest.
09:52Even before the flowers open,
09:53you have the buds,
09:54which have a fantastic presence,
09:56whether it's with frost on them,
09:57the sun through them,
09:58or raindrops on them.
09:59You have a good range of structures as well,
10:04whether it's more narrow and upright
10:06or more broad and horizontal.
10:07Lots going for them.
10:09Yes, indeed.
10:12The old magnolias can take more than 15 years
10:15to flower well,
10:16but the modern varieties are much quicker.
10:20I'm really struck by the number of buds
10:26and open flowers on this particular one.
10:29And the buds, they're really everywhere,
10:31right along the length of the stem.
10:33It's a key feature of the newer hybrids
10:35is to ensure that you do get all of these flowers
10:38all the way through the structure
10:40as opposed to just at the tips,
10:42like on some of the older species
10:43where the flowers can often end up
10:46just on the perimeter of the growing area.
10:48Yes, because they're really right at the top, aren't they?
10:51So you can't see them, you can't enjoy them up there.
10:54Whereas this one is absolutely magnificent
10:57and I know which one I'd rather have.
11:00I'm so impressed with this.
11:05The sheer amount of buds on these new trees
11:08also means that if frost hits,
11:11it's less disastrous.
11:14Most of these hybrids have flowers that open in succession.
11:17If the first flowers get caught by a frost,
11:19there's usually another flush that will follow on.
11:21That's brilliant, isn't it?
11:21So you're going to get that display no matter what?
11:24Hopefully, yes.
11:29When it comes to planting,
11:31magnolias like moisture-retentive soil
11:33at their roots all year round.
11:35And though some prefer more acid soils,
11:38others can manage without.
11:42I would dearly love to plant a magnolia at home,
11:46but I'm in the Cotswolds on limestone,
11:48so I've always been a little bit cautious.
11:50But is there something that I could grow
11:52when it's a bit alkaline?
11:54Well, the magnolia cobus,
11:56this one is cobus, Wisley star,
11:58and the closely related magnolia stilata,
12:01are the most tolerant of slightly alkaline conditions.
12:05It is really beautiful and I'm tempted,
12:08but would I be pushing it too far
12:10if I went for, you know,
12:12one of the really dark,
12:13sumptuous ones with the goblet-shaped flowers?
12:15They are less tolerant, generally,
12:18but there are things you can do to improve that.
12:21So the addition of a good quality topsoil,
12:23preferably slightly acidic,
12:25dug into the surrounding area,
12:27creating a slight mound of good quality soil,
12:30and the soil structure is often more important
12:33in this sort of scenario than the specific acidity,
12:35as long as it isn't too extreme.
12:37OK, so it's a possibility?
12:39It's a possibility.
12:40Now you've got me thinking.
12:45Yonkers plant all their magnolias fairly high
12:48in a gently raised bed or mound
12:51like an upturned saucer of topsoil and mulch.
12:54It lifts them up out of the wet
12:56and holds the moisture in.
13:03As well as bringing in new colours,
13:06the hybrids come in a greater variety of shapes
13:09and sizes.
13:12This beauty is star-bright.
13:15It was planted ten years ago,
13:16and as you can see,
13:18it's really nice and compact.
13:19It's got a lovely branching shape
13:21and very definitely a shrub and not a tree.
13:26And I think with the combination
13:27of these lovely velvety buds
13:29opening to these small but starry white flowers,
13:32it's not only really useful,
13:34it's stunning.
13:35MUSIC PLAYS
13:37Yellow magnolias tend to be later flowering,
13:43so the buds are just showing.
13:45But gosh, there are some purple beauties.
13:50Now this one, I think, is very special.
13:53It's called royal purple,
13:54and it's fastidiate, like a column.
13:57It just goes straight up.
13:59But what I love about it
14:00is that you've got flowers
14:02right from the very base.
14:03Look, there's stems just coming out at all angles.
14:06There's sort of in whorls
14:07arranged around the trunk,
14:09so it's got masses of flower on it.
14:12I think this is a perfect choice.
14:14If you've got a small garden
14:15where you can let the tree go skyward,
14:18but it's confined in terms of the space around it,
14:21this could be the perfect solution.
14:22MUSIC PLAYS
14:24Amazingly, some magnolia flowers
14:34are so sensitive to weather,
14:37they can open with a slightly different shade
14:40to their neighbours,
14:41even on the same tree.
14:44MUSIC PLAYS
14:45And some are just downright magnificent.
14:53MUSIC PLAYS
14:53Meet Anne Leipner.
15:04Isn't she a beauty?
15:05And I must say,
15:06I'm really drawn to these very sumptuous,
15:09velvety, dark, plummy pinks.
15:12So beautiful.
15:13But I've been blown away
15:14by the range of different magnolias here.
15:17It's so impressive.
15:20And I'm now feeling much braver
15:22about trying a magnolia in my own garden
15:24because when I look into the heart of this flower,
15:27it just says love.
15:29MUSIC PLAYS
15:31I thought that was absolutely glorious.
15:39MUSIC PLAYS
15:39I thought that was absolutely glorious.
15:47And do we not all need a magnolia moment?
16:05And there you go.
16:07That's mine.
16:08Magnolia merrill.
16:09And I'm exactly the same as Rachel.
16:11It's a very alkaline soil.
16:13But that is really happy.
16:15So what I would suggest,
16:16if you want to add a magnolia,
16:18go out and test your soil.
16:19Buy yourself a little kit
16:20and find out whether you've got acid or alkaline soil.
16:27It's a good time of year,
16:29if you've got a water feature,
16:32to give it a checkover and a clean-up.
16:34Two years ago,
16:36we created this lovely little focal point.
16:37And it's a really simple tub
16:39and it's been an absolute joy.
16:42So, first thing,
16:43check that you've got no little tagpoles about
16:45or anything like that.
16:47But what I'm going to do
16:49is start to clean this out.
16:50And if I use this old sieve,
16:52I can leave this.
16:54So, any little creepy crawlies
16:56will go back into the pond.
17:00And we're not just doing this
17:01purely because it looks better.
17:04You can more or less feel it straight away.
17:06You know, this stuff is starting to rot down.
17:09And what will happen,
17:11as it rots,
17:14it starts to change
17:15the nutrient levels in the water,
17:18which then starts to go green.
17:20So, let's put that over there.
17:22And then we can clean this right out.
17:27If you are thinking about
17:29building the water feature,
17:30I mean, the key elements, really,
17:32you've got the marginal plants.
17:33So, here I've got a little rush
17:35and marsh marigold,
17:37beautiful yellow flower,
17:38they act as habitat.
17:39Anything that comes out of the water
17:40can hide itself in there.
17:43And the dwarf water lily
17:45that sits in here
17:46covers probably about 50% of that surface.
17:49That helps to control the temperature.
17:52And then somewhere in here,
17:53you've got the oxygenating plant.
17:55It provides oxygen,
17:56which helps keep that water balanced.
18:02So, I did say I had a surprise for you.
18:06Come round here, young man.
18:07Let's go and say hello properly.
18:08There you go.
18:09Look, say hello to the people.
18:11Hello.
18:12Hello.
18:12So, my name's Buster.
18:14I am a miniature Jack Russell.
18:16He's settled in.
18:17Don't need to worry.
18:18Ash is still the boss.
18:20But he's great fun.
18:21And he's chilled.
18:22He spends loads of time in the garden.
18:25So, I would imagine,
18:26over this season,
18:28you will see plenty more of him.
18:30Right, we're going to clean this out, boy.
18:33Remember,
18:33not just about cleaning out
18:35this time of year.
18:35If you haven't got water in the garden,
18:38it's a good time to think about adding it.
18:41And, as this proves,
18:44you don't need a lot of room.
18:49We are now off to meet a couple
18:51that have taken water gardening
18:53to another level.
18:55It would never in a million years
19:06think when you approach the house
19:08from the front
19:08that this is what we have at the back.
19:12This garden is a chill-out space,
19:16an unwinding place
19:17where I can be myself
19:19and completely be at one
19:23with the space.
19:25I'm Joe.
19:28And I'm Linda.
19:29And this is our beautiful home
19:31where we live with Baby Django
19:32in Northampton.
19:35Linda was studying in Colombia
19:37and we went and lived there for a while.
19:39We also travelled Malaysia, Borneo,
19:42quite a bit of South America.
19:44And we got huge inspiration
19:46from the rainforest
19:46and we decided we wanted to come back
19:48to the UK and recreate that.
19:55When we first moved into this house,
20:04it was a dumping ground.
20:07So, if I had known
20:09what it was going to be,
20:11I think I would have said to Joe
20:12that it's crazy.
20:13That's just something that we could,
20:15A, never create,
20:16B, it would be such a long journey,
20:18which I think it was a long journey,
20:20but I would not change it for anything
20:23because it is so unique.
20:24I'm lucky enough to build ponds for a living.
20:29I absolutely love it.
20:31I don't even call it a job.
20:32So, with the knowledge I've gained
20:34through all of my research,
20:35I decided now it's our turn.
20:37What we've created here
20:41is a mini rainforest.
20:43We've put in tall trees,
20:46we've put in bamboos,
20:47we've created a lot of height
20:48within the space
20:49and what that's done
20:50is it's enveloped us with foliage.
20:53Spanning right across the garden,
20:56probably the majority of the garden
20:57is water.
20:59We started to build the pond
21:01by excavating.
21:03So, we shelved the area out,
21:05we've then put an underlay in,
21:08we've covered that with a liner,
21:11and then we've put an overlay in
21:13to protect the liner from the rock.
21:15So, if you build your pond
21:17in the rainy season,
21:19then you can wait for the rain
21:20to fill it up naturally,
21:21or you can use water
21:23collected in your water baths.
21:25The reason for using rainwater
21:27is that tap water contains chlorine
21:29and that will kill off
21:31beneficial bacteria within the pond.
21:35Behind us is mostly in shade,
21:39so we have put plants
21:40that love shade
21:41and do well in shade.
21:43We have some Brunnera jackfrosts.
21:46We also have fat tears
21:48and they are great
21:49because they are evergreen,
21:50so they give interest
21:51in the winter as well.
21:53We also have some palm trees
21:56and a tree fern,
21:57which we rescued
21:58because someone was throwing it out,
22:00so we managed to bring it back to life.
22:02So, we're really proud of that tree fern
22:04because it's a really old one.
22:06And it's quite an unusual variety.
22:08It's a Dixonia fibrosa.
22:10There's not that many of them about.
22:12So, what we've tried to create here
22:24is basically a little jungle stream
22:26coming out from underneath the foliage
22:28and how we've enhanced this area
22:31is by basically putting in
22:32small and large leaves
22:34contrasting each other
22:35so you get the effect there
22:38of a jungle scene.
22:39We've used these Tetrapanax papyrifera rex,
22:44large leaf plants
22:45that give that sort of statement.
22:47We've also used many little ferns
22:49and eucomus there
22:51for the tropical look.
22:54Since I put this pond in,
22:56I've seen a massive increase
22:58in the wildlife that we've got.
23:00Birdlife, amphibians, invertebrates,
23:03they've all come
23:04and made this place home.
23:05This is my little Balinese sanctuary.
23:18So, my right here,
23:19I've got the Japanese water feature
23:21that I made.
23:22So, this is an antique cauldron
23:24with some bamboo poles,
23:28a little pump in there
23:29that just constantly
23:30recirculates the water.
23:32This is cheap to make,
23:34easy to buy
23:35and will fit into
23:36any small space
23:38like a balcony.
23:39It's a wonderful thing
23:41for a small garden.
23:45I suffer with anxiety
23:46and I find that that is a place
23:48where I can really
23:49just calm down,
23:51be myself
23:52and get away from it all.
23:53I am very passionate
23:56about inspiring anybody
23:58to have water in their space.
24:00It's amazing for wildlife
24:01and it adds a completely
24:03new element to people's spaces.
24:06And it's a beautiful thing
24:07that he's getting
24:08our baby jungle into as well.
24:11This garden wouldn't be
24:13what it is without your planting
24:14and your knowledge of the plants,
24:17which is, I think,
24:18for that reason,
24:18we make a really good team.
24:19Yeah, definitely.
24:20Mm-hmm.
24:23Linda, Joe,
24:36wow.
24:37You have created
24:38some garden.
24:40But also,
24:41the fact that, yes,
24:42it looks very tropical,
24:43but not all of those plants
24:45were.
24:46Some good,
24:47really hard-working
24:48herbaceous plants,
24:49but thinking very much
24:51about shape
24:51and form.
24:53Talking of tropicals
24:55or the tender plants
24:56that we have tucked away
24:58for the winter,
24:59we're getting very close
25:01to that time of year
25:02when we need to go
25:03and check
25:03how things have got on.
25:10So,
25:11September,
25:12October time,
25:13anything that I think
25:14is tender
25:15comes in
25:16and then I've put
25:17this fleece
25:17over the top.
25:18So,
25:19there's no heat
25:19in here
25:20whatsoever.
25:21So,
25:21everything you're
25:22about to see
25:22has dealt with
25:23the winter
25:24with a little bit
25:25of protection.
25:26So,
25:26here we go.
25:27A couple of years ago,
25:28during that really
25:29cold winter,
25:30I lost
25:31all the aeoniums
25:32and I started
25:33growing a lot more
25:35of the echeveria
25:36and then
25:37I've got into
25:38cacti
25:39and I'll tell you
25:40what,
25:41I'll tell you
25:42what,
25:42overall,
25:48I would say
25:49I'm happy.
25:51So,
25:52let's now do
25:52the top
25:53and I think
25:54with this,
25:54the fleece,
25:55what it's done
25:55is help
25:56with any
25:56condensation
25:57build up
25:58over the winter
25:59and we have
26:00gone down
26:01to literally
26:01minus 15,
26:03minus 16.
26:04So,
26:08I think
26:09we've got
26:10through the winter
26:11pretty unscathed.
26:13Oh,
26:13and look,
26:14you need to see this.
26:16I'm going to pick it up.
26:19Look at that.
26:20That's known as
26:22the Mount Omi
26:23Busy Lizzy.
26:25Last year,
26:26I planted it
26:27and I was a little bit
26:29concerned about it
26:29but it's done
26:30incredibly well.
26:32Great.
26:34But then,
26:36interesting,
26:36look,
26:36the Melianthus
26:37that some people
26:38further down south
26:39would leave out
26:40looks like
26:42it's had a bit
26:42of a Mullering.
26:43So,
26:43anything like this
26:44that you come across,
26:47rather than just think,
26:48oh,
26:48that's the end of it,
26:49let's take the secateurs
26:50and just
26:52go down the stem
26:53and just see
26:55if there's any green.
26:56Yeah,
26:56that's fine.
26:57Which means
26:58there's life in there.
26:59So,
26:59what I'll do now
26:59is I'll clear away
27:01the rest of this growth,
27:03leave it in here
27:04and you'll find
27:06I would have thought
27:07in the next few weeks
27:08this will start to shoot.
27:15So,
27:15let's get some of these
27:16Echeveria out.
27:19So,
27:20what I'm going to do
27:20with the Echeveria
27:21is put them back
27:22against the south-facing wall
27:23out of the rain,
27:26keeping them as dry
27:26as possible
27:27but I will keep
27:28some fleece
27:29to hand
27:30just in case
27:31we have another cold snap
27:32but by getting those out
27:34it creates me
27:35a little bit of room
27:36and I can start
27:37sowing some seeds.
27:38So,
28:05earlier on
28:05I was talking
28:06about that idea
28:07of an ornamental
28:08kitchen garden
28:09so here
28:09I can really explain
28:11it in detail.
28:12Think about building
28:13in layers.
28:15So,
28:15first of all
28:15two apple trees
28:17and they've got
28:17things like
28:18the currants
28:18and the gooseberries
28:19then some soft fruits
28:20and some strawberries
28:21work their way
28:22around the edges
28:23and if you go down
28:24another layer
28:25there's herbs
28:26all the way
28:27through the space.
28:28Rhubarb
28:29pops up
28:29in two or three places
28:31then you've got
28:32the daffs
28:33they provide
28:33that spring colour
28:34cut for the house
28:35and then later on
28:36in the year
28:36the dahlias
28:37just work their way
28:38through.
28:41So then
28:41that just leaves me
28:42with voids
28:43that I can put
28:43the annual veg in
28:44and today
28:46we are going to put
28:47brassicas
28:48in that little spot
28:50there
28:50but what do they need?
28:52Oh, they need
28:53good
28:53rich
28:55soil
28:56so
28:57if you haven't
28:57done it
28:58six months
28:58before
28:59you need to
29:00work some compost
29:01well-rotted manure
29:02into the area
29:04brassicas
29:09like to go
29:10into a firm soil
29:11so the next thing
29:12is
29:12to get on there
29:13and really start
29:15to firm it all
29:16down again
29:17purple sprouting
29:23broccoli
29:24if you're impatient
29:26like me
29:27I can't wait
29:28eight months
29:28and then by the time
29:29I've grown it
29:30I've shared it
29:31with slugs
29:32pigeons
29:32so I don't
29:33normally grow it
29:34but
29:35this
29:36is called
29:37broccoli
29:38summer purple
29:39and
29:40you can plant it
29:42now
29:42and you will
29:43get a crop
29:44this summer
29:45so actually
29:46for the ornamental
29:47kitchen garden
29:48they're absolutely
29:48fantastic
29:49so when it comes
29:51to planting
29:51that firm soil
29:53is incredibly
29:54important
29:54they don't want
29:55to rock around
29:56ideally
29:57you want to bury
29:58it right up
29:59to the bottom
29:59of those first
30:00true leaves
30:01firm it down
30:02I'm going to put
30:05three in here
30:06and you'd normally
30:07think two foot
30:08apart
30:08which is 60 centimetres
30:09I'm probably going
30:10to go
30:1045 centimetres
30:12at the most
30:13all we want
30:26to do now
30:27is
30:28plush those over
30:29hopefully
30:35that will keep
30:36my resident
30:37pigeons off
30:38and we're just
30:39going to water
30:39them in now
30:40and then through
30:41the season
30:42I'll give them
30:43a general
30:43fertiliser
30:44I'll put some
30:45supports in
30:46net them over
30:47but things like
30:48the currants
30:48and the tree
30:49will just give them
30:50that extra bit
30:51of protection
30:51now
30:58it's time
30:59for one of your
31:00films
31:00hello
31:07welcome to my
31:08garden
31:09my name's
31:10Helen Brown
31:11and I live in
31:12a little town
31:13called Clun
31:13in southwest
31:14Shropshire
31:15today I'd like
31:16to share with
31:17you my passion
31:18for camellias
31:19I've loved them
31:20ever since I
31:21grew them in
31:22Devon
31:22they grow like
31:23weeds there
31:24but here in my
31:25tiny town garden
31:26I grow them
31:27in pots
31:28which is great
31:29because you can
31:29just pack
31:30them in
31:30the real beauty
31:33of having
31:33everything in
31:34pots
31:34means that you
31:35can move
31:36things around
31:36and shuffle
31:37them to suit
31:38yourself
31:38so as my
31:40camellias fade
31:41so I can bring
31:42around the roses
31:43and the peonies
31:45and the lilies
31:46which will give
31:46me scent
31:47and colour
31:48and blooms
31:48right through
31:49the summer season
31:50until the
31:52camellias start
31:52again
31:53which will be
31:54in next November
31:55they aren't
31:57difficult at all
31:58people think
31:59they're difficult
31:59but they're not
32:00they do have
32:02very special
32:02requirements
32:03they have to
32:04have either
32:05acid soil
32:06or ericaceous
32:07compost
32:08otherwise they
32:09will die
32:09they also
32:11require plenty
32:12of rainwater
32:12and they require
32:14feeding on a
32:15regular basis
32:16through the summer
32:16months
32:17if you can do
32:18that they will
32:19flower for you
32:20for absolute
32:21years and bring
32:22you loads of
32:23pleasure
32:23many of them
32:26have wonderful
32:27names
32:27here we have
32:29desire
32:29which is
32:30beautifully
32:31marked
32:32behind it
32:34and in with
32:34the cherry
32:35blossom
32:35is
32:36anticipation
32:37this one's
32:40called lady
32:41lock
32:41it really is
32:42one of my
32:43absolute
32:43favourites
32:44here I have
32:45a beautiful
32:46bowl of
32:47ones that I
32:48picked earlier
32:48all from my
32:49garden
32:50all cut
32:51this morning
32:51you can see
32:53I have mixed
32:54in just a few
32:56little hellebores
32:57thank you for
32:59visiting
32:59bye
33:00Helen thank
33:14you very
33:15much
33:16mind you
33:18you left me
33:18thinking
33:18yeah
33:19I wish I could
33:20grow them
33:21but my soil
33:22is alkaline
33:24if you want to
33:24share with us
33:25what you're
33:26growing
33:26your garden
33:27keep sending
33:28us your
33:29films
33:29if you want
33:30any more
33:30information on
33:31how to do
33:32it
33:32go and have
33:33a look
33:33on the
33:34website
33:34right
33:36mint
33:37I grow
33:38all of mine
33:38in containers
33:39but you end
33:40up with more
33:41or less
33:41a dead
33:42centre
33:42but as you
33:43turn your
33:44pot out
33:44you will
33:45find
33:46that
33:47yeah
33:47exactly
33:48that
33:48look
33:48all the
33:49roots
33:49have gone
33:50out to
33:50the edge
33:51and then
33:51they start
33:51going around
33:52in a circle
33:53and then
33:54however much
33:54water
33:55you're putting
33:55on through
33:56the season
33:57your pot
33:57dries really
33:58quickly
33:59your roots
34:00are always
34:00struggling for
34:01the moisture
34:01so this time
34:02of year
34:02before it
34:03really gets
34:03going
34:04simple thing
34:05to do
34:06take a
34:07spade
34:07and all I'm
34:09going to do
34:09now is cut
34:10that
34:10through
34:11now I've
34:13got
34:13two mints
34:15and then
34:17if you
34:17look like
34:17I've got
34:17all that
34:18new
34:19wonderful
34:20root
34:20so if
34:22I bring
34:22that
34:22pod
34:23over
34:23mix
34:25wise
34:25there is
34:27peat free
34:28compost
34:28I've put a
34:29little bit
34:29of composted
34:30bark in
34:31just to help
34:32hold some
34:32moisture
34:32and there's
34:33some grit
34:34in there
34:35as well
34:35then if I
34:37pick that
34:37plant up
34:38you can
34:39probably see
34:40where that
34:41dead centre
34:42sits
34:42so just
34:43tidy that
34:44back to
34:44live roots
34:45and then
34:46I'm just
34:46going to
34:46give it
34:46a little
34:48bit of
34:48a shake
34:48now what
34:51I'm going
34:51to do
34:51is slightly
34:52fold that
34:52back on
34:54itself
34:54spread those
34:56roots out
34:57a little
34:57bit
34:57and work
35:00that compost
35:01in between
35:02so you're
35:04getting really
35:04good
35:05contact
35:06if I
35:07water that
35:08in
35:08a few
35:09weeks time
35:10that will
35:10be really
35:11putting on
35:11vigorous growth
35:12I think the
35:13last thing
35:13we meant
35:14is just to
35:14not necessarily
35:15think about
35:16it the same
35:17as we do
35:17with a lot
35:18of our other
35:18herbs which
35:19we think
35:19Mediterranean
35:20out in the
35:21sunshine
35:21baking
35:22whereas this
35:23would be
35:24probably in
35:24the semi
35:24shady spot
35:25it's not
35:26going to get
35:26too much
35:27sun
35:27not going
35:28to dry
35:28out
35:28so what
35:30I've got
35:30to do
35:30now
35:30is get
35:32the other
35:32one done
35:33now
35:35we're off
35:36to join
35:37Adverley
35:37who is
35:38celebrating
35:39our
35:40English
35:40garden
35:41heritage
35:42the English
35:55landscape
35:56garden
35:56is a
35:57fundamental
35:58part
35:58of garden
35:59history
36:00the sweeping
36:02romantic
36:03style
36:03so familiar
36:04in Britain's
36:05grand country
36:06houses
36:07has gone
36:08on to
36:08influence
36:09garden
36:09designs
36:10across the
36:10world
36:11and here
36:13at
36:13Paines Hill
36:13Park
36:14in Surrey
36:15the beautifully
36:16restored garden
36:17created
36:18by the
36:18Honorable
36:19Charles
36:19Hamilton
36:20is one
36:21one of the
36:21leading
36:22the leading
36:22designed
36:22landscapes
36:23in the
36:24country
36:24Hamilton
36:26was born
36:27to an
36:28aristocratic
36:28family
36:29in 1704
36:30one of 14
36:32children
36:32and the
36:33youngest son
36:34he had
36:35expensive
36:36tastes
36:36but perhaps
36:37not the
36:38deep pockets
36:38to match
36:39but that
36:40didn't stop
36:41his ambitions
36:42as a young
36:43man
36:43he'd set
36:44off
36:44on the
36:4518th century
36:46version
36:46of the
36:47gap year
36:47the
36:48grand tour
36:49traveling around
36:50Europe
36:51learning about
36:52different cultures
36:53he returned
36:58to England
36:59with trunks
36:59full of
37:00statues
37:01and paintings
37:02with a plan
37:03to recreate
37:04the landscapes
37:05that he had
37:06seen in
37:06Italy
37:07in 1738
37:09he bought
37:10the land
37:11that would
37:12become
37:12Paines Hill
37:13it was
37:14described
37:15at the
37:15time
37:15as a
37:16most
37:17cursed
37:17hill
37:18but
37:18Hamilton
37:19was
37:19determined
37:20to turn
37:21it
37:21into
37:21a
37:21paradise
37:22it was
37:24based
37:25on a
37:25circular
37:26route
37:26and full
37:27of
37:27surprises
37:28around
37:29every
37:29corner
37:30there was
37:30a statue
37:31or a
37:31building
37:32in the
37:32distance
37:33designed
37:33to pull
37:34the
37:34visitor
37:35forward
37:35the
37:40journey
37:41starts
37:41here
37:42at
37:42the
37:42Gothic
37:43temple
37:43it
37:48may
37:49look
37:49like
37:50solid
37:50stone
37:51but
37:52to
37:52save
37:52money
37:53he
37:53actually
37:54used
37:54wood
37:55and
37:55plaster
37:56but
37:57real
37:57or
37:57not
37:58the
37:58views
37:59from
37:59it
37:59are
37:59spectacular
38:00water
38:05was
38:06an
38:06essential
38:06part
38:07of
38:0718th
38:08century
38:08gardens
38:09lakes
38:10like
38:10this
38:10made
38:11a
38:11garden
38:11scene
38:12part
38:12of
38:12the
38:12landscape
38:13while
38:14also
38:14showing
38:15the
38:15designers
38:16control
38:16over
38:17nature
38:17and
38:19Hamilton
38:19spent
38:20a
38:20small
38:20fortune
38:21finding
38:21ways
38:22to
38:22cleverly
38:23pump
38:23water
38:24around
38:24also
38:25the
38:26design
38:27means
38:27that
38:28you
38:28never
38:28see
38:28it
38:29all
38:29at
38:29once
38:30the
38:30serpentine
38:31lake
38:31winds
38:32behind
38:33trees
38:33and
38:34hillsides
38:35encouraging
38:36you to
38:36discover
38:37what's
38:38on the
38:38other
38:38side
38:39as
38:45you
38:45follow
38:45Hamilton's
38:46route
38:47the
38:47first
38:48wonder
38:48you
38:48encounter
38:49is
38:50this
38:50the
38:51crystal
38:52grotto
38:52Hamilton
38:58was
38:59inspired
39:00was
39:00inspired by
39:00the grottoes
39:01he had
39:01seen
39:01in
39:02Italy
39:02which
39:03legend
39:03said
39:04were
39:04home
39:05to
39:05gods
39:05and
39:06nymphs
39:06and
39:07here
39:07it
39:07does
39:08immediately
39:08feel
39:09like
39:09another
39:10world
39:11again
39:13this
39:14is
39:14pure
39:14artifice
39:15the
39:16roof
39:17is
39:17made
39:17of
39:17wood
39:18and
39:18brick
39:19and
39:19every
39:20surface
39:21is
39:21covered
39:21in
39:22over
39:22two
39:23million
39:23hand
39:24laid
39:24crystals
39:25the
39:27effect
39:28is
39:28breathtaking
39:29it
39:30was
39:30the
39:30ultimate
39:31status
39:31symbol
39:32for
39:32a
39:32cultured
39:33man
39:33like
39:34Hamilton
39:34following
39:40the trail
39:41further
39:42past
39:42ruined
39:43abbeys
39:43and
39:44gothic
39:44towers
39:45you
39:45come
39:46to
39:46another
39:47extraordinary
39:47relic
39:48this
39:51is
39:52the
39:52hermitage
39:53buried
39:53deep
39:54in
39:54the
39:54wood
39:54it
39:55was
39:55meant
39:55to
39:55evoke
39:56a
39:56sense
39:56of
39:57remote
39:57wilderness
39:58and
39:59to
39:59make
39:59it
39:59even
40:00more
40:00authentic
40:01Hamilton
40:02employed
40:02a
40:03genuine
40:03hermit
40:04Hamilton
40:09employed
40:10a man
40:11called
40:11Mr
40:11Remington
40:12to live
40:12here
40:13under
40:13very
40:13strict
40:14rules
40:14he
40:15couldn't
40:15cut
40:15his
40:16hair
40:16or
40:16his
40:17fingernails
40:17he
40:19was
40:19only
40:19allowed
40:20the
40:20bible
40:21to
40:21read
40:21and
40:22he
40:22couldn't
40:22leave
40:23the
40:23gardens
40:23all
40:24for
40:24700
40:25guineas
40:26at
40:26the
40:26end
40:26of
40:27seven
40:27years
40:27an
40:28enormous
40:29sum
40:29at
40:29the
40:30time
40:30unsurprisingly
40:34Mr
40:35Remington
40:35did
40:35not
40:36complete
40:37his
40:37contract
40:37after
40:38three
40:38weeks
40:39he
40:39was
40:39supposedly
40:40found
40:40in
40:41the
40:41pub
40:41and
40:42given
40:42the
40:42sack
40:42as
40:55the
40:55visitors
40:55finished
40:56their
40:56walk
40:57they
40:57were
40:57greeted
40:58with
40:58one
40:58final
40:59surprise
41:00the
41:03Turkish
41:03tent
41:04built
41:07of
41:08wood
41:08and
41:08papier
41:09mache
41:09in
41:091760
41:10visitors
41:12would
41:12sit
41:12here
41:13and
41:13enjoy
41:13refreshments
41:14looking
41:15back
41:15over
41:16the
41:16route
41:16that
41:17they'd
41:17taken
41:18this
41:19was
41:20Hamilton's
41:20favourite
41:21view
41:21he
41:22actually
41:22planned
41:22to
41:23build
41:23a
41:23new
41:23house
41:24here
41:24so
41:25that
41:25he
41:25could
41:25enjoy
41:26the
41:26view
41:26from
41:27the
41:27comfort
41:27of
41:28his
41:28living
41:28room
41:28during
41:32its
41:33heyday
41:33in
41:34the
41:3418th
41:34century
41:35Paynes
41:36Hill
41:36welcomed
41:36distinguished
41:37visitors
41:38from
41:38around
41:38the
41:39world
41:39nobles
41:40royals
41:41and
41:41even
41:42two
41:42future
41:43American
41:43presidents
41:44but
41:45this
41:46labour
41:46of
41:46love
41:47would
41:47go
41:47on
41:47to
41:47bankrupt
41:48its
41:48creator
41:49by
41:501773
41:51Hamilton
41:52was
41:52so
41:52deeply
41:53in
41:53debt
41:54he
41:54had
41:54to
41:54sell
41:55Paynes
41:55Hill
41:55after
41:57the
41:57second
41:57world
41:58war
41:58the
41:58site
41:59fell
41:59into
41:59disrepair
42:00until
42:01the
42:011980s
42:03when
42:03the
42:03garden
42:04was
42:04put
42:04into
42:04a
42:05trust
42:05and
42:06painstakingly
42:07brought
42:07back
42:07to
42:07life
42:08looking
42:09across
42:10this
42:10landscape
42:11now
42:11fully
42:12restored
42:12to
42:13its
42:13former
42:13glory
42:14you
42:15can
42:15see
42:15why
42:16the
42:16English
42:16landscape
42:17garden
42:17became
42:18famous
42:19the world
42:19over
42:20by living
42:21beyond his
42:22means
42:23Charles Hamilton
42:24created a kind of heaven on earth
42:26a priceless garden
42:31it may have cost its designer dearly
42:33but we're now forever in his debt
42:36I like that idea of being a hermit but I'm really not sure about not cutting
42:55my nails for seven years
42:58right
42:59I've grown
43:00I've grown some species tulips
43:02so this is tulipa
43:05sylvestris
43:06incredibly beautiful yellow flower that hangs like a bell
43:11grows to about 15-16 centimetres flowers march into april depending on the season
43:20my nickname for it is wet knees reason being I used to grow it in this meadow
43:24and I would be drawn and I would be drawn to the scent you have to get down and really
43:28breathe it in of course you get up because it was spring and you'd have wet knees
43:32and as far as sort of species tulips are concerned these were the ones that were
43:37growing in the wild so everything that's been bred has come ultimately from those
43:41species tulips
43:42and I think with me I've gone full circle and I'm back to so many of those simple plants
43:48but why am I growing them in containers why not just put them out in the garden
43:53well over the last five six years our winters have been unpredictable
43:58so what I do is buy them containerize them probably about September time and then I control
44:04the conditions so these have been back against the hedge out the front there let them grow
44:09on it just means that they're not dealing with those wet conditions
44:12so let's start to dig a hole the good thing about this now yeah they might look a little
44:19bit leaky but it's got a root system on it you know not huge but it's away so if I now
44:25put that in that's got the rest of the season to get itself settled in deal with the winter
44:34and the success rate the moment I've started containerizing stuff has gone through the roof
44:41absolutely brilliant now
44:43sunny conditions heart shade depth wise when I'm planting these in I'm putting
44:51I suppose the bulb about another five six centimeters into the ground just covering up
45:01the lighter foliage really and they'll seed about they'll clump up and I think that's the great
45:08thing about the species tulips instead of the bread tulips is these are only going to get better
45:14whereas the more bred ones yes they're beautiful but you know they do weaken over time
45:21so if you want a little spring color these might be what I'm thinking about we're off to Cornwall now
45:35to meet a man that has a huge passion for crocrosmia
45:39when the sun is high in the sky you need bright colors if you put a bright red crocosmia or yellow
45:55one at the end of the garden your eye is drawn right the way down to it and it really does pick
46:00it up so I think everybody should have at least one my name is mark wash and I live in the beautiful
46:08time of valley and I have a bit of a love affair with crocosmia which are all around me in my garden
46:12there's only eight different species in the wild but there's over 500 hybrids nowadays so plenty for
46:23everyone whether it's small or tall or early flowering or late flowering this there's one for everyone and the
46:29colors range from yellow into all the different tones of orange and salmon and apricot and then
46:35on into the reds getting into deep reds and then you get into bicolored ones and even pinker tones so
46:41there's quite a lot so I guess for many gardeners the reference point for crocosmia is this this is
46:48Montbrecher this is the one that jumps the garden fence and spreads around a lot and these are the flowers
46:54you'll be familiar with but they're so varied there are many different aspects there are
46:58ones like this with small tubular flowers this one grows alongside streams in South Africa
47:04you get arching stems this is totally different to the look of Montbrecher in fact this is one of the
47:12parents of the variety called lucifer that we all know lovely heads up to 30 flowers on on each stem
47:18there and in the wild they go even more varied with these herringbone flowers this one here is
47:24actually pollinated by the malachite sunbird in South Africa and each flower is exactly the same
47:30length and curvature of the beak of the bird so that he can get down there and get the nectar and do the
47:36feeding and do the pollinating at the same time so they're really very varied typically crocosmia have
47:42these lovely sword-shaped leaves which go alongside them sometimes they're unpleated like this one
47:49sometimes they're deeply pleated and huge and sometimes they can even be colors like bronze and
47:55and coppery tones so they vary quite a lot
48:04so my favorite yellow today would be this wonderful variety called lemon spray it's the palest of yellows
48:12amongst crocosmia dainty little flowers and up to 30 blooms on these stems which arch horizontally is
48:20just gorgeous I made a number of trips to South Africa to photograph them all in the wild and one
48:29of the plants I was looking for was this one this is crocosmia matthusiana and I was led to believe it
48:35was growing near the Blyde River Canyon and local children helped us track it down it was growing there on
48:41a pool right near the top of the mountain there with delicate leaves and these beautiful sort of tangerine
48:46orange flowers nodding over the water we do all this breeding to try and create better plants I don't think
48:52we can beat nature nature does it best this is just beautiful just arching little flowers the whole thing
48:58is just dainty and lovely
49:00so one of my favorite reds of the moment is this one here this is one called bees delight and it's a
49:10medium-sized crocosmia packed full of flour very well behaved pleated leaves a good height and it doesn't
49:18spread too much this one stays as a nice clump so one I really like
49:21so they come in all sorts of shapes and sizes crocosmia start as low as two foot I guess the average is about
49:39three foot maybe three and a half foot high that's when they're in flower look at this one here this is
49:44zeal giant I'm six foot two and it's above me and it's a an absolute stonking one and what a beauty
49:55crocosmia are not difficult to grow they like sunshine so if you put a crocosmia in the shade
50:01you'll get lots of leaf and it'll grow but you won't get so many flowers if you don't have space in the
50:07garden then choose a pot of a decent size and make sure there's plenty of love and attention on them they will
50:13reward you they absolutely will give you flower and they do like a bit of feed and that really keeps
50:18them on their toes just like many other herbaceous plants just divide them every three or four years
50:26split the clump apart ideally in the autumn replant it and it'll come back to life the corn is the swollen
50:33base of a stem and it's only the top ones that are really crucial so once you've dug them up take off the
50:39old flowering stem and twist off the lower corms and that's then ready to plant as part of your new clump
50:48and look to set that a good two or three inches down into the ground when you actually put it back into
50:53place and that will form lots of new growth for the following year and keep it in flowering you can
50:58discard these old ones they're not really needed the other way that they actually increase is not just by
51:05growing on the top is by forming stow lawns and stow lawns are little root shoots that grow off from
51:11side to side pull them away chop them off and plant them as part of your clump it's really very easy you
51:20you can do this in the spring as well but autumn is my favorite
51:32i have been breeding them now for around 25 years and have created varieties here such as this one
51:37this is tamar double red which has up to 15 petals per flower compared with the normal six
51:43it's wine red and it's got the rhs award of garden merit and all of these here these are also
51:49varieties that have been created here in cornwall and they all carry good old cornish names and tamar
51:55valley names so this one here is crocosmia cornish copper named after all the copper mines that used
52:01to be around here this is crocosmia tamar glow and all the others carry similar names around so i hope
52:07there's a variety out there that suits every single garden
52:26so talking of summer color we've got a rather big family event early october and guess who's been
52:36asked to grow the flowers yes me so no pressure so what i want to do at the moment is get some
52:46scabies going it's a hardy annual so it'll come up flower do everything it needs to do in that first
52:54season this one's called black knight and grow to about just shy of a meter but really good long stem
53:01on it so it will cut beautifully really really dark maroon ruby color which is the color scheme really
53:09maybe with a few pops of orange there will be a lots of dahlias just simple compost peat free give that a couple of taps
53:19and then what we're going to do very carefully firm not too much but you can still see
53:29there's loads of voids left in there so if you get the sieve put some compost in there
53:37if i now fill those voids that contact when i sow the seed will be so much better
53:49that back down there we will just give this just another little firm
53:59and then just to settle it all we're going to do is just give it a water
54:11all right so by watering that that means that i don't have to water on top of the seeds so you
54:19haven't got any chance of moving around or going over to one corner i've got a little trick for you
54:25because my hands are mucky and wet if i put a load of seed in my hands you can guarantee
54:31it'll stick to it but you just have a little piece of paper fold it in half
54:37and all i need to do now is just finely sow these
54:45and then because the seeds are just a little bit bigger
54:49and i'm just going to very slightly with the dry side press them in
54:53because compost is quite coarse i'm just going to cover this with a little bit of vermiculite
55:01and then what that'll do is i'll hold the seeds in place
55:05the seeds will not dry out these will go in the greenhouse once they've germinated i will prick them out
55:11pot them up grow them on a little bit and hopefully we're gonna have fantastic flower that i can cut
55:17for our very special occasion
55:35it is that time of year when the ground is really starting to warm up you can see around my garden
55:41there's little seedlings coming up all over which is a great sign that you can sow direct into the ground
55:47especially with a lot of our hardy annuals so another thing that i've got growing in the garden is some poppies
55:53which we're gonna use for the event as well but the flower will be over but i love the shape of the seed heads
55:59so all i'm gonna do is prep this soil i've already sort of dug it over a little bit
56:05all i'm trying to do is just create a little seed bed
56:11and then all i'm gonna do now this is not food they're poppy seeds and then all i'm gonna do is
56:17just sprinkle those across really carefully thinly across the top there
56:25so just raking those into the surface i'm gonna repeat that in different places around the garden
56:33but that is another job done but here's some you could get on with over the weekend
56:41of course if you fancy it
56:55if you haven't got around to planting any shallots yet there's still time i've chosen a red skin
57:03variety called red sun gently push the sets into the soil so the tips are just covered i'm allowing 15
57:11centimeters between each one in rows spaced 18 centimeters apart keep well weeded and by july they'll
57:20be ready to harvest if you're training a rose against a wall or a fence it's a good idea to tie it in
57:33get rid of any wayward shoots you don't need then loosely tie in the remainder using soft twine ideally
57:40the branches need to be trained to the horizontal this will encourage more flowers to develop but i've
57:47got a couple of windows in the way so i need to go up before i can go along
58:01with some of my herbs i like to wait until the spring before giving them a haircut the old flowers
58:07help to provide an extra layer of protection over the winter as is the case with this compact form of
58:13oregano they'll look much better as a result putting on a new flush of growth as the weather warms up
58:20isn't it lovely just to spend the day in the garden with some spring sunshine that is it from all of us
58:38here but monty will be back next week at long meadow at 8 p.m so look after yourselves bye-bye
58:57so
59:04you
59:06you
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