Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts

Saturday, 10 July 2021

My Andalusian Garden - House Plants Outdoors



It’s about time I restarted this blog and came out of hiding. For the past year or so I spent a lot of time in reclusiveness with no desire to expose myself to the world. During the first pandemic year which coincided with my father’s strength diminishing and up to his death this spring (luckily not from COVID but simple old age) I used my time at home to sort through my memories. He had handwritten his memoirs from 1931 onwards and had
 finished last year just in time. I copied them down into a book for my family and my sisters’ families with letters and photographs. Somehow this seems to be a time for introspection and integration of one’s past and present. 

At the same time the renovation of our Andalusian “Casa de Verano” was finished and we started working on the garden. The construction workers had left the garden in the usual mess, cement, broken tiles, waste, compacted soil everywhere on the terrain. After a year of hard work the final pieces of irrigation were installed last week. 

I have gone through a steep learning curve  not only about mediterranean plants, but plants from all over the world's warm climates, Australian, Californian, South Asian, even East African that we try out here. I learn about different aspects of temperature, light, sun, wind and water and their interactions and changing conditions throughout the year. Each plant that we try out, has given me new insights, often surprising and unexpected. Our plot in this area on the western mediterranean coast, 200 m above sea level and 7 km from the sea sits on top of a hill with strong winds mostly from the west, cold in winter, occasionally searing hot in summer, but sometimes wind changes direction and comes from the east as well, and then mostly cold. We experience no frost, but last winter's temperatures dropped to a minimum of 3° C for short periods in certain areas of the garden, as my minimax thermometers tell me that I have  deployed in strategic places across our hill. 

So where do I start, one and a half acres of mostly empty soil apart from a few olive trees, pines and macchia shrubs? A huge empty canvas to be filled with shapes and colours. 

When you move into a new home, it is nice to bring some familiar faces, to furnish a new place with a few pieces of family furniture to make it less alien. I like to bring things from all stages in my life together in the places where I live, whether it be furniture, decorative pieces or art. So naturally, I decided to treat my garden the same way. What's easiest then  than to start with what I know from a different setting: house plants from my German home ?



Hibiscus rosa-sinensis "Varie
gata"


A variegated Hibiscus: This goes back to 1982 to my aunt, a long-retired pediatrician, that I stayed with over several summers decades ago, helping in her medical practice and trying to decide whether to study biology or medicine. I had taken those first cuttings forty years ago and propagated them ever since, so this is a really "old" plant

It is a very delicate plant that thrives in our dining room and has created a large bush that reaches up to the ceiling at nearly four meters, flowering occasionally in bright red. In the rather dark German dining room, this plant develops large green leaves, some of them - towards the windows - variegated, sprinkled white, where twigs reach into more light. Flowers appear occasionally between November and May, never more than five or so at a time. I had tried allowing the plant summer vacations on the terrace, but it never enjoyed it and burnt in strong sunlight.

I made fresh cuttings two years ago, they produced roots in water easily and last autumn I transferred them to Spain and into the soil on the eastern side of our hill with sunshine in the morning and shade in the afternoon. Here, leaves are wildly sprinkled green-white and much more showy than at home, but they stay smaller. Last winter the bush lost all leaves and might be deciduous here, as are many Hibiscus. Here in Andalusia we are waiting for the bush to grow to be able to produce those striking bright red flowers.

 

Chlorophytum comosum

This plant goes equally back a long time  to my childhood. It is one of the easiest plants for indoors and equally easy outdoors here. It has produced plenty of "Kindel" and we are using it as a pretty and healthy groundcover with a tropical appearance.





Monstera deliciosa

A very reliable house plant, I have two versions here: the classical "swiss cheese" and a variegated version. Both took half a year to establish and did not make any new leaves then, but are busily producing new leaves now. They survived last winter and we hope that they will cover a large area and climb up trees. The most spectacular example I have seen  in a large garden in South Africa where it climbed at least 8 m high up a palm tree.  



Epipremnum aureum

This "bathroom" plant is a little more demanding outdoors  requiring a constant temperature range and high humidity. Last winter was a little too cold and it lost most leaves, but has returned to try again. It may need more moisture and we are planning to install a misting irrigation in addition to the ugly agricultural brown dripping pipes that I hope will be covered with leaves soon. 



Clivia miniata, C. miniata "Aurea" and C. nobilis,

This easy going plant I know since childhood sitting on the window sills of my grandmother's living room. It is drought resistant and virtually unkillable in dark dry rooms and in my memory associated with boring 1970 restaurants. But not only: The most spectacular example, which makes this plant worth having and striving to give it perfect growth conditions, I have seen potted in a seminary in Brixen, South Tyrol in the cloister: A long row of very large pots all in orange bloom over Easter, when I stayed with my aunt for some pediatrician's conference. Cool in winter, warm bright shade in summer will bring the plant to bloom. I planted three different kinds: Clivia miniata in the orange and yellow forms and Clivia nobilis with hanging flowers.    



Clivia nobilis


Stephanotis floribunda

Sitting next to the Clivia on my grandmother's windowsill in the 1960s was Stephanotis floribunda. Here I have planned for it to climb a garage wall up to my younger son's balcony. The strong night scent is heavenly and I hope he and any guests will appreciate it. So far it seems to thrive, only about one meter left to climb :) which should be achieved in the next few weeks. 

Stephanotis floribunda


Anthurium andraeanum

Not a plant that I ever tried to grow indoors so far, but to my amazement it is thriving beautifully here in deep shade unter a camphor tree and has thrown out many new leaves and flowers. The effect is so tropical and lush with its shiny huge leaves that it turned into a favourite quickly. 




I can recommend trying whatever plant you want to grow from the house plant selection in any garden center - it may be very rewarding and if it won't grow, don't hesitate to throw it on the compost heap and use the freed up space to try something new. 




Tuesday, 19 December 2017

From My Garden: Seasons' Greetings !


In the deepest German winter, when the lights come on in the morning and are never turned off until bedtime, it is hard to imagine that spring and the reawakening of nature is just around the corner, a few months away. 
As I know for sure that a winter depression will befall me each year, I decided last spring to make a series of photographs of my garden in all seasons to have something to look forward to. I chose the daily view from my kitchen window for this project. 


Autumn view

The window goes north, so this corner of my garden is quite dark at all times of the year. When planning this corner, I devised a theme in green and white with bright leaves and white flowering shrubs that would be nice to brighten up the area. 

Evergreen shrubs with interesting varied leaves dominate both sides of the path. Cephalotaxus harringtonia, the "head yew" with its distinctive needle heads, one for each year of growth, sits in a sheltered position in front of the wall of the house next to Camellia "Shiragiku" (behind) who needs a sheltered spot as well. It has been growing and thriving in this spot for the past 14 years. It prefers not to be exposed to wintry sun, so a spot facing west against a wall is always good for not so hardy camellias. In front, on the right hand side of the Cephalotaxus, I used to have a Buxus elegantissima, a white box tree, very rare, since 2003. Unfortunately, last year it succumbed to the ugly Chinese Buchszünssler moth and had to be removed. 


April

Underneath we have hellebores, Symphytum grandiflorum album and on the corner the unusual Saxifraga pennsylvanica with its memorable name, which sends up a flowering stem each May. 





On the left hand side, we have several white-flowering Viburnums, underplanted with hosta, wild strawberries, sweet woodruff (Galium odoratum) and pink azaleas in spring.



May


In the back before the path turns to the right and on around the house there is a white-leaved Euonymus, an ivy trimmed as hedge and Viburnum plicatum to the right. A red hazelnut is towering over them.

Between Cephalotaxus and the white Buxus we had planted Rodgersia. Now that the Buxus is gone, it enjoys the added space and has grown and filled the spot with its large pinnate chestnut-like leaves which turn a beautiful bright yellow-orange before they fall off.





October





Seasons' Greetings! 

Friday, 2 September 2016

Garden Visit : Hermannshof, Weinheim


"Warum in die Ferne schweifen, sieh, das Gute liegt so nah"   - appropriating Goethe, we visited Schau- und Sichtungsgarten Hermannshof, not over in England but on our doorstep, 60 km down south in Weinheim, a German private botanical garden, owned by the Freudenberg family since the 19th century.

This garden has a completely different microclimate, mediterranean and with the ability to grow many exotic and rare plants. Close to the entrance they cultivate plants that neither of us had ever heard of: e.g. Dysosma "China-leaf" in at least four different species. 


Dysosma 


Further down into the garden, we found many more unusual plants or unusual use of plants. 



 Peucedanum officinale looks a bit like fennel, parts of it have been used as medicine since the 17th century. I had never heard of it before. 



something poking up through Angels' Hair







    something familiar: Federmohn "Coral Plume"


the wrong time of year for blue-bells - these are ageratums !



thriving Echinaceae

We came away impressed and with many ideas for our own garden, e.g. the Ageratum underplanting, a yellow flowering Kirengeshoma from the Hydrangea-family to try out and some high growing Bistorta in different colours - and Paul with ideas for exports for his clients in Spain ...

many Bistorta in shades of red, pink and white

Monday, 18 July 2016

Visiting Sissinghurst Castle Garden






Visiting Sissinghurst Castle Garden seems like stepping into the reference book on perfect English gardening. The garden is so well known from Vita Sackville-West's writings about her creation which she planned together with her husband Harold Nicholson, that a visit feels a bit like an inspection round, checking off images in your head: the white garden, the rose garden, the lime walk, the nut garden .... Her columns on gardening, compiled in her four "In my garden" books in the cycle of the seasons and Tony Lord's excellent photographic book and all the later books about it helped me develop my first own garden twenty years ago. What to grow unter hazelnuts? Which old roses can be recommended? I tried to obtain a Stewartia pseudocamellia, Millium effusum or Aster frikartii "Mönch" ... which most gardeners in Germany had never heard of then. 

But books and written words are permanently fixed, while a garden is always developing and provides fleeting images only. Great expectations for the visit, and also slight worries whether the gardens would be able to live up to these expectations, decades after the property joined the National Trust's portfolio and the creator is gone. 
These are photographs I made during our visit in June.

The White Garden:


view from the tower towards the white garden and the Kentish countryside




Peony-shaped white poppy "White Cloud"; 
A gardener told me, the heads are so heavy that they droop in rains and even here on this picture when it was dry. I will try them nevertheless ... 








Rosa mulliganii on the pergola not yet in flower




The Rose Garden:





I had not seen these Allium christophii in such mass plantings before - usually they are used  in singles. These clouds though look great! Another idea to try out... 

A view from the top: 




Panorama towards the long main house and library: 







View towards the tower where Vita had her study



Stewartia pseudocamellia ? 









lupins ...



.... and delphiniums


 a pale Kniphofia 


 red and yellow Aquilegia



 difficult to grow Eremurus



 Martagon lilies



 view from the pond

the lime walk in the background is under reconstruction, no Aster frikartii "Mönch" today


wild meadow  


Welcome to the shop ...