Gardening – Part Two


This should have been part one, but I accidentally mixed them up! Enjoy all the same…- Natalie

How many kinds of wildflowers grow,
In an English country garden?
We’ll tell you now of some that we know,
Those we miss, you’ll surely pardon!
Daffodils, heart’s ease and phlox,
Meadowsweet and lady smocks,
Gentian, lupine and hollyhocks,
Roses, foxgloves, snowdrops, and forget-me-nots,
In an English country garden!

- English Folk Song

Spring has been slow in coming our way this year, but it has given us more time to look at gardening books and catalogs. I’ll discuss our vegetable garden in a future post, but for now I’d like to share a little about our flower garden.

Mom and I both enjoy the look of “English cottage” gardening. While that can be a bit hard to define, it’s basically the opposite of a “formal” look. English cottage gardening utilizes old-fashioned plants like bleeding hearts and hollyhocks, and herbs like lavender and catmint. Instead of a perfectly shaped tea rose, we delight in climbers and ramblers. So cottage gardening might be described as relaxed, informal, and homey. At least that’s how Mom and I view it!

There are several great books on cottage gardening. My favorite is Margaret Hensel’s English Cottage Gardening, worth buying for the pictures alone! There are chapters on selecting plants, color combinations, and garden layout ideas. One of the best parts is the gardens you get to “tour,” seeing exactly how people have made such beautiful spaces.

Another great book (especially for ideas and general oohing-and-ahhing) is Tasha Tudor’s Garden. This lady has the most lovely garden! Mom and I get inspired every time we page through this book. Both of these are at our local library (although we never check them out since we have them in our personal library as well).

I would post a picture of our garden, but at the moment there are just little green tufts here and there. I should call them little green toughs, because they are braving the cold and even snow that continues to hang around. As I write this, it’s 40 degrees, and we had yet another dusting of the white stuff this morning! When things warm up a bit and the garden looks better, I’ll post some pictures. For now, I’ll list some of our favorite plants:

bleeding hearts (pink and white)
columbine
Jacob’s ladder
creeping thyme
catmint
hollyhocks
purple coneflower
mountain bluet
cleome
… and of course the spring bulbs – tulips, daffodils, crocus, etc.

- by Jeannie Castleberry
March 28, 2008
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One Response to Gardening – Part Two

  1. 1
    Heartful of Hope says:

    Jeannie, I loved this post – and the song in the beginning is charming!!

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