Saturday, October 27, 2018

Painting Winter Heathers



 Painted heather


I’ve been making a new bed along a wall this week. 

It’s to house my creeping thyme plants that have come on well over the summer in their small cells. Now is a good time to be setting up any new beds and borders before it gets too wet and will also spare the house and carpets getting covered in mud.

The soil in the new bed is quite fibrous as I put cardboard over the grass two years ago, but it’s full of lovely worms. I’ve sieved the top soil and any large clumps of fibre have been taken out and composted, which has left me with a lovely fine planting medium for the small plugs. I’ll keep an eye on any chickweed coming up and remove that too because like the chamomiles, thyme plants don’t really do well without us having to intervene occasionally and take out a few self-set weeds.
I’m starting small with an area of around 10’x2’ and can expand as the plants develop.  I might even get my whole lawn made from thyme just like gardens used to be a hundred and fifty years ago before lawn mowers.

Heather Sprayed with food colouring
Heathers are looking great in the shops and gardens at the moment. Winter flowering types are very popular and will brighten up a garden or planter well into spring.  One type of heather (calluna vulgaris ‘garden girls’) is particularly popular as the flowers are very bright and will last months because the actual flowers don’t open up, they stay as tidy buds. There’s plenty of colour range too from whites to pinks and purple. 

I did notice that the plants being sold at a garden centre this week were being sprayed different colours even though they were in flower. I’m not really sure why growers need to put colour on the plants; maybe they just weren’t bright enough. (They are proving to be the best sellers around our local garden centres so the growers are doing something right)

We’re used heathers sprayed with fake snow in December but colouring already colourful plants is a bit baffling. The dye used is generally a natural food colouring so it won’t harm the plants and will eventually wash off leaving you with (I presume) a dull looking plant that you can put out in the garden to fill up a gap. Either that or trim it back and get the food colouring out of the cupboard and get spraying. The only difference will be that the dye colours the whole plant-stems and leaves- as well as the flowers so they look a bit artificial, but at a glance you wouldn’t notice.

That reminds me of an experiment I used to do for the children when they were young. I’d choose a white flower, a rose or carnation, but any single stem flower will probably do. This is fun to do and usually leaves the stems their natural colour.

Colour changing flowers
What you need:
  • Fresh white flowers, carnations are best
  • Food colouring
  • Warm water
  • Several small jars to put in different colours
What to do:
Fill the jars 2/3 full with warm water.

Add 15-20 drops of food colouring to the vase. You can add different colours into each vase to see if some colours work better than others.

Cut the stem of the flower (adult stuff) at a slant. Put a flower into each of the vases and wait…
Let the flowers sit in the water and keep checking to see when the colour starts to change.  It should take about six hours, but it could take longer depending on the plant

Some colours might work faster than others and see what happens when to swap the flowers into different vases.

Salvia Artemis
I came across a Silver Sage, Salvia argentea in the garden centre and couldn’t resist stroking the soft furry leaves.  Usually sage plants are grown for their flowers but these short lived perennials or usually grown as biennials are mainly used for their foliage.  

They like dry settings with partial shade and will tolerate a mild frost in the garden especially if you keep the old leaves on the crown as they die back in the winter (like you would a gunnera).  The following year the plants flower so you can collect the seeds and grow some new plants for the borders.  If you want the plants to live longer just cut off the flowering spikes as they appear, this should keep them looking good throughout most of next summer.

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