Isn’t the hot, dry weather excellent for getting around to
all those odd jobs outside?
I have put off painting our white wall for the last six
years because there’s generally a risk of rain but could procrastinate no
longer and my wall, like many others on our road has had a fresh coat.
I can imagine the paint manufacturers have seen very little
or no sun for the last few weeks because they have been too busy mixing the
exterior paint to cater for the demand.
I’ve also been making a new perennial bed for the ever
growing plants I got earlier this year. Most of them have outgrown their 2
litre pots and were drying out on an hourly basis in the sun. I’ve put the
plants quite close together into the bed as I’ll be moving a lot of them to a
more permanent spot next year in the front garden.
When I dug the holes for the plants I filled them up with
water before putting the rootball in. This saved a lot of watering afterwards
and there will be very little evaporation and hopefully I won’t really need to
water them again before the rain comes. I have also put old broken clay pots
and small upright bamboo poles in the gaps to hopefully keep the dogs from
sitting on the plants which seems to be one of their favourite things to do in
the hot weather. I have a clump of montbretia with a hole in the centre where
they like to sit, as it must be a bit cooler in there for them in the shade.
Some larger containers of strawberries need quite a lot of
attention too. We’re trying to save water so the butts are emptying fast and we
are also putting the washing up water into the flower pots too to cut down the
demand a little bit, they don’t seem to mind.

Plants for Hot
Weather
We are really grateful of plants that can tolerate dryness
and the silver hairy varieties are perfect for this type of weather. A lot of plants like this come from the
Mediterranean where it might not rain for months.
Aromatic silver-leafed plants, and those with pungent
foliage, produce an oily film on their leaves that acts as a sunscreen while
minimising water loss. Most develop deep root systems that penetrate metres
into the ground allowing them to reach water reserves. Most flower in summer
and their sugar-rich nectar pleases the bees.

Other plants store water either in their leaves and stems. Succulents,
house leeks (sempervivums) and sedums shrug off drought and never flag, thanks
to their plump foliage.
Some plants cope by developing long tap roots as a
water-seeking device. Poppies, lupins, hollyhocks and lots of umbellifers rely
on tapping into moisture underground.
If you are planting now add organic matter to the soil,
water the hole and use mulches to retain moisture after planting. Hold off on
any fertilizers to if possible as this can encourage too much lush growth which
may flop in the summer sun, require extra watering, and be affected by frost in
the winter.
Fruit
The warm weather has also produced an abundance of sweet
peas. If you pick them regularly they produce even more, in much the same way
that mange tout do, twice a day we’re getting a bowl full of the sweet
pods. It’s been an excellent few weeks
for fruit production too with the strawberries, currants and raspberries all
fully ladened ready for a daily pick.