The green and rolling countryside of Worcestershire, England, is home to the cider apple orchards which surround the gardens of Pear Tree Cottage. They enjoy a sunny south westerly aspect with sweeping views across to Martley Hillside, Woodbury and Abberley clock tower. The Teme Valley lies just over the hill and, not far away, is the Herefordshire border. Although our climate is temperate, our seasons are often uncertain and always a challenge to a gardener! This began in 2010 & follows the weekly ups and downs of garden work chronicling both successes and failures but, above all, demonstrates the fun enjoyed by three people who regularly garden in all weathers

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28 October 2013

Back to work after more gallivanting!

Chief Blogger is back again following another absence!  This time, exploring a tiny fraction of the Canadian shield in Ontario.  Verdict: a fabulous intensity to the autumn colours of the sugar maples, immense natural beauty and unimaginable amounts of wood and numbers of freshwater lakes!

1 plant=4 pumpkins
Apple crop

Anyway it's back to work and the first job was to pick all the remaining apples and my 4 pumpkins.  Yes, I know there are only 3 in the photo!  That's because the 4th has been made into a very colourful and spicy pumpkin soup.  Frankly, I think that's about the only way pumpkins can be eaten.  There was a surfeit of sickly sweet pumpkin pie in Canada and the soup is so deliciously velvety smooth, I don't know why you would ever want to add sugar and put it in a pie crust.  Sadly, due to the bounteous apple crop this year, we are having to store ours before they can be juiced and bottled.


There is still a surprising  amount of colour in the garden and only a small proportion of leaves have fallen.  I expected to return to bare trees.  It's still very mild and a hardy fuchsia which has managed to grow out between the joints in the stone wall deserves to remain.  Who would combine brilliant pink with violent orange and dare to be seen?  Only in nature such as this Spindle could such a colour combination look so good!

Spindle (Euonymus europaeus)
Hardy Fuchsia














2 October 2013

Lawn Indulgence




On a dark and misty autumnal morning, it was indulgence time for the lawn.
The Green Thumb team arrived promptly with scarification and aeration equipment as well as an impressive Stihl powered sweeper. The aim is to remove all the dead thatch without ripping out the live grass.  Having checked the height of the tines on the scarifier to ensure the grass isn't scalped, and done a few test runs, it was time for the off!




It's always surprising how much bulk is actually removed.  The aerator removes plugs of soil of about 2 inches.  Ideally, the remaining holes should have lawn sand brushed into them to preserve the improved drainage created.  Must have a word with Mark!  Because of persistent wet weather, we missed out last autumn and following the heatwave this summer, the poor old lawn was really overdue for some T.L.C..
Anyway, in no time at all, treatments were finished and sweeping up completed with all sweepings deposited in the compost heap.  Result: a tidy treated lawn which should look amazing by spring!!
Well done all round!

Thatch residue and one finished and tidy lawn!





Still Standing!



Here's our faithful Chief Gardener having a much deserved drink having run a marathon - that's a whole 26 long miles in under 5 hours on Sunday in Nottingham. How good is that?  Congratulations again Chris!

29 September 2013

Stoke Bliss & District Agricultural Improvement Society Annual Competitions 2013 - Burton Court Farm


Some of the lucky entries
Another year - another show and a few more family successes this year!  See link to photos of other family members, their triumphs and attempts! 


Home produce, bar & lunch venue
It was a surprise to win anything vaguely horticultural as having just been away, it was luck and no preparation whatsoever.  The Dahlias were just picked at random that morning and then I broke the head of the very best specimen!  The rose had been in the fridge for 4 days and the Begonia was one I propagated last year and snatched from the conservatory. As for beans, they were what was left after 2 weeks absence and lack or water. Lots of luck and no skill - unlike cake and bread making! The photo categories were very difficult and 'sunsets' was the only class for which I had lots and then I couldn't 

A 2 year old shire
make up my mind!  Anyway it was another lovely day dry with the smell of freshly turned earth in the air and the very special treat of a Spitfire demonstrating barrel rolls and loops over Shelsley - not to mention a most excellent roast pork lunch! The only disappointment was the fact that, despite the presence of a well turned out pair of Shires, there wasn't a single horse actually ploughing this year - sniff!  Everyone I spoke to were all of the same opinion and all felt that it was a real shame.  Anyway, it was back to work and mowing when we got home and dark when we called it a day and went indoors - with a 6.30am start: another long but successful day!

26 September 2013

DANS LE JARDIN!









We could hardly go to France without admiring their bedding styles.  After all - they invented it!!  I did like the softer and blowsier styles of planting in Calais.  Even on a dull and blustery evening, the borders were alight with colour and positively zinging!


Back Home!

Chief Blogger and Head Gardener is back home from gallivanting around France and Switzerland for a couple of weeks.  The girls are also back from their holiday at Newland Grange (http://www.newlandpoultry.com/) with Sarah where they stayed in a 5***** luxury Egglu.  Newland Grange is a fabulous place to visit!  It is so clean and well ordered with many and various breeds of poultry all kept with a high degree of professional expertise (no, not eggspertise!)  I know I always say this but, it really is worth calling in.  They also make fabulous shepherds' huts and really pretty poultry houses as well as having a shop which supplies all poultry requisits.  The girls came home (with all their eggs) in a pet carrier and rushed up to perch on their chair after first snacking on apples.  Percy's tail feathers always droop making her appear rather more melancholy unlike the others.  It's all a ruse as, she was first at the apple rack!
The girls come home!

Thunbergia on the arch
Al's (Costco) Dahlias
Despite the dull and overcast day, the garden seemed alight with Dahlias and Michaelmas Daisies all covered in insect life - wanted and unwanted!  The former were full of earwigs and slugs and the latter was swarming with bees, hoverflies and butterflies.  The Black Eyed Susan (Thunbergia) is also a mass of bloom and completely clothing the sides of the new arch.  The Cosmos had put on more growth and the roses were enjoying a second flush of flowers.  In our absence, Chris had kept everything as neat as a new pin and the lawns were all mowed and edged and hedges all trimmed.  What a star and... definitely worth an H.P.A.!!

Insects on the Michaelmas Daisies

8 September 2013

Acer Pollarding.........a little late!

A sorry looking Acer
We have this dear old Acer.  It's a variegated variety, name unknown but a much loved resident along the Fernery path.  The trouble is, it was originally planted much too close to other trees (one of which has since died) and as a direct result it was very one sided with weighty crossing branches which had been striving to reach light.  A good 80% had reverted but it is an otherwise healthy but misshapen and very unbalanced with most of the weight overhanging and touching the hedge.  We didn't want to pollard it prior to open gardens in June so, we took a very deep breath and did it on Saturday.  To add to our problems: as well as adding shade for the Fernery, it hides (or rather hid) an electricity pole and transformer.  Luckily another mature tree stands behind the pole, but for which would now be highlighted or rather silhouetted against the skyline along with the myriad of other overhead wires which blight our lanes and countryside.  Well, the deed is now done and we can only hope that it throws out new growth quickly.  We have left younger growth to help draw up the sap (and to partially disguise overhead wires!) I know that pruning Acers in the spring is not advised as they can bleed and that, if it has to be done at all, it should be in summer.  We are advised that autumn is not a good time either due to the possibilities of fungal spores entering through the cuts so, let's hope we are not too late and that we have the predicted Indian summer!

What's missing?
It meant, what seemed like 85000 journeys dragging big old heavy branches down the road to the bonfire in order to burn the brash and log up the larger branches. We certainly kept our very own resident pyromaniac busy and I may just be exaggerating the number of journeys!  Other weekend jobs included the removal of 2 conifers which had outgrown their spaces in front of the conservatory and, funnily enough, they have not been missed in the slightest. The Hebes and remaining Lavenders were also sculpted into cushion shapes and the Marjoram, which had all finished flowering was cut back.  I do find that this helps them keep a nice dense and compact shape.

I had also had a good sort out in the greenhouse before Chris arrived.  Old tomato plants which had finished fruiting were disposed of as were the dreaded and useless specimens of Geraniums from Vernon Specialist Geraniums.  They were without doubt the worst specimens I've ever seen or attempted to grow. There is at least room for less hardy's if we have any early frosts (shudder!)

Al at work
Woodbury rising above the drifting smoke

All in all, things were looking surprisingly tidy by the end of the day - as the smoke from Al's bonfire drifted low and hung in the valley beneath a pretty biblical cloud formation.
More photos at:
https://picasaweb.google.com/100788191989823327785/SeptemberWorkAtPTC

We won't mention what happened to Chris when pouring his beer in the kitchen but I did send him the photos!!