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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26 February 2015

Less of a Meadow - More of an Orchard!

After Saturday's planting, I can now claim that we have an orchard of our own!!  I have hesitated to say that because we are surround by vast acreages of serious orchards.  Wikipedia's & Google's definition of an orchard is:

1 tree with 3 grafted varieties: Cox's Orange Pippin, Sunset & Herefordshire Russet
Orchard is an intentional planting of trees or shrubs that is maintained for food production. Orchards comprise fruit, vegetable, and nut-producing trees which are grown for commercial production. Orchards are also sometimes a feature of large gardens, where they serve an aesthetic as well as a productive purpose.[1] A fruit garden is generally synonymous with an orchard, although it is set on a smaller non-commercial scale and may emphasize berry shrubs in preference to fruit trees. Most temperate-zone orchards are laid out in a regular grid, with a grazed or mown grass or bare soil base that makes maintenance and fruit gathering.



Old English: ortgeard; the first element from Latin hortus 'garden', the second representing yard.

PTC's very own orchard




Well, we have done our best to plant out in a grid but that was difficult given the fact that we already had an aging pear and 2 fairly mature apple trees which don't follow our grid pattern.  From the photo, it appears that the spacing between them is enormous but it really isn't.  We were determined that they should not be crowded and that each specimen should have room to grown and mature.  I have yet to tie on our copper labels as I'm waiting to see if any copper wire can be found.  Fingers crossed!

Serious Outbreak of Hyacinth Flop!








As predicted, we have another outbreak of Hyacinth flop this year.  In anticipation of this outbreak an following an attack of great foresight, I cut some little 'Y' shaped mini supports from Birch and Hazel twigs back in the autumn. These really do make the perfect supports.  They look entirely natural and there's no fiddly tying up with ugly string.  They are easily inserted and easily removed for use with the next outbreak.  All in all, the perfect cure!!  If only all cures were so easy!




22 February 2015

Orchard in an Orchard!!

At LONG last, we found time to invest in some additional fruit trees for what we can now call our orchard!  We bought a King James II Chelsea Mulberry. a Rivers Early Prolific Plum, a Lord Hindlip Apple and a family tree with 3 grafted varieties: Cox's Orange Pippin, Hereford Russet and a Sunset.  We also planted 2 very young cob nuts. These fruit trees all came from Frank P. Matthews who are pretty local to us and I do not exaggerate when I say it is 'Tree Heaven'!!  They guarantee that pot grown trees have only been in a pot for a single season so there's no poverty stricken pot bound specimens and, even better, they also sell bare rooted specimens.  It's an astonishing and impressive nursery and visits should be mandatory!!  Say no more.  They even provide their own named copper labels AND even the wire ready to be twisted on in spirals so that it never harms the tree by becoming too tight.

I should perhaps mention (for those who don't already know) King James II bought this fruiting Mulberry tree to feed his silk worms and because it was entirely the wrong mulberry leaf, all his silk worms dies and no silk was ever produced!

All our little trees are now planted and we didn't have to worry about self fertile varieties as we're surrounded by another 24,000 apple trees!!

20 February 2015

Cheering up the kitchen sink & Speeding up Spring!

After 1 day indoors
After 3 days in doors!

We can get a little impatient at this time of year so I've been speeding up spring! I have been cutting Prunus twigs, arranging them in water in the kitchen and forcing the flower buds to open well ahead of their natural timing.  I know that many people smash the woody stems and leave them to stand in water in a cooler room first but, I find this also works well and the buds will open in about 3 days depending on room temperature.  Even when the flowers drop, the leaf buds will continue to open.  The same can be done with Forsythia and Horse Chestnut bubs look very dramatic when forced.  A few spring flowers in an old teapot can cheer up the kitchen sink on a dull and miserable day - and we can never have too much cheer at the sink!


Spring in February?


In between the dark, mizzly rainy days, we have had the odd sunny and frosty day and, yes!  More Snowdrops and Hellebores are popping up in the Woodland Border. In the greenhouse, Hyacinths and Tete-a-tetes have popped up along with more Pansies and Polyanthus so, it's looking pretty colourful.  The Violas have battled with our winter weather and some have won, others are looking a little care worn!  The Irises are beginning to bloom - all in all, on these precious sunny days, it's looking really quite spring-like!

19 February 2015

Wild White Winifred is Well...........again!

Fiona & Winifred
Henny Penny, Cicely, Fiona, Winifred & Marigold
Following a period of looking most unwell and going through 'mini moult', Winifred has made a full recovery and is even laying again.  We were most concerned for her and had sought advice from Sarah of Newland Poultry who made an instant and accurate diagnosis.  Winifred had chosen the coldest and frostiest period to lose all her neck feathers.  Her (floppy) comb had lost all is colour and she looked extremely sorry for herself.  Although the smallest of our flock of five, she had always been by far the bossiest and the most prolific layer and so it was a shame to see her looking so poorly and vulnerable.  I'm thrilled to say that she is now fully recovered and back to her normal bossy self!  We are lucky to have a very happy flock and unlike others we've had, these five display very little spite.  Hens are very unforgiving birds and are often super spiteful to each other so it's a treat to see such a contented flock. Hopefully, we're doing something right!
Winifred

17 February 2015

February Border Work.

Woodbury Hill from the Lower Lawn
'The Border With Nothing In It!'

Without doing too much trampling, we have managed to actually do some border work.  In a border known as 'The Border with Nothing In It'.  Long story!  It lies at the bottom of our little orchard and is south of the Henclosure.  Fair enough - it is a bit of a hotch potch of a really nice shrub rose a couple of Lilacs, some Sedums, a young Hornbeam an old coppiced Hazel some Pulmonarias, an Epimedium, an ancient, weak and woody Weigela, a Hemerocallis and a low spreading conifer to say nothing of a HUGE amount of bindweed!  Being at the bottom of a 15' slope it tends to be rather wet.  However, Sedums were deadheaded, Lamium as well as the usual weeds were all removed.  The soil was turned over and the lawn edged.  The ground was wetter than ideal but we tiptoed around without compacting the soil and it really did look much improved  The days are noticeably lengthening but, looking across to Woodbury, we still have the long early morning shadows.