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

Translate

18 February 2023

Bad Day at Black Rock!

 Have you ever had one of those gardening days when NOTHING goes right???  Well I certainly had one today! Apart from toppling over in a border - to be fair: it slopes and I just lost my balance.  Having rolled ober backwards down the slop, Chris tried to pull me up from the side - a complete loss of dignity but no injuries. 

Having recovered, I walked all the way from the bonfire to the tool shed (longest distance in the garden) to fetch the muck fork and couldn't find it - at all.  Thinking that we must have left it out somewhere, I eventually returned empty handed.  Needless to say it was standing in its proper place (according to Chris) as he appeared carrying it! Sigh!

Then I was wrong about the make of my treasured hand fork and, as if all of that was enough, I accidentally tipped out the contents of a very full wheelbarrow before it got to the bonfire!


Apart from that, we moved a Hydrangea and an Abelia - both big shrubs so, fingers crossed, trimmed a Berberis and removed a lot of ivy from beneath it oh, and I modelled a rather large hat while Chris had a nap under the Berberis!

05 February 2023

MORE HORTICULTURAL IMPROVISATION!

 For ages a self seeded Cotoneaster franchetii has been growing between the end of the Yew sofa and the edge of the path. It's a silly place but we never got around to moving it or even finding another place for it.  When walking past it, I kept nipping out the side shoots rather than allow it to branch out!  Eventually the single leader got to that annoying height and whipped across faces when walking up the path. No more!!  With the aid of a couple of pieces of old angle iron driven into the ground and a Wisteria offcut wired to the angle iron - hey presto!  A homemade and somwehat rustic garden arch.  It won't be very long lived but it seemed such a shame to ditch the Cotoneaster and now, we can at least walk beneath it - in safety! 


29 January 2023

Solo Saturday Slog!



 It's pretty unusual for me to have a Saturday alone in the garden but Chris was away urgently planting bareroot copper beeches.  I actually finished my greenhouse clear up by sorting out the corner underneath/behind the lemon tree - not exactly easy access but I won the battle!

My next challenge was to prune a young apple tree - a Lord Hindlip on to which a Bramley was grafted about 3 years ago.  Both grafts successfully grew and are now quite strong.  Pruning was hardly difficult but managing the steps on uneven sloping ground definitely was!!
 
That done, I trimmed the flagpole Yew which was missed earlier then onto the Senecio - as we call it.  I think it's actually Brachyglottis sunshine.  Anyway, it's meant to be a ringed doghnut shape in which Sinful Cynthia stands or rather flaunts!  I know Chris would have done a better job!  

A major tidy up of pots and containers was next - trimming the Erigeron karvinskianus, ditching dead cyclamens (all victims of heavy frosts), removing dead scented Nemesias and, after another trip to Newent Plant Centre, planting a new Hellebore nigra in the gap left in the dragon pot by last year's Skimmia (which now happily resides in a border). Note the height of the narcissi and it's still only January.



23 January 2023

Jack Frost Makes a Visit!

 A few photos of the garden after Jack Frost came visiting.






Thyme Square Tidy Up

 Despite the winter weather and hard frosts, there's always work to be done in the garden!  The hedge around Thyme Square had a Pugh makeover and Lewd's niche was reshaped in line with Rude's and Nude's - our 3 statues who reside in the Square. Before long , the niches will be cloaked in green again. After a good clear up of hedge trimmings and dead leaves, it was all left looking pretty immaculate .....for now!



04 January 2023

OUT NOW!

SURPRISE START TO 2023


We are both surprised & thrilled to read a 7 page article published in the February issue of The English Garden Magazine witten by  Vivienne Hambly with photographs by Ian Thwaites.  We hope that it will result in more visitors and money raised for charity.  On a dreary January day, it's nice to see the garden in May!!

The English Garden Magazine - February 2023


30 December 2022

UNEXPECTED PHOTOGRAPHIC RECOGNITION!

 This simple photo (taken in the garden last spring) was spotted on Instagram by Camilla Bassett-Smith, editor of The Daffodil Society Journal and The Royal Horticultural Society Daffodil, Snowdrop and Tulip Yearbook. As a result, we expect to see it in print next year!!


Narcisuss x tete boucle