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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4 June 2020

THE GIN SEAT IS BORN!

 'Nuff said - except it was too wet for proper garden work! (The old brass taps don't show up very well against the chestnut pergola).


Look closely above the seat!

Well!  It's always good to have a choice!!


2 June 2020

RAIN NEEDED!

The Dahlia Border

The Vegetable Plot.


As for the rest of the garden... it's dry!  VERY dry.  VERY dry everywhere!  Like everyone else, we're desperate for rain. Am managing to keep the vegetables watered and thanks to Chris's black gold, they look really healthy. Pea germination was pretty appalling and we'll be lucky to enjoy a single meal.



Saturday was spent digging round the chickens bamboos and removing all the runners.  A hard and dusty job but Chris keeps them under control.  We then picked all the Sweet Williams prior to removal and to make space for the Dahlias.  Picking flowers proved not to be Chris's favourite occupation!! There were complaints that it should be forestry not floristry!

The soil is very poor in this bed so we enriched it with what we had to hand - bonemeal, chicken pellets and Growmore.  We then laid down the seep hose to keep their roots gently watered.

Buckets of cut Sweet Williams

Greenhouse Obsessed!


Now the greenhouse is completely finished, I can hardly keep out of it!! Absolutely any excuse for another visit!! The new sill tiles are so much easier to keep clean compared with the rough blue brick and they look a zillion times nicer.  The brick walls have been painted right up to the sills so the modern blue bricks are no longer visible. And as for the floor........it's more than a girl could ever have wished for.



After my flooding debacle, Chris has fitted a full-proof anti-flooding device in the way of a two way tap so excess water from the indoor water tank is carried outside and not into the well beneath the floor grids!  Still, it was a great test of Dave's electrics seeing them all underwater and still illuminated!!  I'll probably never live it down!

Am looking forward to planting some ferns in their pockets in the well beneath the floor grids.


18 May 2020

SURPRISE GREENHOUSE PROJECT!

Last summer whilst searching for some roofing materials on EBay, I came across some floor tiles.  Yes I know! BUT!  I just knew would look amazing in the greenhouse. As if that wasn't bad enough, after buying them I spotted some old cast iron grids. An even bigger bargain!! For nearly a year they all stood in the barn gathering dust and cobwebs  (sniff) .....................................waiting and waiting!

Trench dug
Shuttering constructed
Shuttering in place
Last Monday - HUGE excitement!!  Work began.  (Why do I love a garden project SO much?)  Chris Genever arrived promptly (yawn) and removed the old brick path and dug out a trench. Having lined the bottom with concrete, he made shuttering to extremely precise dimensions filling in around it with more concrete and including some planting pockets for ferns made from old plastic down pipe.  Dave Melhuish  called by to see what we were up to and to leave cable in place for underfloor lighting!!  I was thinking of tea lights in glass lanterns but, having recovered from the shock of finding that we'd replaced the path with a deep trench; my Under Gardener totally embraced the entire project and got all masterful!! Proper lighting was called for -  Gawd bless 'im!

Meanwhile, with his trusty labourer/apprentice looking more like Boris with her lockdown hair, Chris got on with laying footings for a mini brick wall to provide a very firm foundation where previously there had been a wide planting border.  We reduced the width of the border in order to gain more floor space (and, as this season's tomatoes had succumbed to some form of sickness, we disposed of them in favour of carnations - on order).  A traditional chequered pattern of tiling was adopted which has TOTALLY transformed the entire greenhouse. 

Bringing in the floor grids
Lowering the grids into place (with lockdown hair!)


And then.............shuttering removal!  The most exciting part was seeing if the grids fitted their allotted space.  Chris's building was so deadly accurate, they are a perfect fit. What a star!!  After a week's kneeling down, I only hope that his knees are feeling better than mine!

The plan beneath the floor grids is to have a mini fernery and plant  Aspleniums & Trichomane ferns in the planting pockets. Ultimately, this will be illuminated with coloured LED strip.  Actually, what IS amazing is the fact that: stacked in their piles in the barn for all those months - covered in cobwebs and ivy growing over them, the tiles didn't look too exciting.  All laid and pointed, they look entirely different.  Who's a VERY lucky girl?

Sometimes I think I love Victorian styles and methods FAR too much but.........not much in the way of LED lighting back then! 

The original brick path.
Transformation!

Toro Grazing!

Toro munching!
Nearly finished

These Saturday's seem to be coming round faster and faster in lockdown!  Maybe because I spend even more time gardening! 


With no garden visitors allowed and all open days and visiting groups cancelled, we are going a tad radical this year!  Our little orchard has been 'Toro Grazed' - a FIRST in PTC history!  Normally we leave the grass to grow long and then cut it for hay.  This year and, having let the cowslips set seed, Chris mowed it at a height of 4".  We plan to do this every 5 - 6 weeks. 

Advantages? No yellow areas, no flattened long grass by thundery/heavy rain, prevention of Aspen suckers from establishing (even though the trees were all removed last autumn there are dozens popping up), retaining  an interesting effect as it will still be much longer than the shorter mowed paths bisecting it.




Mowing in May
Mowing in August

9 May 2020

PLOTTING!

Row labels
Labels galore!

Since sowing vegetable seeds and planting potatoes on 31st March, the vegetable plot is transformed in 5 weeks.  Apart from the peas, where germination has been patchy; everything else is up and growing away well including potatoes which need earthing up.  Lettuce plants have been planted out and runner and climbing beans and marrows are germinating in the greenhouse.  I made some new signs for the rows and this year plastic has been abandoned because they deteriorate in the sunlight and become too brittle.  Also, it's too difficult to clean off permanent ink from them.  Wooden ones rot in the soil and discolour in the sunlight.  This year, I've gone for slate labels and they're hung from mini metal shepherd's crooks.  I have used a white chalk pen to write names and varieties and  plan to clean and reuse each year.

3 May 2020

(VERY) Radical Pruning!

Checking levels
Ta dah!

Whilst trying to recover from this prolonged bout of Wisteria hysteria, we got a tad radical.  No visitors to worry about so we just went for broke with the circular box hedge around the well!!  Armed with a very long straight edge, tape measure and spirit level; we carefully measured, cut back, trimmed and levelled the box hedge.  It meant radically cutting back in areas and lightly trimming in others.  The result is a perfect shaped box hedge that now has probably more brown than green!


As if that wasn't radical enough, we removed the top topiary shapes from the Yew hedge. Why?  Because they had grown so big, they were top heavy and disproportioned, they obscureded both light and view from 4 windows in the house and worse, they obscured the Wisteria.  Instead, we propose to grow futtocks or small spheres and keep them in check.

The view we want to keep!



Before.....
...& after topiary removal.