Categories
Uncategorized

Plas Cadnant the Hidden Garden Part 2

Here we are back at Plas Cadnant, The Hidden Garden of Anglesey where in Part One I covered the walk down from the Welcome Buildings through the double borders and the slow descent down the Ravine. I was looking forward to the collection of unusual ferns and walking down to the mountain stream. Here in the Lower Valley the first feature we reached was the Reflecting Pool with interesting plants all around the area.

The photos below are of a large and very healthy specimen of Podophyllum ‘Spotted Dotty’ and the Reflecting Pool with a row of Dalmera peltata lined up on its edge.

Primulas and Oxalis add gentle spots of colour among all the restful greens here including lots of unusual ferns and some native flowering plants such as bluebells and red campion.

The long upward gradient awaited us as we rested by the stream, but we still had plenty to look forward to on the journey, the Upper Valley Garden, Ann’s Seat and Valley View, Mrs Fanning Evan’s Secret Garden and the long Raised Border.

The slope up was quite steep to start with as the path meandered its way uphill. It was a good job that there were a few seats to use for short rests on our way. This wooden bench was surrounded by our native woodland bulb bluebells, which were not only good to look at with their stunning shade of blue with hints of pink and purple, but they also had such a rich sweet scent from the flowers.

Soon we reached the level where flowering woodland shrubs, mainly rhododendrons and azaleas, provided much colour. Narrower footpaths meandered through the shrubs which afforded us beautiful close up views of the flowers and also a chance to enjoy the rich aromas. The brightness of the flowers could have been a bit overpowering but the rich foliage of small trees such as acers added some respite and a beauty of their own.

The massive foliage of the Gunnera, often called giant rhubarb, looked so good alongside the smaller but much glossier leaves of rhododendrons and laurels and the excessively cut fronds of ferns including tree ferns. It all had a tropical atmosphere but with the calls and songs of native birds.

As the gravel paths among the brightly coloured pinks and reds of the rhodos and azaleas gave way to more open woodland plantings, with paler more subtle colours of yet more ferns and trees.

When we reached the stone wall that ran across the garden the path led us through an archway into the next section of garden. As we passed through the entrance we stopped to admire a very smart pyramidal piece of topiary. but first we just had to admire this very high backed bench. Of course Jude had to try it out for size and we took the advantage of a rest and to peruse the garden map to see where else we had to go.

We were looking forward to exploring the ‘Secret Garden’ of Mrs Fanning Evans, which was just the other side of the beautiful stone wall.

Mrs Fanning Evans was the last gardener at Plas Cadnant before it was abandoned until its rescue and restoration. This patch of garden is the only remaining feature of the original 1940’s planting. The remaining plants are a Magnolia x soulangiana, Eucryphia ‘Nymansay’ and Buddleia alternifolia and they certainly have survived well but are showing their age.

Nearby looking across across an area of grass, we spotted a large rectangular pool with a white seat overlooking it. This was too tempting so we walked across the grass to get a closer look. We couldn’t work out what the deep pink flowering plants were around its margins. They were bergenias, very floriferous ones.

We had virtually completed our tour of this superb garden, having just the raised border to enjoy before we found ourselves back at the cafe and just had time for a quick cup of coffee before it closed and we then made our way back to the hotel.

Categories
Uncategorized

Plas Cadnant – Anglesey’s Hidden Garden

We visit Anglesey often because it has a unique atmosphere and a beautiful coastline in places not unlike Pembrokeshire. The most recent visit was near the end of April earlier this year.

We first saw a small sign on the roadside for the “Hidden Garden” as we travelled the road to Beaumaris. It was a few years later when we first decided to find the hidden garden. We were so glad we did! Recently we visited again and so enjoyed the developments that had been made.

After driving up a tree lined driveway we were welcomed by a beautiful slate sign. This set the tone for the welcome buildings, the cafe, shop and nursery.

The first view of the garden showed its long sweeping undulating lawn and neat topiary. Trained fruit trees adorned the area directly in front of the cafe windows. But there were some well composed pots of tulips all around the buildings.

We usually follow a clockwise route around a garden but the way the garden map was numbered led us in the opposite direction for a change. We soon arrived at a long, narrow rectangular garden which took us alongside the grass area. The planting here was interesting and contrasted well with the formality of the early views we had enjoyed. More beautiful pots, many with bright tulips, provided extra colour.

From this area a winding gravel path took us through ‘The Jungle’ beneath a large specimen of Yew and over a tiny stream. It was a slow time as I struggled with my walking stick and Jude supporting me and helping on the slopes and steps. But the planting made it oh so worthwhile with all sorts of plants from tiny alpines to tall trees above.

Having to move slowly here gave us the opportunity to study plants and appreciate them in detail. The area around the little stream was a great place for looking closely.

Carrying on down, several short but steep flights of stone steps slowed us right down but there was so much to see.

As we approached the bottom of the slope we got close to one of my favourite parts of the garden, the pond and streamside. So this is a good time to end part one of my report on our day at Plas Cadnant, the Hidden Garden. In part two we will consider the pond and streamside gardens and the walk back to the beginning.

Categories
Uncategorized

Bridgemere Show Gardens July

Well we are off again to the Bridgemere Garden Centre Show Gardens near Woore in Northern Shropshire, the opposite end of the county to our place. It was a warm dry day overcast at times with the sun bursting through whenever a gap in the cloud cover allowed it to. Just perfect for a day of appreciation of plants and a day that makes my camera happy.

The Cottage Garden was the first port of call as usual being just inside the entrance gate. It immediately looked so colourful, much more so than in any other month up to now. The fruit trees were heavily laden and perennials flowering profusely adding up to a pure cottage garden style.

As usual we next made our way towards the pond area not expecting to see much change, but we had such a surprise when we looked at the area around the pond. On the way we enjoyed looking at the hostas and pulmonarias in the bed with a very unhealthy looking champion cherry tree at its centre. The cherry is dying quite rapidly now with bare branches at the top and down towards halfway. The subtle planting beneath it however was worth a close look.

Sunshine lit up the foliage and flowers of plants around the pool, astilbes, hostas, iris, ligularia and even a water lily.

There were so many colourful areas within the show gardens, sometimes provided by flowering or berrying shrubs, others by perennials planted in large groups such as agapanthus and hemerocallis

The flowers that dominated the show gardens this month were dahlias, the reliable late summer and early autumn stars, particularly those with interesting coloured foliage supporting the flowers.

We particularly like to see their flowers working well with contrasting foliage colours and we prefer by far the more single flowers rather than the hefty oversized doubles. There are so many different forms of flower here so all visitors can find those they like best.

In one part of the garden dahlias are planted in single cultivars borders surrounded by short box edging.

There were a few cultivars that I didn’t like at all, mostly those flowers which seemed oversized or showing weak colours.

Even if there were no dahlias to be seen there were colourful patches of perennials and shrubs throughout the gardens.

In some cases the cameos that attracted us consisted only of colourful foliage that sat well together.

We were drawn towards a patch of Rosa rugosa partly because of its flowers but mostly because of its colourful large spherical hips.

I will finish off with the most colourful and most interesting border of all in July, a border that had failed to attract us on previous occasions. An herbaceous border planted with a carefully selected groups of perennials. The Lutyens seat adds extra interest and a place to see and listen to the noise of the many insects attracted to the plantings.

Categories
Uncategorized

My Garden Journal 2025 for July

July was to be month dominated by the weather, specifically the lack of rain. We had no precipitation until mid-month and the garden was suffering, lawns went brown, shrubs and trees had browning leaves and the whole garden looked lacklustre. It was so disheartening.

At the beginning of the month we set up our live moth trap to see what was around hoping for a better result than we had in June. Above the photos of some of the moths that turned up attracted by the mercury lamp, I noted that, “We experienced the Summer Solstice about about a week ago so our days and nights are of similar lengths. Early July was a time of high daytime and nighttime temperatures, sometimes of over 30 degrees C.

Midweek of the first week in July we put out our live moth trap and it attracted a reasonable number of moths including a colourful beetle, never seen here before.”

Swallow Tailed Moth. Elephant Hawk-moth

Large Yellow Underwing Drinker Moth

Burying Beetle

Over the page I shared another of my “30 second sketches.” I wrote “Another of my 30 second sketches drawn using a 0.3 Fineliner. In such a short time I couldn’t draw all of the seed heads.”

Alongside you can see my coloured sketch of our Nectaroscordum, and about this onion I wrote, “Nectaroscordum, the onion with an identity crisis, was first discovered almost 200 years ago.

It was known as ‘Allium siculum’ from its discovery until it had a name change and became ‘Nectaroscordum siculum’.

Recently botanist using DNA studies decided it was an allium after all, so currently we know it as Allium siculum just as it was in the beginning. The name Nectaroscordum is now considered a ‘subsection’.

The next page features one of our most colourful and reliable perennials in our garden, where I wrote, “Throughout the garden, both front and back in almost every border, the plants giving us so much colour is the family of Day Lilies or Hemerocallis. Below the photographs show just a few of our collection.”

We return to a bulb for the next page, a Cammassia. I wrote, “While pulling up some dried stems in the Prairie Garden I accidentally pulled out a two foot stem of a Cammassia complete with bulb, so taking advantage of seeing the whole plant I decided to draw it.

The bulb was just a just a youngster which must have become separated from the mother bulb. It was a rich orange colour from which grew a single root curled like a pig’s tail. Two seed pods still in their green colouring held onto the top of the stem.”

The drawings below show on the left the whole stem which measured 25 inches in height and to its right a coloured sketch showing more detail of the top of the stem down to the bulb together with its root and dried skin with the middle marked by a broken line. The coloured sketched was drawn using Japanese brush pens.

The following page is about some of our climbers currently looking good in the garden. I noted that, “I was wandering around the garden taking photos of climbing plants, in particular our honeysuckles, clematis and ivies featuring only those climbing on one section of fence in the Shade Garden. The one photo though is a more unusual climber, delicate, variegated with deep pink stems, Ampelopsis elegans.”

Below the first four photos are of a lemon coloured honeysuckle, flowers and berries.

The three photos below are of Clematis ‘Queen Mother’ which flowers reliably and prolifically, with beautiful purple bell flowers.

The three photos above show two different ivies and the delicate climber ‘Ampelopsis elegans’. The final two photos related to this journal show a thornless blackberry called Oregon Thornless and a jasmine called Jasminum officinale ‘Clotted Cream’.

The page opposite the climbers page is concerned with colour in our garden. I noted that, “By mid-July there is colour wherever you look, mostly flowers but some shrubs, climbers and trees are showing colourful berries. Out with my camera I looked for interesting patches of colour, or longer views. The three blue poppies are ceramic. We saw these in the ‘Himalayan. Sculpture Garden’ near Rippon in Yorkshire, and bought some to position in the Shade Garden, just where we had failed to grow them in the past.”

Below are some of the photos I took from around the garden.

“When considering colour in the summer garden we often just think of flowering plants, but in July one shrub adds lots of colour through its berries. Hypericum inodorum come with berries in a variety of colours and there are often beautiful golden flowers among the berries. Below are some of our varieties in many of our borders.”

That is it for July. My Garden Journal will return in August.

thinkinGardens

for people who want more than gardening from gardens

This Veggie Life

A Vegetarian | Nature Lifestyle Blog

Rambling in the Garden

.....and nurturing my soul

The Arch City Gardener

Journeys In St. Louis Gardening and Beyond

Garden Dreaming at Châtillon

Consult the genius of the place

Storyshucker

A blog full of humorous and poignant observations.

gardeninacity

Notes from a wildlife-friendly cottage garden

PlayGroundology

...an emerging social science

The Official Blog of British Wildlife

'The most important and informative publication on wildlife of our times' - The Independent. This blog is a member of The UK & Ireland Natural History Bloggers group: www.uknhb.blogspot.com

iGrowHort

Inspire - Cultivate - Grow Native Plants - Restore Landscapes

Bishops Meadow Trust

To create and protect a semi-natural wild space for the people of Farnham to enjoy and experience an array of British wildlife in our town

Gardening with Children

The www.gardeningwithchildren.co.uk Blog

UKbirdingtimeline

birding through the seasons, why birds matter and how to conserve them

NATURE WALKER

with a camera in hand

Jardin

Transform your outdoor space

Eva's space

My allotment, cooking and other interests

Old School Garden

my gardening life through the year

LEANNE COLE

Trying to live a creative life

fromacountrycottage

trying to live as lightly as possible on our beautiful planet

Good Life Gardening

Nature lovers from Leicester living the good life.

mybeautfulthings

Finding the beautiful in the everyday

mawsonmichelle

Michelle's Allotment

In and Out of My Garden

thoughts from and about my garden

Greenhousing

Big plans for a small garden

The Scottish Country Garden

A Walled Country Garden in South East Scotland

The Fruity Chicken

Life at the fruity chicken

willowarchway

Off grid living. Self sufficient. "PERMAGANICS RULE".

St Anns Allotments

Nottingham's Grade 2* Listed Allotments and Community Orchard

Manifest Joy Harvests

a journey in suburban vegetable gardening

Allotmental

The madness of growing your own

Penny's Garden: a harvest beyond my front door

A novel approach to vegetable gardening

arignagardener

Sustainable living in the Irish countryside.

NewEnglandGardenAndThread

Master Gardener, amateur photographer, quilter, NH native, and sometimes SC snowbird

dianajhale

Recent work and work in progress and anything else that interests me

planthoarder

a chaotic cottage gardener

Lens and Pens by Sally

a weekly blog that creates a personal philosophy through photographs and words

Dewdrops and Sunshine

Stories from a sassy and classy Southern farmbelle.

The Pyjama Gardener

Simple Organic Gardening & Seasonal Living

gettin' fresh!

turning dirt into dinner

JOY...

today the world is created anew

Garden Birds

Notes from a Devon garden

ShootAbout

Life Through The Lens

Adapting Pixels

A photography blog showcasing the best photography pictures and videos on the internet

Wildlifegardening's Blog

Just another WordPress.com site

naturestimeline

personal observations from the natural world as the search continues for a new approach to conservation.