Daphne's post got me thinking about lily of the valley, one of a group of woodland-glade plants that do surprisingly badly in my garden. Like columbines, foxgloves and campions, I plant, they sulk, they die. A shame as I find them utterly charming. Some folk have them growing like weeds. Indeed, this is one of the fresh delights caused by the detours I have to make round the building site: the cracks in the pavement outside one house are lined by lilies of the valley, all in bloom. I am suffused with envy. A few doors down from me a clump of Japanese anemones are doing similar. All I can manage is some groundsel and willow herbs. I'm tempted to cheat and resort to seeding the area with marjorams and wallflowers.
I do better by the cracks between the house and the path, which are currently seething with valerians, dog violets and marjoram. I had to grub out the teasels and sycamores. And the cypress seedling that I found by the back door. Commonsense tells me that I should remove the seedling dogwood from the base of the fencepost but it has such good colour in its young stems I couldn't do it. Perhaps later in the year when I'm feeling ruthless.
It obviously runs in the family: I noticed that my parents have got a fine crop of wallflowers and snapdragons lining their foundations, interspersed with seedlings of the little dark Viola labradorica. As we were admiring this accidental planting I noticed something different.
"Isn't that a hollyhock?" I asked.
"Is it? It'll make a change from cherry trees."
I've never had flowers in my cracks.
ReplyDeleteSx
Just dribblers?
ReplyDeleteI have the same problem with wild horse chestnut trees. News on the garden front here is that I now have a cheap Camelia by a west-facing fence. It's called Kevin and will be sending you (badly written) letters every 6 months telling you how it's getting on.
ReplyDelete(I'm impressed to see you wrote "lilies of the valley" - like courts martial, I s'pose).
Yay! a Camelia! Good luck with it.
ReplyDeleteLilies of the valley is good, I must have been writing in autopilot
This is like reading a foreign language. Gardens remain a mystery to me. As would be evidence if you ever saw our back garden. Although if you did that, I think you were a prowler.
ReplyDeleteDribblers and vinegar strokes...?!!
ReplyDeleteGoodness me, what have you been reading/watching???
Sx
The young 'uns have been leading me astray
ReplyDelete