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February in Your Garden

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  • A question on Hellebores please,  can you tell me is it a corm,  I've never grown them before but having seem them on here and other threads I've quite fallen for them also what sort of soil do they need to be in,  thanks.

  • Bunny ...Bunny ... Posts: 3,471
    I had never thought of you as a hellebore Verdun .... I shall nowimage



    Where's these pics ?
  • The user and all related content has been deleted.
  • They are great Hollie hock. I love the door on the tree xx

  • I have ordered some Hellebore seeds through eBay,  some Hybridus Red, Helleborus Orientalis Black and some Viridis Green,  now those names mean nothing to me but I liked the colour and as I'm up for a challenge I'll have a go fail or win.   Have just checked the weather for me and tomorrow it looks mild and wet so I think I might just set some Sweet peas away if nothing else they should at least be able to stand firm if the weather takes a nose dive,  bit too cold for anything else I think,  next month I'll try and get all my seeds away.

  • I've just got around to clearing from last autumn and delighted to find a double maroon hellebore and a double yellow one - beautiful to look at but I can't remember what they were called - they came from T & M as a pack several years ago.  They grow in dappled shade under a Viburnum which is just coming into flower and smells wonderful.  The rest of my hellebores are under the apple trees - they self seed copiously and each year I pot up the pure white ones and the deeper pink ones, but chuck away the more nondescript ones - then I offer them to my friends when they come into flower.

    The snowdrops are wonderful this year, and on sunny day the palest mauve species crocus show their faces - they love to self seed into the surrounding grass area.

    I also have some double primroses I bought last year fron the GC because they were scented and they are doing well.

    It's lovely to see everything starting to pop up despite the snow flurries.

  • summerpots wrote (see)

    It has been freezing here in Crawley and I dont feel any inclination to go and do anything in the garden but have a quick nosey round...  My onions are growing  slowly, my beans were eaten alive so dont think there will be any early beans now, but a couple of sweetpeas in pots that got left out are still growing like mad despite the snow and frost (dont understand that), my chives and parsely survived not sure what to do with my clematis tho... I had a new one that was doing well then it developed 3 buds over the winter which didnt flower, should I trim my clematis as they look a bit spindly, I didnt do it earlier because some were flowering until late.  My garden was all upside down last year.  Tomatoes/pots got blight.. if it wasnt for my courgettes I would have given up.

    There are other threads about clematis, summerpots, but can I just say that it does matter when you prune your clematis if you want flowers this year. Clematis fall into three groups that have different pruning requirements. For around a fiver, you could get a booklet about them with pictures of lots of different ones to help identify yours, and also instructions about pruning. The RHS does one. Otherwise, try the British Clematis Society website. Have a great year's gardening!

  • Bunny ...Bunny ... Posts: 3,471
    No Verdun more pics , more pics image
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