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Posts Tagged ‘summer scent’

I’ve just spent the morning working in a client’s garden that was packed full of Sarcococcas (Christmas or sweet box). The perfume was intoxicating, mesmerizing even, and it just got me thinking about how important scent is in a garden.

Plants with a powerful winter scent jump to mind easily,

such as the delicious Viburham bodnantense ‘Dawn’ (above),

the subltle perfume of Daphne Bholua (above),

and the delicate aroma of Mahonia japonica (above), with a scent akin to that of Lily of the Valley,

but as the year progresses, I find myself  being seduced into using colours, form and texture for planting plans,

with scent really taking a back seat. So while sitting on a bus, I gave myself the challenge of calling to mind flowers and shrubs that provide fragrance for the garden for the rest of the year.

Euphorbia Robbiae with Hyacinth ‘Blue Jacket’

In  March and April I recalled the heady scent of Hyacinths really knocking my socks off,

and Clematis armandii delicately perfuming the air , especially on warm sunny days in March and April. Oh, and the delicious honey scented Euphorbia mellifera.

Pittosporum tennuifolium flowers

The flowers of Pittosporum tennuifolium are so tiny and dark that you barely notice them , but last April, the sweet scent caught me unawares as I passed by this wonderful (and very useful) evergreen shrub whilst I worked away in my own garden. Will grow happily in semi-shade too.

May did fox me for a while, but Lily of the Valley has to be one of my all time favourite scents, and how could I forget Wisteria (call myself a gardener!).

For June, July and August, fragrant choices abound from Roses (which flowered well in to December last year too!), Lillies,  mock orange-Phildelphus and star Jasmin-Trachelspermum jasminoides. But I started to struggle as I mentally planned ahead for the autumn months.

Roses will still be flowering in September, and then I remembered the delicious scent and waving wands of Actaea Simplex (aka Cimifuga atropurpurea) as I entered into the magical Jardin Plume  last year. These should flower well into October too.

And taking us through November and December is the wonderful Camellia sesanqua, a joyous surprise, both for scent and colour (and also happy in semi-shade),  as autumn turns into winter and the rest of garden looks as if it’s shut up shop for the year. Then I thought I’d start all over again with all year round colour, then all year round structure and this brought me back to the Sarcococcas, planted where I was working both as evergreen arching shrubs (eventually growing to about 4-5ft, 120-150cm) and more formal hedging. With its small glossy dark green leaves, the ability to grow in shady parts of the garden (even dry shade in mine) and the added benefit of its fragrant perfume, it’s a great structural plant for any garden and one I wouldn’t be without in my own!

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Ivyshed from shedworking.co.uk

Ivy (Hedera) can be a wonderful plant: evergreen, fast to grow, many coloured and with the ability to clamber over a multitude of sins. It can also provide insulation and a natural habitat for birds and animals in your garden, but at what price to your walls?

Ivy before trimming

While cutting back ivy covering a wall, damage done to the bricks, hitherto unnoticed, was revealed.

The top layer of bricks has been lifted off most of the wall

and the roots have burrowed into the mortar in large sections too.

Damage done will have to be repaired now to avoid a more costly intervention a few years down the road.

Speaking to the Brick Development Association (yes, I really did), they would warn against planting Ivy against walls, because, as seen above, the roots do infiltrate the mortar. They say the problem with Ivy, is when you want to remove it, as is so entangled that it will inevitably damage the wall. If you do want to remove it, they recommend cutting it at the roots and leaving it to die back for  TWO YEARS! , before carefully removing the plant from the wall. As a gardener, I wouldn’t like to see a dead or dying plant in a garden for this length of time.

However the better shape the mortar is in to begin with, the easier to control the Ivy with regular pruning and possibly cutting Ivy right down to the ground every few years. Quite a task and obviously cutting right back would leave a bare wall for a good few months until the Ivy grew back again. Not ideal.

An alternative to Ivy,  if you have a south or west facing wall and if it is sheltered and in a mild climate, may well be Trachelospermum jasminoides (Star Jasmin). It too provides evergreen coverage of large areas, with the added bonus of wonderful scent from mid to late summer.

Wisteria pic from threadspider.wordpress.com

Or a magnificent Wisteria if you have a south-facing wall. Not evergreen, but in winter you still have a very beautiful sculptural framework to look at. Worth considering, although it would take many years to achieve this marvellous growth above!

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