What Jobs Are We Doing In The Garden Today 2020

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by NigelJ, Jan 11, 2020.

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  1. ARMANDII

    ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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    Hi Perki, well, at that age they should be in in the flowering range depending on if they get enough Sun on the corms and if they get a weekly feed of high Potash.
    Just a point of interest......the size of the corm does not seem to matter when it comes to being able to flower or the size of the flower. I've got, on the last count, 18 of the "Earlies" on the point of bursting their buds with the size of their corms and lengths of the leaves ranging from big to small while some of the smaller corms are putting out stems over 3 feet in length with large buds. Some of the corms seem to be naturally small but capable of putting out some really large and glorious flowers. The expert commercial growers advice seems to be to cut the flower stem at the base and to keep feeding the Iris until the end of August............just passing on some interesting details to who I know to be a competent, experienced, and keen gardener.:dunno::love30::thumbsup:
     
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    • 2nd_bassoon

      2nd_bassoon Super Gardener

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      Thanks @Jasmine star :) It was all going too smoothly to be honest - eight weeks after our offer was accepted we had the mortgage in place and surveys done, and then literally the week we were expecting to set an exchange date, wham :wallbanging:. Neither my partner nor I are able to work at the moment either so we're sitting around trying not to think of all the DIY and garden work we could have been doing instead :rolleyespink:
       
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      • Perki

        Perki Total Gardener

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        Well I've been out and had a closer inspection, 2 out 3 corms had been re covered with soil and dead ivy leaves , tidied it out and re exposed the corms ( I am sure they grown downwards :noidea: ) and give them a potash feed, I'll put them on my weekly feed regime :blue thumb:. I may have to move them at the back end / tidy whole border. They will have some competition in that border to be the star of the show, I have Allium globemaster ( probably the best allium in my opinion ) in that bed which really need dividing I am counting 15 flower heads of only supposedly 5 bulbs .
         
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        • KFF

          KFF Total Gardener

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          Hi @Perki , if they're growing downwards into the soil you want to gently lever them out so they are level with the ground. The ideal way to plant them in the ground is to make spread the roots out from the rhizome , make a little mound tand sit the plant on it. Then, spread the roots out sideways and downwards and cover the roots only with soil.
           
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          • KFF

            KFF Total Gardener

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            PS @Perki , and @ARMANDII ( I'm surprised at you , you old mucker ) these Irises grow from rhizomes not corms. Corms are what Crocus and Gladioili grow from.
             
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            • ARMANDII

              ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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              No, KFF, my friend, the commercial growers refer to them specifically as Corms not rhizomes and also refer to them as corms in their advice notes to customers. The RHS Handbook refers to them as Rhizomes but then goes on to say that due to the vast variety of genus of Iris, bulbous, rhizomes, Bearded, Beardless there is a great deal of debate in the scientific/commercial/private growers world as to whether to refer to Iris food bodies as Corms, Rhizomes or bulbs. There's even some USA commercial growers, where the largest commercial and hybridizers are, who refer to the corms/rhizomes as bulbs:wallbanging: I go with the commercial growers decided definition.:heehee::dunno::cat-kittyandsmiley::coffee:
               
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              • Snorky85

                Snorky85 Total Gardener

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                Thanks for the tips @ARMANDII Theyve been in a very bright greenhouse and the smaller stalks is all new growth. They inly ever get watered with rainwater. I'll try potting them on and see if that helps. I wonder if theyve got some virus or fungus or bacteria....seems like everything is this garden has something wrong with it lately!
                 
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                • ARMANDII

                  ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                  I would disagree with your advice, KFF. as that would disturb the fine feeding hairs on the roots and possibly disturb the growing and flowering period. It would be better to gently scrape the compost/soil away from the sides of the corms/rhizomes to expose them to sunlight.

                  Oh, bu&!££, I really do apologise for disagreeing with you again, KFF, my friend, but that is not the best method for planting Bearded Iris. The "Mound Method" is usually only used where the soil is poor draining and putting the Iris on it and the roots draping around it is to help stop the corm/rhizome roots rotting due to standing in water. If Perki does not have poor draining soil then the best method is the standard one.
                  Again, I apologies for disagreeing with you, my friend.
                   
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                  • ARMANDII

                    ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                    There's very little that can affect Carnivorous plants, Snorky.:dunno: Aphids can be bad for them but very little else.

                    To be honest, Snorky, they don't look like it, new growth has a fresh green look and those in your pot look just like last years growth should
                    I have around 3O or so Sarracenias and they all in different stages of growth some now fully out with Pitchers and flowers. some just starting with stems forming Pitchers, some with just red shoots starting to appear and others just sitting there. I'm not worried about the latter as they will come into life shortly.
                    I don't know the size of the pot you've got your Sarracenia in but they're quite happy in small pots. Can I ask what growing medium it's in? as that is really important.#

                    Hey Girl, despite being in the bad neighbour predicament that you're in, I know you to be a very bright, lively, positive, live life to the full character so that is not the way to think, and I know your friends on GC will agree with me.:love30:
                     
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                    • ARMANDII

                      ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                      Another catch up from yesterday. I started cataloguing and numbering each Bearded Iris in their pots, which is a job I should have done long ago. Now that they're starting to throw up stems I can identify which are early, mid and late season varieties and colours. A good few of them are unnamed so a Winters job will be to try to identify their variety names from the photos I'll be taking......a job for the dark nights.
                      I've been looking at the large clump of red flowered Day lilies
                      upload_2020-5-3_12-55-58.png

                      and holding back, for some unknown reason, from dividing them severely down to a small clump but, yesterday, lost patience as they show no signs of flowering and dug them up leaving only about 2 or three of them in a clump. The dug up Day Lilies will either go to Neighbours, friends, or in the Compost Bins:dunno: The ironic fact is that I still have 3 "Pandora's Box" Day lilies
                      [​IMG]
                      in pots waiting to be planted, so I've dug some up and I'm going to plant some more!!:doh:
                      I planted 3 more Knautias on the East side of the "walk around" border, which rises in a mound from the paths by around 18 inches, just about a clump of Phlomis where they should do well.
                      I'm also trying to "clear" the table standing on the Patio under the Kitchen Window of the rest of the Hardy Perennials so that I can move the Carnivorous plants out of the Green House and onto it for the Summer.....slowly getting there.
                      My life long friend in Manchester is going slightly "stir crazy" despite taking walks along the beautiful canal only 200 yards from where he lives and wants to meet, when Boris eases the Lockdown, at a halfway point near a place we used to, and still intend to, fish.
                      So, I'm putting some Kniphofia, Lupins, Phlox, Ferns, Hellebores and whatever I think his Wife:love30:will like, (as she's the Head Gardener), and has turned her garden and borders into a really fabulous place, for him to take back home. He and I will also be planning, and hoping, to be able to fish together again soon as all we can do at the moment is remember the "adventures" we've had over the decades which my Wife and his Wife had to give us the permission to go on:heehee:
                      Today it's time to feed the Roses, refill the Wildlife pond, sort out the dug up Day Lilies, plant the 3 Knautias and, Oh, decide on which of the 3 Clematis can be planted down against the Wildlife pond Jasmine/Clematis hedge.:scratch: I've also got to carry on cataloguing the Bearded Iris those that are named and unnamed while also drawing a plan of the, at the moment, 4 rows of them. When the 15, plus a free one,ordered Bearded Iris arrive in June/July I'm going to have to pot them up, label them, and then figure where they're going to go.
                      The 4 recently planted Geums are doing well, the Roses are looking healthy, and the Peonies are looking good, but I'm always trying to keep a look out for the garden problems that, as we all know, will arise during the year.:cat-kittyandsmiley::coffee:
                       
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                      • NigelJ

                        NigelJ Total Gardener

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                        @Snorky85 The first photo looks fine with good new growth and a flower. Brown tips could be due to cold dry winds. Mine live in pots in washing up bowls full of peat and sphagnum moss, this helps maointain a damp atmosphere. I put mine in the greenhouse over winter as well, the older pitchers certainly look battered with blotchy markings, brown tops and the odd hole. I've had a greenfly on the young growth and wipe these off.
                        If you repot them remember they like nutrient poor soil, so a mix of sand, peat, chopped moss, perlite etc is good. They can get pot bound and then it can be difficult to keep them damp. I repotted mine at the end of Feb and reduced the size of the stolon? so they would fit comfortably in the pot. Gave away lots and threw lots on the compost heap.
                         
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                        • NigelJ

                          NigelJ Total Gardener

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                          As it's damp and drizzly today I've been in the greenhouse repotting cacti, always a fun job.
                           
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                          • ARMANDII

                            ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                            [​IMG]
                             
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                            • Vince

                              Vince Not so well known for it.

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                              War in the garden.... Vince vs Nettles, eventual winner was Vince but came away with some battle wounds!

                              I hate asking for help but I had to in the end, I moved as much as I could off the veggie patch, 1 bit left but my back had given up, I had to ask Carol to help.

                              Now doped up on painkillers, sitting on the bed (not long before I'm in it) and catching up with old friends via facebook.
                               
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                              • Logan

                                Logan Total Gardener

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                                Not much today, prepared the ground for the beetroot seedlings and watered the snapdragons and tithonias.
                                 
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