Tuesday 15 January 2019

January in the garden

 It is always lovely to wander round the garden and see what is growing.  Owing to the relatively mild winter weather so far (this is apparently set to change from next week), some plants from last summer are still flowering and winter plants are also growing too.  My favourite flowers for this time of the year,  snowdrops, are starting to push through which always make me happy.
 Small clumps of snowdrops are all around the garden - you can never have too many in my opinion!  I do like the named varieties with their different markings, but for reliability, you can't beat Galanthus nivalis, the 'common' variety.  (How can something this elegant can be called 'common'?  That is just wrong!)
My young replacement winter flowering jasmine is flowering too and I will get the poor thing planted in the border at some stage.  It is a bit of a birds' nest of a plant as it can become very straggly, but my previous one, which had to come out when the wall was rebuilt,  was very forgiving and I did hack at it without much planning.  The burst of bright yellow is so welcome on a dull winter day.
Camellia Yoimachi is becoming a regular feature at the moment and I make no apologies for this as it is a beautiful plant.  It has been flowering since December and apart from moving it out of full sun in the summer, it has been left to its own devices.  It has rewarded me with lots of these stunning flowers which shine out at the bottom of the garden.
It is just so pretty.  I am going to repot it in Spring and hopefully will enjoy a repeat performance next autumn and winter. 

6 comments:

  1. Just glorious.
    I am a big fan of snowdrops too. And indeed most of the bulbs. And plant them to 'excess'. Too many bulbs are barely enough.
    Love that stylish poached egg camelia too. I will have to hunt it down.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, EC. I manage to pack a fair few bulbs into my garden and also into pots - I agree, never enough! One day, it would be lovely to have huge drifts of snowdrops, but until I have won the lottery and can have a woodland as part of my garden, I will enjoy visiting places which do have that...
      The camellia is an absolute joy - it is definitely my star plant at the moment (closely followed by the snowdrops).
      Best wishes
      Ellie

      Delete
  2. You have such a green thumb. Lovely flowers, I am so envious. January here....nothing is popping up out of the ground. It's frozen solid. Was -4 degrees F yesterday and only 11 today.
    Sandy's Space

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Sandy. It has been mild here so far but temperatures have dipped a bit recently. I keep reminding myself that Spring isn't too far away!
      Best wishes
      Ellie

      Delete
  3. Lovely to see the garden springing back to life, I love snowdrops xcx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Chrissie. I love to see the snowdrops too - such tough little flowers.
      Best wishes
      Ellie

      Delete