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Making Changes
Suffering from
cabin fever? Fancy a bit of exercise? Ruth Chivers has
just the thing for you, with ideas for adding new interest
to your garden, and improving existing features.
Even bleak midwinter
days offer opportunities for gardening. The virtual,
planning kind can be done in the warmth of indoors.
In chilly but dry weather, a great escape to the garden
helps work off cabin fever, and get your creative juices
flowing. Winter is a great time to take stock and plan
changes.
Wet or frosty conditions
put lawns and borders
out of bounds. Concentrate instead on the hard surfaces
in your garden. Check that your paths take you where
you need to go, keeping your feet clean. Are they wide
enough for wheelbarrows? Start work now on making new
paved paths or extending old ones. Sheltered patios
and other corners that catch winter sunlight are welcome
havens. If your garden lacks such inviting nooks, now
is a good time to plan and build one. Patios are often
too small for outdoor dining. Extend yours now if this
is the case. Brushing paths and patios with a good stiff
broom is great aerobic exercise, and helps keep surfaces
slime-free and safe. Really stubborn mossy debris can
be shifted with Jeyes Fluid or Armillatox.
Winter gales can
loosen fence panels. Left to flap, these will damage
plants, so fix them as soon as you can. With much foliage
stripped from your garden, its structure can be appreciated
– or not, if your garden lacks form. Walls, fences,
trellis, pergolas
and arches can all be used to divide up space and give
year-round vertical interest. Adding these features
now means they’ll provide backdrops for plants
in summer.
Evergreens
add weight and year-round interest to planting. Now
is a good time to decide whether you have enough of
them in your garden. Sarcococca
(Christmas box), Mahonia
japonica, and Viburnum
tinus 'Eve Price' all look great at the moment,
the first two adding a bonus of deliciously fragrant
flowers. Winter starkness can highlight the lack of
screening plants, or structural planting in the form
of trees and hedges. Hedging of any type can still be
bought and planted. Bare-rooted
trees are only found on sale in winter. So if your ground
is frost free and not waterlogged,
you can tackle these planting jobs now.
Use frosty mornings
to check where frost
pockets are in your garden. Remember these when
it comes to later season planting. Don’t plant
borderline hardy
plants in chilly spots. Perennials
and grasses add winter interest to your garden if you
resist the temptation to cut them back after summer
flowering. Miscanthus
seed heads look magnificent against a winter sky. Spent
flowerheads of bronze
fennel and Phlomis
russeliana achieve spectacular good looks in winter
frosts.
All gardens should
have space for snowdrops. A horticultural Prozac, there’s
nothing more uplifting than seeing the first snowdrop
of winter – some of mine are out now. They’re
best planted ‘in the green’, so buy now
or divide
existing clumps. And snowdrops mean that spring can’t
be too far off!
Check out our
related workshops… Laying
paved/brick paths
Paving
a patio
Extending
patios
Taking
advantage of microclimates
How to
fix fence/trellis panels
How to
make/install a pergola/timber arch
Planning
a winter border
Planting
a hedge
Dividing
clumps of bulbs/planting in the green
Articles
reprinted with premission from Greenfingers.com

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