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My Garden Valentine
Love is in the
air. and Barty Phillips has some inspired ideas for
making your Valentine's Day gift a special one
Valentine's Day demands
something a bit special in the way of loving gestures.
What should we give to persuade the loved one that our
love is true? The powerful and the passionate used to
create whole gardens for their beloveds. Nebuchadnezzar
built the huge terraced gardens supported by enormous
columns that were the Hanging Gardens of Babylon for
a favourite Persian courtesan who was homesick for the
mountains of her homeland. Did she appreciate them?
Who can tell?
Few of us have the
wherewithal or opportunity today of such wildly extravagant
gestures to prove our love. However, we can emulate
the idea. Why not fill the patio of your heart's delight
with pots of colourful flowering bulbs and shrubs with
a potted palm to add an exotic touch. Hyacinths smell
delicious at this time of year; tall red tulips can
make the heart miss a beat; tiny dwarf rhododendrons
and azaleas look spectacular when their abundant flowers
completely cover the leaves. A splendid small azalea
is Rhododendron simsii which has glossy dark green leaves
and is absolutely covered in bright cyclamen-coloured
flowers; R.
'Bashful' is one of the hardiest. Camellias, with
their perfect flowers and shiny, healthy leaves are
a good choice too.
Plants or flowers
on their own are always acceptable, particularly if
they carry a message. If you optimistically look to
the relationship to grow and mature, give the light
of your eye a red rose to plant in the garden giving
years of delight. The yellow climbing rose 'Wedding
Day' is healthy and vigorous, but perhaps that's not
quite the message you want to send. Perhaps you'd prefer
the pillar rose 'Bantry Bay' with its showy clusters
of blood-red blooms and glossy, dark green leaves: the
patio rose 'Fairy Rose' is delicately pink, a long-term
addition to a small garden or patio.
For immediate impact,
cut flowers are the traditional way of showing your
feelings. A bunch of red roses can hardly be bettered,
particularly if they are scented. Roses at this time
of year, though, often don't smell at all, in which
case, tulips can be just as telling. Florists are becoming
much more imaginative with their colour-matching and
bouquets in carefully chosen colourways such as reds
and whites or blues and purples give lots of scope for
indicating that you care. If you want something sweetly
scented so you will be remembered with every breath,
freesias will do the trick. Their trumpet-shaped flowers,
usually rather discreet in colour are staggeringly sweetly
scented. When buying flowers, don't just buy one bunch,
get three - get five - do it in style.
Perhaps the greatest
commitment you could possibly make, short of actually
building a garden for your inamorata, is to offer half
of your own - a truly meaningful gesture. As the poet
Thomas Moore wrote in 1835:
I have a garden of
my own,
Shining with flowers of every hue,
I loved it dearly while alone
But I shall love it more with you.
Browse:
our
sumptuous range of romantic bouquets
Articles reprinted
with premission from Greenfingers.com

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