Cut flower corner - early summer bounty

Cut flower corner - early summer bounty

There’s masses to pick in the garden right now to bring inside and enjoy, whether you have a cutting bed or well-stocked borders.  Peonies make wonderful cut flowers, especially the doubles.  Try not to be tempted to pick them in full bloom, but cut them when they’re still in the bud stage so that you can enjoy them as they open all their beautiful layers of petals in the vase.  They’ll also last longer if you cut them in the morning.  Five or six peony heads of the same or a mix of varieties look great on their own, but work well with other more delicate flowers such as astrantia and forget-me-nots.  Some sprigs of lilac and fresh green Alchemilla mollis or Heleborus foetidus work well too.

Iris too are beginning to flower now.  At this time of year, I like to combine deep purple bearded iris with frothy nepeta and purple allium for a moody bouquet in shades of purple and blue.  And one of the stars of the cut flower garden, alstroemerias, are beginning to come into flower by the end of May.  They are very long lasting and come in a great range of colours from rusty orange A. ‘Cahors’, delicate A. ‘Peaches and Cream,’ or dark purple A. ‘Cardinal Purple’.  Sweet Williams also make great flowers and smell divine.  In terms of foliage, beech branches with their fresh green foliage, makes lovely structure.

As with all floral arrangements, keep changing the water and ideally put the vase out of direct light to prolong the flowers and foliage.


You may also like

View all

Modern heroes of horticulture - Madeline Mesias

Some gardens are designed simply to look beautiful. Others ask bigger questions - about how we live, what we grow, and our connection to the land around us. For Madeline...
Read More

Greener gardening - pest control

Can you hold your nerve and hold off on the chemicals when it comes to aphid attacks?  Pesticides are harmful to people, pets and the environment, and using these chemicals...
Read More

Wildlife in the garden - grass snakes

Have you ever spotted a snake in your garden?  Grass snakes are not uncommon in England and Wales, though absent from gardens in Scotland and Ireland.  However, they’re also shy...
Read More