Northern lights

Northern lights

The front of the cottage at Genus HQ faces north, looking across the orchard lawn and into the surrounding fields.  There is a border adjoining the cottage on this side too, planted with a variety of perennials including Geranium, Anemone, and Pulmonaria, along with a scattering of tulips and narcissi.

The bed was once home to a rapidly expanding Philadelphus which threatened to dominate the border.  We decided to  remove most of the wood, training just half a dozen branches up against the cottage wall.  It’s a decision we’ve never regretted.  Maintenance is easy - old flowered stems are removed every winter and new shoots tied in to horizontal wires.  A neighbouring Schizophragma hydrangeoides - a climbing plant introduced into the Uk in 1901 by EH ‘Chinese’ Wilson and known as the Japanese Hydrangea Vine - is equally low on maintenance requiring just a light trim every winter to keep it out of the gutters and off the window frames.  Flowering in early July along with the Philadelphus, together they both bring a wonderful splash of light into an otherwise shady spot. 


Modern heroes of horticulture - Chris Hull

There are some people in horticulture whose careers grow slowly, gently, season by season.  And then there are those whose paths unfurl with the quiet determination of a tree finding...
Read More

Greener gardening - sustainable cut flowers

December is a time for giving, celebrating and decorating, and inevitably that may involve buying cut flowers for your home, or gifting an arrangement to a loved one.  It’s worth...
Read More

Wildlife in the garden - red squirrels

Are you lucky enough to live in an area of the UK where there are red squirrels?  Although greys are much more commonly spotted in parks and gardens across the...
Read More