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Monday 6 October 2008

The Season Comes to an End - the Gardeners Work Continues


It was a very windy day when I posted last months blog. After finishing the writing I went to check for damage, as occasionally happens when we have high winds in late summer. As I walked across the Rose Lawn there was a very loud crack and I discovered a large oak branch had landed on the old outside toilet block in the woods by the house. After roping the area off and reporting the incident I thought no more about it until the next day when again in the gardens I heard another crack. Another branch from the same tree had fallen on the toilet block. You never know what each day will bring, but it is rare for the same incident to happen twice!

We have had fluctuating staff levels recently: Richard has had a second operation on his knee and will be recovering at home for the next 8 weeks, and Debbie has been on a belated honeymoon in Canada for 3 weeks. Then Steve is taking a week off to learn about the job that the gamekeeper does. Thankfully, and just by chance Alex, our summer student contacted me on another matter a couple of weeks ago and happened to be free for the next few weeks, so he is covering until Richard returns.

Jobs in the garden seem to be going well. The hedge cutting has now been finished with yew and box hedges now all trimmed. The dry spell has allowed us to catch up with all the grass cutting and we are also able to hoe when it is sunny. I have been round the gardens making lists (I love lists) of all the dahlias, so that when the frost has blackened the foliage I will be able to locate and identify them for lifting and storage.

The renovation of the vinery is moving on, with new cedar repacing all the rotten sills. The rose lawn project is also beginning to take shape as arches are installed and paving is being laid, (see picture). Remember that we are open every weekend in October for you to see the progress, at the end of the month we close. Then we'll be getting ready for our Christmas Trail.

Best Wishes

Kate

Topical Tips for October

Start sowings of hardy annuals and sweet peas under glass.

Take hardwood cuttings of deciduous shrubs, and gather clematis seed for sowing in a cold frame.

Feed roses with sulphate of potash to ripen the wood and make the plants more disease resistant place netting over ponds to catch leaves.

Change the plantings in hanging baskets for winter interest.

Prepare the garden for winter: keep drains and ponds etc free from leaves and debris, clean and store garden tools, ensure that greenhouse glass is clean, and that any shading has been replaced by insulation.

Check tender plants for infestations of insects, and treat before returning them to their winter quarters.

Put frost protection round any plants that will be staying out for the winter.

Lift and divide herbaceous perennials.

Store undamaged apples and pears in a cool, dark well ventilated room such as a garage or garden
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