bugshaw: (BugPrincess)
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posted by [personal profile] bugshaw at 12:19am on 27/05/2010
We have had the medical appointments phase of the holiday (except dentist tomorrow and one got cancelled and rescheduled, and another has to be repeated - bah!) and the visiting mother phase. We got a lot done on the garden - mostly working out what to actually do with it, as in five years it's not evolved much past rectangular bit of grass. I now have a fuchsia and six different sorts of lavender, all potted up and ready to grow (or die horribly). If I want a buddleia as a shrub I think my best bet might be to go to a bit of waste ground and pull up a self-seeded stem :-) Mum weeded the lawn, and the rain is giving it a nice soak but I don't think it'll turn the brown bits green. It's all very complicated, working out what would go where, whether it would survive, what it'll look like in a couple of years. I wonder if I should give it up and go back to baking...
There are 6 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] techiebabe.livejournal.com at 09:58am on 27/05/2010
If you want a buddleia get the nice deep purple one from Crocus - I am just waiting for mine to flower. It is doing well despite being put in the one area where nothing grows.

Fuchsias are hard to kill (frost might do it) but I always fail to keep lavender alive.
 
posted by [identity profile] sphyg.livejournal.com at 10:00am on 27/05/2010
I'll happily be a baking guinea pig ;)
 
posted by [identity profile] bugshaw.livejournal.com at 10:05am on 27/05/2010
I just need a spot of baking inspiration. Can you cook fuchsia?
 
posted by [identity profile] sphyg.livejournal.com at 08:28pm on 31/05/2010
I can't find any recipes. Though Aldabra made wine out of surplus lilac recently.
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posted by [identity profile] watervole.livejournal.com at 11:30am on 27/05/2010
Dig up a buddlea seedling rather than pull it - you want to keep the small roots as well as the big ones.

Fuchsias do well if you feed them home-made compost every year.

Lavender needs *gentle* pruning. Don't cut into old wood when the plants get bigger. Expect to replace them after half a dozen years when they get a bit leggy.
 
posted by [identity profile] woolymonkey.livejournal.com at 04:20pm on 27/05/2010
Lavender is easy to keep happy if it gets lots of sun.

You know there are other kinds of buddleia--still tough, and good for butterflies but look less like waste ground plants? There's one with spherical orange flowers that smell like honey...
http://www.photoready.co.uk/flora-fauna/buddleia-globosa-hope.html

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