Thursday, 21 June 2012

Summer Solstice

     A sunny afternoon in Shropshire, and I've been sitting admiring the plethora of flowers on the honeysuckle trailing across the bower at the end of the garden. The fine display possibly being a result of an abundance of rainfall. Something which honeysuckles revel in.
    Of course, to bring out what many people consider to be the best feature of those flowers, a heavenly scent intended to attract the moths which have to seek them out to fertilise them at night, warm and balmy evenings are also called for, and they have been decidedly lacking this year. So, unfortunately, has the scent.
    If left to their own devices, as I've seen happen in more than one park, honeysuckles grow and grow, covering anything available for them to twine their way through, until their centres eventually become choked with dead growth, and require a great deal of remedial work to bring them back under control. Much better to prune those honeysuckles such as Lonicera periclymenum, common honeysuckle, which flower early in the season, back by a third immediately after flowering, and the later flowering types such as Lonicera japonica, Japanese honeysuckle, which flower on current year's growth, by simply trimming back any over long shoots in spring.
    Where we were staying in Spain last year they had made a hedge out of honeysuckles and had obviously cut it with hedgecutters as if it was a hedge. It had grown into a very effective barrier as a result of that treatment, but I don't know that it's a management regime I would risk trying out on my plants at home.
     In the garden, from now until long after the honeysuckle's flowering season has passed, look out for one of the Crane's Bills, Geranium endressii 'Wargrave Pink', a semi evergreen perennial with small, lobed leaves and cup-shaped rose-pink flowers borne throughout the summer.

No comments:

Post a Comment