May Garden

After what seems like the driest year since we’ve moved here, came a storm with rain and wind to compare with any save a hurricane. Even the creeping jenny has struggled with the dryness.

Creeping Jenny

 

Clematis

The iris came and went so quickly that I didn’t have time to grab a photo – doesn’t bode well for the forthcoming iris bed, but I’ve had more look with the two clematis plants
Foxgloves in the border

The garden has always had an element of chaos but now that’s tipped over into a bit of a mess.

 We have a number of blow-ins, plants like the neighbour’s geranium that has seeded into the pavement cracks.
Stray geranium

And a yellow  iris that has appeared this year from nowhere.

Visiting iris

There are the usual waifs and strays: the poppies, the foxgloves, the ever-spreading violets etc

Wandering violets

Foxgloves
Poppies

And if anything, I’m happy to see them arrive and thrive. Next year I might actually buy and plant some foxgloves, pink for the sunshine and white for the shade.

White Foxgloves for the shade

But if last month was all about the tulips, this month is about the geraniums, light and dark throughout the garden and also rather earlier than usual, about the roses.

May Roses

The old pink and yellow roses seem to be thriving.

And the new rose babies are flowering and looking healthy.

new Roses

Apparently it takes three years before they come into their own and I’m really quite excited by the row of roses.

New Roses
 And all underpinned by some long flowering, long lasting rock roses and the odd splash from a catanache.
Rock Roses
Catanache

The bees are still bumbling along the wallflowers

Busy bees on the wallflower

And will the spread of the fleabane ever come to an end.

Fleabane

It’s second only to the shady garden’s geraniums which have run riot (not in an especially good way).

Shade garden
Fatsia

It is true that white flowers show best through the shady doom and gloom. 

iris Foetidissima
Aquilegia
Shady Garden

Whilst the geraniums are beautiful flowers, there seems little room for anything else at the moment.

Geranium Roxanne
White Geraniums
Pink Geraniums

The wild garlic has gone over, and the ferns are starting to unfurl.

And every so often the yellow meconopsis pokes through the green.

Meconopsis
Meconopsis

Down in the rather messy fritelaria bed, the huge alliums have also gone over.

and we were left with huge seed heads, until the winds blew through and smushed them to smithereens

So far the watering regime has held good and neither the hanging baskets nor the tiny dry bed on top of the sleeper wall has died a death. Yet.

Not dead yet

White Thrift
 But in the chaos there are countless plants lost and overgrown from the red salvia through to the bellflower

In general the new rose bed is thriving though a little underwhelming as a baby bed.

The silver leaf shoved into the ground a few years ago rather than throw it out after 6 months in a hanging basket is much bigger and more vigorous than any rescue plant has a right to be. One day I’ll be okay with throwing plants out but I’m not there yet.

Up on top of the garage, the gravel bed is growing a bit too well.

The little alliums, the molys are really perking up the whole thing with a splash of yellow.

And the sedums are beginning to do their thing

Along with the sanguine geranium, some alpine penstemon and of course the pinks.

Alpine geranium

Carnation

Mostly the plants planted into the gravel mimic their larger counterparts in the large beds, including a very sweet rock rose.

Alpine Rock Roses

And the erysimum (wallflower) next to the aubrietia,

But the thrift in the gravel has gone over, where as down in the shadier beds it still has time to run.

Thrift going over
Late thrift

And everywhere you look, fleabane growing away and possibly stringing out other beauties.

Though of course the bees don’t care.

Allium + bee

And neither do the cats.

Audience

Despite warning about the use of white(-ish) bedding the pelargoniums are working well, along with begonias in the shade.

Bedding

Shady Pots

Down in the courtyard the alchemical is looking lovely and the ferns starting to look lush.

Alchemical Mollis

Ferns unfold

But no matter how I try to appreciate the greens, it is the show stopper pins and reds that blow me away.

Rock rose
Poppy

And with the larger penstemons just about to appear, the year is likely to get better and better.

Penstemon
Sour Grapes Penstemon