I
gave up gardening!
September
2002
Somewhere
in the middle of August I gave up gardening! This was such
a shock to my friends that one of them e-mailed me to find
out if I was ill! It was really the drought. We had at least
six weeks with no rain and as our water comes from our own
well and supplies all our needs watering lavishly was not
something I could risk.
The soil was so hard I could not get a trowel into it and
the sun was so hot even in my shaded garden I felt at risk
. Above all, the plants were dying which is heartbreaking
for the helpless gardener. So it seemed sensible just to stop
until there was a change. Eventually the rains came and shortly
after I was back in the garden assessing the damage.
We are told that droughts like this may happen more and more
frequently as the global warming increases in which case we
should be preparing our gardens so that they can survive long
periods without rain if necessary.
With this in view I have been studying my plants to see which
could handle the dry conditions and where changes should be
made.
Perhaps the lawns were the first to show stress, turning brown
and drying up though we were repeatedly assured that they
were only going dormant and would return to a normal green
after a good rainfall. Unfortunately weeds in a lawn are more
drought resistant than the grass and were able to grow strongly
throughout the dry weather . I think that there will have
to be a great deal of weeding to get some of the lawns back
in condition. Fortunately, I do not have a grass lawn. All
my lawn areas are covered with a low growing thyme which reveled
in the heat and drought. I strongly recommend this plant for
areas which are sunny and dry. If a low creeping thyme is
grown there is no mowing either.
I only grow a few annuals, mostly impatiens and they suffered
badly from lack of water. It is difficult to find annuals
which will grow in shade but the begonias did well with very
little water perhaps because they are all in containers.
The perennial plants are my main concern and I may not know
until next year how much damage has been done. Plants which
were most stressed were the astilbes and the perennial phlox.
Most of the astilbes I had moved to areas which were usually
naturally damp, ones that hadn't been moved suffered severely
and if they do come back nest year they will be the first
to find a new home. The phlox wilted every day and looked
terrible, but, now after the rain they are flowering, a little
shorter in the stem, but quite profusely. I shall not give
the pink varieties such a prominent place in the garden in
the future; the white ones have done very well and are a lovely
cool accent in the late summer garden . Balloon flowers (
Platycodon ) did not seem to be affected and are flowering
steadily.
As
my garden is very shaded I rely on foliage to give interest
in the summer and to my surprise both the hostas and the maidenhair
fern did fairly well without water. The Ostrich fern did not;
many of the fronds turned brown and dried up. One of my favorite
plants the Japanese silver fern had to be spot watered to
save it from drying out and the same with the Harts tongue,
both these ferns do need damp conditions and need to be placed
near a source of water. All plants which are so happy in their
environment that they self seed survived the drought very
well. These will vary from garden to garden and it is a good
idea to check your own garden for plants which do not show
signs of stress. In my case it was aquilegia species, the
rusty foxglove and all the ground covers with the exception
of one area of ajuga that dried out.
It is probable that all our bulbs will have benefited from
the heat as they will have matured and gone dormant and not
suffered from lack of moisture. However now is the time to
replenish the bulbs in your garden; the catalogues are out
with lovely ideas and tempting pictures.
My needs this year are simple: more and more scillas to make
a carpet of blue in the spring which will be followed by hostas.
Every year I look with envy at Crocuses with their bright
showing in local gardens and I always thought that the squirrels
would take them. This year I am going to try and hope I can
outwit the squirrels. Also, as I am remaking my front bed
this fall I am going to add a clump of the lovely double pink
tulip 'Angelique'. Now is the time to plan the new bulbs you
want to buy. Your bulbs should be planted before the really
cold weather starts to ensure a burst of flowers again next
spring!
Rachel
McLeod has many years of experience in gardening... particularly
with herbs. She occasionally lectures on herbs and plants
for natural gardens.
She can be reached at 905-659-1001
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