Welcome to my blog!

Here, I journal the transformation of our tiny London backyard into a dream garden. I hope you will like it!

A dream garden, for me, is an outdoor space filled with rich colours and seductive scents, offering beautiful flowers, interesting textures and tasty morsels for our delectation. Also a source of nourishment for the local wildlife - birds, butterflies and bees. A space to enjoy with my SO, friends, family, and, of course, our cats. Somewhere to sit and have coffee, or even a meal, and a tiny patch of grass to lie on in the fleeting sunshine of the English summer. And, we're almost there...

Unless stated otherwise, all photos are by me (or my SO) and are clickable.

Tuesday, 25 January 2011

Winter Sowing

Since Christmas (and I mean the second, Orthodox Christmas which takes place 2 weeks after the Western one (yes, we celebrate both!)) I have been trying not to think about the garden. Because, what's the point of getting excited about the new growing season when we're still in the deepest of winters? My fingers itched to do something, so I kept drawing ever more intricate plans of the front garden remodelling (a new rose and a few evergreen shrubby herbs).

Until a friend showed me this: Winter Sowing
Brilliant! I knew that hardy plants could be sown in the autumn, straight into the ground, and that the more common sowing season starts in early spring. But sowing seeds in the middle of winter, that I had never heard of! But when you think about it, it seems intuitively OK... The seeds are still dormant and will continue to be such until the weather and light conditions are optimal. And anyway, what's the worst that could happen? I lose some seeds! Well, it's not as if there's not plenty more where these came from...


Here is one of 3 seed trays that I filled with mostly hardy annual, herb and some perennial seeds. I also used several small plastic pots, and covered everything with a long plastic cloche I had bought, but not used, last year. The cloche has vents on the sides, and it's been wedged down with a couple of bricks. It can be rather blustery around here sometimes, so better safe than sorry!

2 comments:

  1. Yay! I'm so glad you're trying it! I'm on GardenWeb too - they have a really great, supportive section on Winter Sowing. My username there is Serenae :)

    I got all my hardy perennials done, now I'm just waiting (impatiently) for the end of Feb to do the tender perennials and hardy annuals. I'm so excited!

    ~melikai

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks, Melikai, I'll look for you there! :D

    ReplyDelete