Ladies in waiting....

It's April...and that means Epimedium.  Little bobbing butterflies above heart-shaped leaves...what's not to adore?  It's hear-stoppingly gorgeous and deserves to be in a delicious bed under the dappled shade of an apple tree.  Sadly, it's not there yet and has joined the ever-increasing ranks of my 'Ladies in waiting'.  The culprit is, of course, bindweed.  Here it is:

If things work out like they are in my head, then I will have tackled this by the middle of next week and then I'll be able to plant all my ladies in waiting.  Apart from the epimediums, there are these lovelies:

...and so much more...waiting waiting (I feel like I'm in a Chekov play) - which brings me to the vast CRIME I discovered that I had committed today.  I found several raspberry canes that i had ordered back in FEBRUARY, utterly forgotten about and still wrapped tightly in plastic.  They had fallen victim to 'the move'.  The poor things had tried to put on some growth, which was flaccid and completely anaemic.  I almost threw them out, but there was a half hour of daylight left, The Hunk was babysitting and I dug a quick trench, added a bit of manure and planted them anyway (without even soaking the dry roots).  Honestly, I don't hold out much hope for the poor little blighters in terms of fruit....but I'm sure they'll survive okay, and perhaps next year I'll have raspberries.

This was one of those days when the garden seemed to change dramatically as a result of my efforts; mostly due, I think, to the addition of lots of vertical elements which give the impression, not only of growth, but of seclusion.  I've put hazel tripods in the lawn borders, and peasticks in my skinny trenches, creating an instant 'hedge' through which I shall grow sweetpeas or runner beans...who knows:

A Picnic...at last

My crambe cordifolia arrived yesterday, along with a fig tree and various other lovelies.  No time as yet to plant any of them - the pots are standing on my still-too-bare flowerbeds waiting for my attention.  Yesterday and today has been all about hoeing the borders- (I say 'all about' as if it took me hours, but actually it was a matter of a few minutes)- and sorting out which plants are going in the apple garden (that bit closest to the house that has two apple trees in it).  I have it in my head that I'll tackle these early next week (yeah yeah) but it's always good to set wild intentions I find.  These beds are choc full of digitalis and bindweed, along with three roses that have seen better days.  I have pots and pots of viola odorata, epimidiums, ferns and other lovelies all ready to be set free in here...fingers crossed I get my act together.

On an altogether more important note, we had our first ever PICNIC today.  The Hunk made sandwiches with a set-fire-to-your-nose amount of mustard, and Mr Pug ate bits of bread and cheese out of babety's fat hands (they have a symbiotic relationship - he helped incubate her by lying on top of me for nine months; she knows this and duly rewards him with extra food).  Glorious day...over all too soon.

So much else to say - cherry blossom out and proud, pear about to burst forth...oh, and I planted a row of shallots (can't remember when) and they're UP.

OMG WOW!

YAY! -my new potatoes have come up!!!

New potatoes are ridiculously easy to grow so I don't know why I'm so surprised...but actually I'm always a-gog when something I plant actually emerges from the earth.  This is deeply thrilling....  I'm going to wait now, until the stems reach about 15cm high, then cover the whole lot up again with some more compost.  I planted these in a pot on Friday 19th March, so that's just over two weeks.  I still have lots more chitting that I'm going to put in the ground when I stop being lazy.

On the subject of potatoes - I've been falling so in love with the chitting shoots on my egg-boxed lovelies.  They look like scruptious tiny hairy pineapples:

April.....

....whenever I hear that word my mind always adds '...is the cruellest month' (throwback from my schooldays, so forgive me) - and I suppose April is rather cruel in a sense, as - gardening wise- we are hit with unexpected frosts and seemingly un-ending rain, just when we think things ought to be feeling just a teensy weensy bit ...well....BALMY?

Anyway, TS Elliot was rather a grumpy old kermudgeon wasn't he? - I thought about him again today as I walked in the park with the babety and Mr Pug and we feasted our eyes on this delicious scene:

Somehow I think he wouldn't have thought the candy-floss shade of pink and the blowsy magnificence of the blossom quite 'the thing'.  I adore it...wish I had room for one in my garden...wish I knew the cultivar because I will definitely have an avenue of them like this in my next garden....

But back to my own back garden - It's been a pretty soggy round here lately (by which I mean it hasn't stopped raining even for a polite amount of time).  It's good in some ways, because the garden has been planted (of shrubs at least) and the torrential down-pours mean I don't have to be out there watering every day...but the SQUELCHINESS is sort of getting to me and I'm dying for some drier weather just so I can go out without wellies on.