Well, it’s officially Spring and the garden is accelerating almost visibly. Sadly that also means the weeds are going nuts. Bindweed, my annual scourge, is poking up in all the usual places, and those sycamore! Everywhere. Time for Six on Saturday. Clue is in the name – Six things, in the garden, on a Saturday. Could be anything – flowers, foliage, tools, a success, a failure, an untidy corner, a job to do, anything at all. Join in!
Here are mine for this week.
1 – Muscari, Grape Hyacinths. I planted these years ago, along the edges of the wisteria border. They are certainly reliable, coming back in numbers every year. This pair is among others growing up through the lavender. I confess I don’t much like them, they have a touch of the haemorrhoids about them. Still, mustn’t grumble, not a great deal of flowering going on so one should enjoy what there is.
2 – Peony. Just a week ago these were tightly packed red buds, barely showing on the surface of the soil. These are new to me via grannysgarden. I gather they are a red flowered-variety, the name is lost to history. I still have one or two pieces to plant out, I must get around to that.
3 – Narcissus ‘Peeping Jenny’. The second to flower of five daff varieties that I planted out back in the autumn. Apparently the petals fade to almost white. They are ok, I suppose, but lack the pzzazz of the jetfire variety.
4 – Cornus ‘midwinter fire’. A couple of weeks ago I cut this right back to the lower trunk, about 8 inches from the ground. It’s stil a fairly young shrub, this is year 3 I think, so this is the first prune. I’d like to have this re-grow from the base every year, keeping it fairly tidy and also maximising the winter show. I’m pleased to say it is already kicking out new growth, always a relief after a hard prune.
5 – Wallflower, ‘Cloth of Gold’. Those little yellow buds from a couple of weeks ago have fulfilled their destiny.
6 – Tulip kauffmaniana. Here we go again. A very reliably perennial tulip and always first to flower. For reasons best known to my past self, I planted them at either end of a planter, with much taller daffodils sparsely planted between them. As displays go it is thus a bit lacking, but close on they look great.
Those are my Six for this week, what are yours? If you are contemplating joining in, couldn’t be easier, just publish your post, pop a link to it in the comments below. If you also mention my blog in yours that would be fab. For more details and for other ways to participate, please see the brief participant guide.
Have a fab weekend in the garden, I certainly shall be for as much of it as I can. Don’t forget to check back in as more links are added during the day.
I’ll be back next week with another #SixOnSaturday.
Just peeped in to see what you and other have posted. I spent all Saturday helping a friend sell plants at the HPS sale in East Lambrook Manor gardens…heaven!! Left too early, and returned too tired to post.
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Your excuses are duly recorded! Sounds like a fab day. Ours is not till mid may.
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So you do have an outlet for all that propagating….that’s a relief!
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I like the trumpet on ‘peeping jenny’.
This year we have lots of sycamore seedlings that have survived from last year. Normally they all vanish, so I don’t worry about them much. I’ve tried transplanting some, since they do seem to survive the wind and salt here. They just look so tatty as trees though!
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Poor muscari for looking like haemorrhoids! They are very useful for poor soil where other things would sulk. Yes, I noticed yesterday that the weeds are coming into their own! Busy day ahead!
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I don’t object to them that much! Happy to see a bit of colour. I have piles (!) of them….
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Your tulips are great looking- the first is new to me! I’m glad to be back into the swing of it…
Here’s mine https://wp.me/p9dipw-oN
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Love the tulip. Have made a note for next year. Adds to a very long wish list.
https://happyretiredblog.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-spain-again-2/
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Hello again, yes it’s a good one. Had them for a good 3 or 4 years now i think.
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Pruned Cornus. I knew I’d forgotten to prune something. A very late Six from me as I’ve had to fight grandchildren for my iPad. Away for the weekend but will catch up with all the Sixes next week.
https://thequiltinggardener.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23-03-19/
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Just in the nick of time. Get pruning!
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A colour six, Mr P! I love the Wallflower, ‘Cloth of Gold’. I remember growing wallflowers when I was a child. I seem to remember they have the most wonderful scent?
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Not sure tbh. Haven’t got close enough to tell. I shall have a sniff tomorrow.
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did you have a sniff?
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No been out all day.
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Evening Mr. P. I’m running late today.
https://pigletinportugal.com/2019/03/23/sos-creating-a-succulent-garden-part-i/
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Here’s my offering for this week. Your tulips are beautiful – mine are all still just a bunch of leaves. You’ve reminded me that I must go out the front and rake the leaves up -they’re right over my peonies and I guess could be stifling them (there’s a LOT of leaves!)
https://greengirlgardener.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23rd-march/
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I am still raking up leaves as well…
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Late again 😂 looking forward to reading through them all in the morning.
https://southfieldgardener.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-spring-has-sprung/
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Evening! Plenty to get through.
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I do love this time of year, peony new shoots are just the best. Heres my post on Saturday for a change https://patientgardener.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23rd-march-2019/
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Evening Helen. Peonies are new to me so I am enjoying them for the first time.
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I have lost them in the past from planting too deep and mulching so fingers crossed for flowers this year
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Love the tulip photo Mr P. this is my 6 this Saturday
https://flowerswalksnature.home.blog/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23-3-19/
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Evening! Lovely, will have a read at some point.
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On my third attempt, despite a migraine, I’ve managed my Six. I’ll come back tomorrow and read/comment on posts. https://hurtledto60.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23-march-2019/
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Oh dear, take it easy.
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It is so lovely to see a range of colours and new green growth. Here are my six
https://thirdageblogger.blogspot.com/2019/03/six-on-saturday-spring.html
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Your flowers are beautiful. My garden is a celebration of white. Anyone feeling down in the dumps about their garden this first week of spring can have a look at mine. It will make you appreciate everything, including the weeds, growing in the garden. https://haphazardlyharpingon.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-03-23-2019-snow-garden/
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Oh dear! Still snow on the ground?
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This is my first time on the site, but I already envy the peony buds. I love the plant, however, have yet to have luck with it. This is also my first time to post Sx on Saturday. Here is the link to the post on my site After Eden: https://aftereden.blog/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23-march-2019/
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Hello Susan, welcome to the gang! Look forward to reading later on.
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I love grape hyacinths! While crocus start blooming before spring is really here, the hyacinths start when the crocus die back, when it really is the beginning of spring! I have tulips coming up in a fruit tree bed… I didn’t plant tulips. I haven’t even bought tulips! The tree’s been there for a few years, so no new bulb-filled soil. Odd! Your tulips are pretty, there is just something about them that I am not a fan enough to bother having any (except the volunteers).
https://lisasgardenadventureinoregon.blogspot.com/2019/03/six-on-saturday-flowers-and-harvest.html
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No tulips? Perish the thought.
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I like those tulips, perhaps you could put them in the ground for next year. I have muscari to share but I rather like them. Hopefully I won’t be banned!
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Howdy, I made it this week. Galloping!
https://digwithdorris.wordpress.com
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Hiya, well done! Look forward to reading later.
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Love those tulips. I am missing ours terribly – we didn’t put any in last autumn and we are bereft. Here are 6 rather boring things from me this week. https://theoptimisticgardener.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/6-on-saturday-23-04-2019/
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What? No tulips? Scandalous!
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I think I have some tulips reappearing from previous years which makes a change
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Hi everyone! Isn’t it exciting to see all the spring colours coming out! There’s ten from me this week (cheeky, I know) https://doingtheplan.com/2019/03/23/ten-good-things-this-march/
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Hello again. Loving your tulips this week! Here is my link http://2blackhens.home.blog/2019/03/23/six-on-23rd-march/
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Hello there, welcome back.
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I agree with your assessment of ‘Peeping Jenny’. If you’re going to have that color scheme, you might as well grow the original Narcissus pseudonarcissus. Hybrids should improve on the wild species.
We have relatives visiting, so no six from me this week.
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Excuses!
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Here’s mine and yes, I’ve included grape hyacinth too! I quite like them thank you very much!
https://oldhouseintheshires.com/2019/03/23/spring-sunshine-six-on-saturday/
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Each to their own, each to their own…
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I shall never look at them the same again mind!
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😱
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Grape hyacinth get too leafy for me and seed around but there are some prettier varieties – pale blue or two tone which aren’t so prolific and leafy and I grow those
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Is birdweed what we call chickweed here (Stellaria media)? A low-growing spreader with tiny white flowers? If so, our tour guide to Champagne country pointed them out and noted that he chopped them up and added them to his chicken soup. Another up cycle inspiration. Here are my six. I’m very happy to be back and see everyone again. https://ajoann.com/2019/03/23/luxembourg-french-gardens-blooms-pink/
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No, bindweed not birdweed. Strangling vine, will kill trees if left to grow unrestrained. Convolvulus family I think.
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Oh. yes, we’ve got that, too (of course).
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All the best people do…
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https://thepotter973907073.wordpress.com
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From the heavenly gill devons. Or is it the devonly gill heavens. She who is too busy in brizzle to post her own link. Out. Rageous.
https://offtheedgegardening.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-the-management/
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Cheers me dears 🙂
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You are so on trend – muscari and tulip speciosas featured in well know gardening magazine this month! No muscari here, so I couldn’t possibly comment! Also not quite there with the tulips, mine will be a couple of weeks I think. Thanks to everyone for advice on wp editors. I’m back with the familiar again. Here’s my link https://wp.me/p97pee-mT Now I must get to the garden!
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They ask me before going to print.
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😂😂😂
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Oh, you are naughty! Hemorrhoid’s indeed. Have you ever seen Muscari planted along wit daffodils in a Cornish wall? Then you’d change your mind, they look fabulous. Anything that resists being eaten is welcome in my garden. I have tulips too. Not early ones, mine are supposed to flower April to May. Seems they have a mind of their own. 🌷
Happy gardening Jon 😁
https://wp.me/p79zFr-1LX
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Don’t talk to me about piles. I was going to write that now it’s Tulip season, Tony Tomeo would be writing to say that he doesn’t bother with them, but I see he already has! Tony, it’s starting…
https://timhewittgardener.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23-3-19/
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Here are my six. It started to dry out in my garden, then another deluge. So I did something a little different this week. https://doesthisfontmakemelookfat.com/2019/03/23/write-on-saturday-making-a-leaf-casting-march-23-2019/
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Gaaagh, more rain!
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Still dark over here – on the cusp of being ‘the crack of dawn.’ My six are from yesterday and I”m totally freakin’ over the moon that spring is here. Finally. Tulips and daffs have yet to break free but it’s so nice to see white Galanthus instead of white snow….
https://countygardening.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23-03-2019-first-saturday-of-spring/
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Great! About time. No doubt everything will soon catch up.
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You’re darn sarf of course so a bit ahead of me. Tulip-free this year except for a few cheap ones that I didn’t manage to dig up last year. Better varieties will return next year (I hope). Waiting for wallflowers. OTOH, daffs are going over now. Oh well. My musical six is at https://rivendellgarden.blog/?p=4162. It’s shorter 🙂
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Loves a tulip, I do. A must have for me.
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Yay! Tulip season is here. Your kaufmannia tulips are very striking. Glad that you say you have waited until Year 3 to prune your Cornus Midwinter Fire, as mine is in Year 2 and I have just left it. Can’t agree with you on Muscari though, we have them lining our garden path and I like them very much. Here are my six for this week:
https://carrotsandcalendula.co.uk/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-how-to-plant-an-apple-tree/
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So happy its tulip time. Your seeds will go in the post today. Mislaid them till yesterday when they turned up in my coat pocket…
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Thanks!
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“Reliable” is a double edged word in gardening; dull but at least it doesn’t die like everything else, or stalwart that I wouldn’t be without. That’s Muscari. I still get post pruning anxiety after all the stuff I’ve hacked down in my time. Here’s my six: https://wp.me/p6bCCa-1Nu
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Lovely six as usual – I’m wondering if the original namers of muscari considered ‘haemorrhoid hyacinth’?
I’m featuring the colour yellow this week and yes, a Jetfire is featured.
https://www.teabreakgardener.co.uk/?p=1094&preview=true
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Sorry all – wrong link Here’s my summary of the colour yellow this week.
https://www.teabreakgardener.co.uk/my-gardening-week-six-on-saturday-23-03-19/
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I think muscari is probably Latin for “piles”. Ooh doctor, me muscari are killing me. Sounds right to me…
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Hi Jon, very nice picture of your Kauffmaniana tulips. They look different from mine. It seems that yours are higher or you have taken the picture from the ground…. Unlike you, I like the muscaris if I can tame them but the bulbs are easy to dig up. (Beautiful anatomical comparison image…)
My Six : https://fredgardenerblog.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23-03/
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Mine are planted in a tall planter on the patio which is higher than the rest of the garden.
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Good morning. Your Six-on-Saturday is definitely “Spring like”. I hope you didn’t post this yesterday – we all assume you get up at the crack of dawn to compose it. Anyway, here are your m-in-law’s Six.
https://grannysgarden229242407.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six–on-saturday
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Crack of dawn. Definitely.
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Lots of colour there. My tulips are no where near flowering yet apart from some dwarf variety that have turned out to a bit meah. I rather like the subtle yellows of your daffodilI but Jetfire is a hard act to follow (it’s been added to my 2019 Autumn buying bulb list). I’ve remembered to add my SoS link this week! https://onemanandhisgardentrowel.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23-march-2019/
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Morning. Some of my other tulips are coming through now too. Reckon I’ll have some out next week.
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Morning all. Looks like a beautiful morning and I have already been for a wee wander round the garden at dawn. What a contrast with last weekends snow! I have gradually come round to grape hyacinths. The bees seem to like them and they are one bulb where you can be pretty brutal in clearing handfuls of foliage away after they flower and they will still return next year. Here are my six, inspired by this weeks vernal equinox. Look forward to seeing everyone else’s…
https://schoolhousegarden.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-22-03-19-balance/
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Morning. Yes I have been sat out on the patio this morning contemplating future tulips.
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Just bought some muscari bulbs…https://basia329.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-18/
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You can get the cream in the chemists!
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I’ve been spotting random muscari I’d forgotten I’d emptied from pots last year into the border. Don’t do much for me either but filling a gap between the iris flowering and the tulips still to come.
https://30daysofwildparenting.wordpress.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-23-3-19/
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They are fairly harmless, I don’t dislike them enough to get rid.
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That is a cracking Tulip! Spring has definitely sprung. Here is my SOS. Busy weekend for me. Enjoy your weekend. https://sedumsdahliasandhayfever.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-march-23rd-2019/
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Have a good one!
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https://tonytomeo.com/2019/03/23/six-on-saturday-presbyterian-horticulture/
Here are mine. Again, I will come back later to see what other post. It is too late to do it now.
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Oh, you got grape hyacinth too! Even while fancier varieties of grape hyacinth are trendy, the old original straight species is still stigmatized, sort of like nasturtiums. The classic old fashioned variety is still my favorite because it is what I remember. Those tulips are rad too, although I will not grow tulips. They are not likely to bloom a second year here.
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