So that’s it, we’re in summer. Spring was brief, wasn’t it! I still haven’t cleared away the tulip pots from the patio, so it’s a fairly unedifying display of browning foliage. I should do something about that. I’ve been off work for a few days, taking advantage of the Jubilee bank holidays here in the UK. Some garden pottering has been done, some (bargain) plants have been bought, some of them have even been planted. I really must get them in the ground today or they will just dry out in their pots and sit there accusingly. The garden is looking quite nice at the moment, with one or two annoying areas that stubbornly refuse my attempts to zsuzz them up. I planted some echinacea in a gap, for example, but they have been munched to the ground by slugs and snails. I have not been patrolling the borders at night with my mollusc murder weapon, lacking the will or motivation to do so. I fear for my dahlias when I eventually get around to planting them out. Which reminds me, I should pot them on. They may as will be big and beefy when I plant them out.
Time for Six on Saturday. Six things, in the garden, on a Saturday. You know the drill, could be anything. Join in!
Here are my Six for this week.
1 – Hollyhock. In its third or possibly fourth year, any issues with rust hidden by surrounding plants. This is now quite a big clump. In the front garden I have found several new plants this year, seedlings of a similar clump in the front garden. I’ve just left them to grow, why not? This one will flower soon.

2 – Geranium ‘Orion’ or possibly ‘Rozanne’. I’m leaning Orion, but really who knows? The main thing is the flower power of this sizeable clump of garden trooper. Totally untroubled by slugs and snails to boot. In fact, I recently resolved to plant only plants that are not interesting to our slimy friends. It’s a shame, but needs must.


3 – Rose ‘A Shropshire Lad’. One of many climbing roses flowering their socks off in my garden at the moment, this plant is in its second year and its first time flowering. It’s rather lovely. I’m looking forward to a year or two when this will have grown to cover a decent chunk of the front garden fence.

4 – Clematis ‘Princess Diana’. Planted just down the fence from the aforementioned rose, this clematis is also in it’s second summer, and also flowering for the first time. It is struggling a bit for light, growing in amongst the very vigorous Paul Noel rambler. It is a very vivid pink and a pleasing trumpet shape.


5 – Campanula ‘Catherina’. Another plant that is usually defenceless in the face of remorseless munching, this variety is not thus afflicted. A low ground, clump forming variety, it’s pretty, popular with the bees. And not munched.

6 – Rose ‘Danse de Feu’. I have several of these roses, the others grown as cuttings from this one, the uber rose. It is a very bright red, set off beautifully by the lime green of the dwarf hop leaves. An accidental combination, but I’ll take it.

Those are my Six, what are yours? If you’d like to join in, just publish your post and pop a link to it in the comments below. If you also mention my blog in yours that would be splendid. For more details you can read the brief participant guide.
Have a great weekend, get some good gardening done.
I’ll be back next time for another #SixOnSaturday.
I’ve added 4 Clematis this week, two fabulous ones from a lovely Clematis nursery; the only Clematis I have failed to nurture is Lady Diana, don’t know why, but it’s lovely. Here’s hoping we have a bit of rain this weekend: https://kasmaty.blogspot.com/2022/06/sixonsaturdayreaching-for-sky.html
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I love them all, but maybe especially the Shropshire Lad rose. It’s odd, in other areas of life I don’t greatly care for pink, but in flowers (live ones, not in printed fabric) I am very drawn to it. Here are mine: https://dameeleanorhull.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/five-flowers-and-a-squirrel/
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Thanks for hosting, Jon. Your Princess Di is ahead of mine, although she always is the first texensis to flower. What a pretty rose Shropshire Lad is – and thanks for sharing Danse de Feu, a very accommodating and floriferous rose that I once had three of on a pergola, until I properly discovered fragrant roses so I took the m out and got some smelly ones instead! My six are at https://ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-not-all-of-them-pretty/
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Yes that is my only regret. I have a few roses with zero fragrance from the days before I saw the light.
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💡
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A wonderful geranium! Thanks to Six on Saturday, I have a thing for geraniums now. My six: https://stoneyknob.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/sos-visitors-from-afar/
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Absolutely lovely geraniums and the campanula looks great. I recently tried transplanting a white campanula, but placed it in too much sun. Ho hum.
A very late entry from me! https://onemorethyme.art.blog/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-4-june-2022/
As always, thanks for hosting
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Shropshire Lad is fantastic isn’t it? Thanks for sharing and hosting, Mr Propagator. In haste, here are mine! https://notesfromtheundergardener.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-4th-june-2022/ Have a great weekend everyone. Much needed rain has cleared to sun with a brisk breeze here – fine for sitting outside with a drink, which is what I’ll be doing shortly for my belated birthday celebration!
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Gorgeous, love that Geranium and Shropshire Lad, spring seemingly was short?! Thanks for hosting. https://theshrubqueen.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-not-alex/
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Wow, Clematis ‘Princess Diana’ is bright! Nice shape though. ‘A Shropshire Lad’ is very pretty. Is it particularly scented? I’ve just noticed that most of my sunflowers have been levelled by the dreaded mollusc population here. Now I am fearful of planting the courgettes out!
Here are my Six: https://frogenddweller.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-04-06-2022/
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Oh dear! I wish I’d read your post before publishing mine (I’m still in SPRING mode!). Oh well. The Clematis ‘Princess Diana’ is so unusual – I love it!
Here’s my Six:
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When I see all your color, I get color envy, since not much blooms in my garden just yet. I have to remind myself that green is a color! I am untroubled by slugs and snails here, but I feel your pain – when I lived in Seattle, well, they grow them big there, and they are hungry! I learned that they seem to prefer green lettuce to red, so I only grew the reddest varieties I could find. Good plan to buy slug resistant plants!
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Ooops, forgot to add my link: https://wisconsingarden.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-june-3/
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Your Princess Diana is lovely – I have Princess Kate which is the same shape. Not yet flowering so something to look forward to. I have long moved over to only buying plants that S&S don’t like. My Heleniums have fallen foul once again so I won’t be buying them again.
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I really like all the plants you featured this week. Great colors, your garden must be glorious. I’m slightly envious of the geranium and campanula, I can’t keep either of those alive here. https://pruneplantsow.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/sixonsaturday-june-4th-peonies-and-roses/
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Greetings from the Southeast USA. We are on the verge of our muggy season. The dampness of spring is ending and the relentless heat is about to start. Slugs and snails are mostly a problem with hostas in the shady parts but diatomaceous earth seems to have them at bay this year.
The roses are waning but the daisies and dahlias are taking their place of glory.
Here are mine for this week.
https://mensgardenvestavia.wordpress.com/2022/06/03/five-for-friday-plus-one-3-june-2022/
Happy gardening.
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I knew there was something else I needed to do. After my warning last week, I’ve returned to the fold at https://rivendellgarden.blog/?p=4673. Aside from that I can only be jealous as, apart from an abundance of roses and a single clematis flower, things here are a bit tardy! There we go. Onward and upward as they say.
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Hello stranger! 👋
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What a perfect selection this week of gorgeous Clematis and English roses. You’re making me want to pull out my David Austin Roses catalog and order something new! Thanks for sharing. here are my six for the week: https://woodlandgnome.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-iris/
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That’s what I keep doing. I have two dozen or more of them now…
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And there is always room for more, right? I’ve killed more roses in this garden than anywhere I’ve ever tried to grow them. So heartbreaking, especially with the gorgeous Austin varieties. I swore off insecticides and fungicides a few years ago when I made a greater commitment to butterflies, and well, you know the rest…. I thoroughly enjoy the rose photos you post from your garden!
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I use a spray which is just a foliar feed, called ‘Uncle Tom’s Rose Tonic’, not sure if you can get it or an equivalent over there. My roses have never been healthier.
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Terrific! I look for it! Thank you!
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I’m back for a Six on Saturday outing! Hope everyone’s doing well. Those pesky slugs do seem to zone in on any new plantings to fill gaps, anyone would like they have an agenda. Do like Princess Diana and vibrant pink generally.
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Yep, slimy buggers.
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Campanula is a bad word around here, but yours looks well behaved and very attractive. Love the roses!
https://wp.me/p50zvt-2xY
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Wow that’s a dazzling post, full of summer colour. I’m also behind with dahlia planting – good intentions for this weekend! Oh the slug and snail debate, I always say I will not grow the things they eat but then I can’t resist delphiniums, so on we go. Here’s my six – my to do list if getting out of hand! https://n20gardener.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-extra-time-needed/
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Yep, I planted three lupins a few weeks ago, nice healthy plants. Absolute shredded mess now. Such a shame.
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Why haven’t I grown C. ‘Princess Diana’? It’s so beautiful. It’s very damp here in North Somerset and I can hear the SnS munching as I type.
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Chomp chomp chomp
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So we are to embrace the idea of slugs and snails being a natural part of the garden ecosystem then not grow any of the things they want to eat. I’m not convinced of the logic and there are too many things I’m not ready to give up on yet. Princess Diana went on our ‘have grown’ list a few years back and seeing yours inclines me to replace it. Orion looks like a good’n and I like a good geranium as much as I dislike a poor one. Here are mine: https://wp.me/p6bCCa-3kL
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It’s more a case of I can’t be bothered to battle with the little f*ckers. I concede defeat.
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Too right! I used to use Sluggo when I lived in Seattle, but now learn that it is bad news, in some ways worse than the old slug bait. I have read that slugs dislike caffeine and now wonder if my high coffee ratio compost is deterring the local slugs. I dee them eating dandelion leaves, so they are around, but they do not eat my lettuce, nor anything else that I care about, as far as I can tell
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Good morning. What vibrant colours this week! My hollyhocks are getting going, in particular the one up against the conservatory. They keep coming back and spreading their seeds.
https://grannysgarden229242407.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-04-06-2022/
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Morning. More hollyhocks, nice problem to have!
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The strong pink on Clematis Diana is quite appealing and I am with you with regards slugs and snails. Here are my Six: https://noellemace.blogspot.com/2022/06/six-on-saturday-4-june-2022.html
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Yes it’s rather nice.
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You seem to be in the same mindset as me lately with regards to the slugs and snails They’ve been having a right old feast in my garden and I’ve done little to stop them.
I’m also becoming quite a fan of geraniums and have planted my first ones in the garden this summer.
Here are my six: https://wp.me/pa4Gvd-NZ
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Can’t go wrong with a geranium.
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I agree re the snails and only plants things in the City Garden which are not to their liking! The Fortnight Garden doesn’t have the same problem: https://thepropagatorblog.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-04-06-2022/
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I might get some kind of small pond arrangement going, frogs and toads are good slug control, I gather.
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Morning! I’m in the same situation with my tulip pots although I have been pulling out the dead and dying foliage as I’ve gone along so they just need emptying now.
An accidentally Jubilee-themed from me this week plus my regular Waddesdon update: https://mysecretgarden61808037.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/sixonsaturday-the-platinum-jubilee-edition/
Enjoy the rest of the weekend! Louise
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I have to decide what to do with the tulips. I usually just compost them, but I might experiment with keeping a few pots of the best to see how/whether they return.
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I love the flowers on Princess Diana, and have seen it growing vigorously, but it didn’t like my garden. Maybe the Calendula is a Campanula? Hoping everyone gets time to sort their gardens amid rampant June growth. Here are my six: http://kasmaty.blogspot.com/2022/06/sixonsaturday-reaching-for-sky.html
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Yes it is a campanula, just checking everyone was awake! I find clematis are binary, they’re either VERY happy or they die, there’s no in between.
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The Clematis is beautiful, although at first glance I thought it was a rose because of the leaves! It is a stunning pink colour! The Geranium is also lovely, and the more I see photos of it the more I think I should try and grow one. I also found what I think might be a native scraggly Geranium in the garden, although it is not impressive at all.
Here is my Six for the week – a very brief one this week.
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Definitely worth growing some geranium. Good doers.
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Shropshire Lad is my favourite rose here, so beautiful with a gorgeous perfume! Does Geranium Orion flower for as long as Rozanne which seems to go on for ever?
My six are here…..https://www.leadupthegardenpath.com/
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My rozanne aren’t flowering yet, so thinking about it that makes it likely this is orion..
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A great selection. I love the bluey/purple Geranium and the accidental planting combination. I’ve not been doing any late night slug and snail patrols either and discovered they’d polished off the Helenium. Damn things https://onemanandhisgardentrowel.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-4-june-2022/
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Yes that’s a shame my helenium are struggling to get going for the same reason.
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So lovely to see the bee on your Calendula, I find it so hard to get a photo in focus of bees when I chase them round my garden. I love the shape of your Clematis flowers too. Here’s my six https://wp.me/p2Eu3u-icg
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It’s a campanula actually, I got the name wrong.
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‘Princess Dianna’ clematis is excellent. Rose foliage actually suits it well. It must be nice to be able to grow Clematis like that. ‘Danse de Feu’ rose really does look good with rose foliage. Heck, even your Calendula looks great with Campanula flowers (although I doubt that is intentional).
Here are mine. I like to brag about my Allium, since they are my first and all.
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Actually it is a campanula, my bad! Duly corrected.
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Oh, I know. I recognized it as a mistake, just like I mentioned the rose with rose foliage (duh) instead of rose with hop foliage.
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I recently planted the geranium Rozanne and I will have to wait a bit before having a tuft like yours. Clematis ‘Princess Diana’ is exquisite! https://fredgardenerblog2.wordpress.com/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-04-06-22/
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It grows very well, shouldn’t be too long to wait!
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Beautiful roses. My ‘Orion’ is struggling to survive munching. Because of our drought, snails are gone, slugs are rare, but the rabbits are ravenous.
Here’s my six:
https://pieceofeden.blogspot.com/2022/06/six-on-saturday-june-4-2022.html
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no rabbits here fortunately. I think I’d give up entirely if something at my geraniums.
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A couple of beautiful roses there and lovely to see summer as we don sweaters and turn up the heating for winter. Here are my wet six for this week https://thistlesandkiwis.org/2022/06/04/six-on-saturday-04-06-22/
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