Thanks for all your good wishes last week, I had an excellent race, 50 miles in a loop round the Chilterns. The injury I picked up in the previous race behaved itself until quite close to the end. Much fun was had, believe it or not. I have a couple of months off before the next one, so there is a decent chance I’ll get some gardening done. If I’m not out training, eating or snoozing.
Last weekend I got the lawn mowed again and that was it. This weekend I have half an idea I’ll tackle some of the bindweed which has become rampant in various places, seemingly undeterred by the drought. In the meantime, it’s time for Six on Saturday. Six things, in the garden, on a Saturday. Could be anything, you decide!
Here are my Six….
1 – Alchemella mollis. It rained a little early this morning, the water beading nicely on the tiny hairs of the Lady’s Mantle leaf.

2 – Monarda seedhead. Of the several varieties of plant I bought and eventually planted this year, these are the only ones I have some confidence in. The others I fear did not survive the double whammy of drought and neglect this summer.

3 – Teasel. Persistent bugger. They grew quite big over the summer when I wasn’t mowing, but I cut them back to size with the mower the last few weeks. They are gamely putting out new growth. I should dig them up properly. Can you see the slug hiding under a leaf?

4 – Geranium ‘Dreamland’. Minding its own business in the shady border. Winner.

5 – Salvia ‘Hot Lips’. Every year I threaten to dig this thug up, but at this time of year, with little else flowering, I’ll take it.


6 – Fuchsia, bog standard one. ‘Mrs Popple’, maybe. Whoever it is, they are being photobombed, and in danger of being strangled, by the dreaded bindweed. Why can’t the slugs and snails eat that?

Those are my Six, what are yours? If you’d like to have a go, 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’s guide.
Enjoy your garden, downhill to winter now!
I’ll be back next weekend for another #SixOnSaturday.
I share your distate for ‘Hot Lips’ – just a teensy bit too vulgar- but those monad seed heeds are beautiful. Here is my infrequent contribution for this week…
https://theoptimisticgardener.wordpress.com
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monarda!!!
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Oh, no, not bindweed!! Ugh. It was starting to make a comeback at our old house when we managed to unload the place and leave it for the next suckers. Although it’s Sunday morning for you, it’s still Saturday in my time zone, so I’m sneaking in with my post: https://dameeleanorhull.wordpress.com/2022/09/24/still-saturday-so-sixish-pixish/
I hope everyone has a great remainder of the weekend!
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OK, so if I had to pick a favorite, I’d go with Geranium ‘Dreamland’. I like that geraniums are self sufficient! 🙂
Here are my six:
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Some nice shapes in your teasels and seed heads there. this week I’ve got my six but also sixty – reaching my target of harvesting sixty edible plants in 2022 https://reclaimingparadise.wordpress.com/2022/09/24/sixtyish-on-saturday/
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Ha – I have removed my Hotlips after tolerating it for a few years! It just didn’t bring me pleasure… Glad you had fun on your run! https://ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com/2022/09/24/six-on-saturday-busy-between-the-blooms/
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I’m not a fan either.
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👍
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My favorite of yours is the Monarda seedhead. Unfortunately, my monarda did not bloom this year… just lots of green (all sizzle, no steak).
Here are my six: https://linnie113.wordpress.com/2022/09/24/six-on-saturday-09-24-22/
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Nice pops of color! Much of my garden is fading now. https://wisconsingarden.wordpress.com/2022/09/24/six-on-saturday-september-24-2022/
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The weather will cool this weekend. Time to concentrate on fall gardening tasks. I have bought som new plants and I am anxious to get them in the ground.
https://mensgardenvestavia.wordpress.com/2022/09/24/21-sept-2022-the-heat-is-back/
Happy gardening to all my SOS friends.
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Those lips are definitely a winner this time of year! And I also wander about bindweed – you’d think by now the genetic engineers of the world would have created something that attacked it, and only it – but that may be asking too much. Happy running!
https://countygardening.wordpress.com/2022/09/24/six-on-saturday-24sep2022-garden-hellos-and-goodbyes/
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With so many lovely Salvias I cannot bring myself to like Hot Lips. I don’t know why, but it just looks too contrived for me. I think my large fuchsia in the ground might be your Mrs Popple, it looks the same and it is quite a doer, the one I am showing today though is in a pot. Good to hear you injury hasn’t got worse. Though I still think you are bonkers running those sort of distances! 😆
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The fuchsias have certainly come on since the rain came back, they’re wonderful now. I too have your bindweed problem, never seem to get rid of it, no matter how much I pull out. Like your salvia, lovely bright colour.
My six are here……https://www.leadupthegardenpath.com/
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Just my shade of lipstick on that Salvia. Congratulations on that run. Here are my Six: https://noellemace.blogspot.com/2022/09/six-on-saturday-24-september-2022.html
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Also joining the crowd singing the praises of salvias for late season, although not ‘Hot Lips’ for me! No salvias this week, but of course there is a rose, another of my late season favourites. Aargh to the weeds, they will probably be my focus this weekend. Here’s my link https://n20gardener.com/2022/09/24/six-on-saturday-beautiful-times/
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Salvias are becoming my favourite plant for this time of year. I’ve yet to try them in the actual ground and have stuck to pots. Lovely photo of the alchemilla.
Here’s my link with a few garden visits in Somerset and a few from my garden too
https://www.hortusbaileyana.co.uk/2022/09/home-and-away.html
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I swapped ‘Hot Lips’ for ‘Amethyst Lips’ last year. It seems to keep its lips better than the former. G. ‘Dreamland’ looks to be a winner. Good luck with the bindweed battle.
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Hello. I have been absent again. Congratulations on your run (I’m full of admiration) and your Fuchsia. Bog standard or not, I would be happy to be able to grow one here.
Here are my six: http://janesmudgeegarden.com/sos-september-24-2022-shamefully-remiss/
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The salvia is lovely. And congratulations on your run of course!
Here are my six
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Perhaps a link would help?
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I forgot to ask yesterday how you did in your 50 mile run last weekend. I have read your post and see that you enjoyed yourself in spite of your previous injury. Don’t dare knock the Hot Lips, I think it’s brilliant and have included it in my post this week.
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Good morning! Pleased to hear that you had a good race last weekend. Some lovely colour in your garden with the Salvia and fuchsia. The geranium is a lovely colour too.
I missed linking my post from last week to your one, but I’m making sure this week’s post is linked! Here it is: https://hairbellsandmaples.com/2022/09/24/six-on-saturday-vegetables-in-september/
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Naughty slug! Regarding the teasel, of course they must be removed before they produce flowers. I pulled up about 50 of them 15 days ago but at least I’m quiet… for the moment.
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That geranium is beautiful, I might just have to buy one or two of those.
I’m a long-time lurker of SoS, posting here for the first time now I finally have something to post about! Here are my six:
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I have only just realised the relevance of the ‘Hot Lips’ name, it really does suit that Salvia. Glad that your run was a success. Here’s my six
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It seems that slugs, gophers, deer, . . . and just about everyone who is a menace to the garden, takes classes on how to cause the most damage. Seriously, we all know that we would not mind their voraciousness if only they would eat the undesirable vegetation.
Are teasels considered desirable in the right situations? I mean, does anyone actually enjoy them? I do not like them because they grow in weedy situations, and often mix with thistles. To me, they look like weeds. However, I can also remember when they were a popular cut flower.
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Great arty photo of the rain drops on the Alchemella mollis and that Geranium ‘Dreamland’ is smashing. I never used to suffer from the perils of bindweed until I found some under the hedge a few months ago – it’s a persistent so-and-so https://onemanandhisgardentrowel.wordpress.com/2022/09/24/six-on-saturday-24-september-2022-farewell-summer/
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Having just created bare soil with my border changes I’m finding teasel seeds are now germinating. Must have been dormant there for a while and have found their opportunity. I’ve been considering what to do with hot lips too. I’ve got two patches that have run rampant this year. On the one hand they are drowning other plants out but on the other they have thrived in the drought conditions when others haven’t. On the whole though I prefer the more upright salvias.
This week’s six has been a quick one after a busy week at work. Six from my parents garden. https://30daysofwildparenting.wordpress.com/2022/09/24/six-on-saturday-24-9-22/
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Slugs don’t eat any of the real problem weeds, part of why they are problems weeds presumably. I sing the praises of Salvias for their late season turn too, they’re hard to beat. Here are mine: https://wp.me/p6bCCa-3wU
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