FREE PLANTS

I have a small selection of plants left over from a garden design project and anyone who wants them are welcome to contact me and collect them.

There are a few lavenders and the following herbaceous perennials: Achillea, Lobelia, Helenium, Blue grasses, Aquilegia, red hot poker, potentilla, ladys mantle, white echinacea and guernsey lillies.

Hanwell Fields Community FETE

community fete

The Hanwell Fields Community Fete is on this Saturday (28th June) from 2-4 pm.

Fun for the kids…fun for all the family. Come and join us for a splendid afternoon.

Here’s what to expect…

  • Splat a teacher
  • Hot dogs Forest school area
  • Teddy tombola and Ice-cream van
  • Hook a duck and lucky Dip.
  • Jar tombola
  • Balloon modelling and face painting
  • Human fruit machine
  • Traditional tombola
  • Bottle tombola
  • Plant Stall
  • Regal Equestrian
  • KNR Jewellery
  • Barks Charity
  • Water babies
  • Sing and sign
  • Parent Council stall
  • Residents Association
  • Tug of war
  • Book stall
  • Buttons about craft
  • Gretchen- Decorative Jars
  • Youth Group
  • Jo Merry Dance School
  • Tea and cakes

Gardening Organically

Further to questions i have received from members in the group regarding  how to control pests and diseases in the garden i thought i would share some small tips. Some i have used in the past and have worked a treat and others take a little time to  work.

Vegetable Gardening.

If you have your vegetables in pots or beds and you are plagued by Blackfly / Greenfly or whitefly, then i would advise you plant clumps or lines of either French or African Marigolds between them. These summer bedding plants give off a pungent scent that pests dont like and often tend to keep away or at least there numbers can be reduced.

If your growing carrots or cauliflowers, then i would advise creating mini tents using a wire coat hangers and horticultural fleece over the wire frames. The main pest with carrots is Carrot root fly. The adult will usually lay its eggs just below the surface of the soil and once the young hatch they then feed on the carrot, over time these carrots can become deformed and often will just stop growing altogether. Ideally once the carrots have been planted you need to consider adding a tent like structure to cover the plants. Alternatively you could plant bulbs of garlic near your carrots and this will deter the pests aswell.

Blackfly / Greenfly/ Whitefly and Red Spider Mite.

All of these pests are common garden pests and will affect not just home grown produce but flowering plants too including roses, bedding plants and even shrub stock in the garden. There are various methods for reducing numbers and outbreaks organically, some methods require further treatments throughout the growing season.

With the use of a hand sprayer you could make a mix up of 50/50 washing up liquid and water, when you spray this on the plants particuarley roses, the soap leaves a sticky residue film on the top and underside of the foliage, spray at the first outbreak of pests, the soap will prevent the pest flying and eventually bind its wings and then the eventual happens

If you grow Rhubarb in your garden what do you do with the leaves once you have harvested the stalks? Take a hessian sack and fill the sack with all the rhubarb leaves (it helps if you can rip them up as it will speed the process up quicker). Once the sack is filled, tie the top and dunk the whole sack in a bin of water (rainwater preferred) and leave for 3 months.  During this time your are creating the equivalent of a garden tea bag. Once 3 months are up take the sack out of the water, squeeze all the remaining water / rhubarb juice out of the sack as you would with a tea bag. Empty the decayed foliage onto the compost bin and then you need to filter the residue water in the bin. I will warn you now this is quite a stinking job, but it will pay massive dividends later.

Store the filtered rhubarb water /juice in a separate bottles or buckets and then once a week add it to a hand sprayer and spray everything in the garden with it (All plants). This makes a good foliage feed, and organic insecticide and fungicide.  This method can also be used with Borage and Comfrey leaves too.

Finally, Stinging nettles, Every garden has them , but really we call them weeds. A weed is an unwanted plant growing in the wrong place. Many weeds are bad for the garden. But the Stinging nettle is a useful plant to have. I am not advising to plant the garden completely with them, but keeping a clump of them in a pot somewhere in the garden is good for nature.

The humble nettle Utica dioca is a super food for the garden, full of iron , calcium and magnesium and is fantastic for adding to a compost heap, leaves only . It makes a great host plant, meaning many Aphids will congregate round a clump of nettles and then the nettles become almost a sacrificial ground full of aphids, fantastic for garden birds as they will then have a hub of aphids to feed from and your prize blooms are saved.

A good pot of nettles in the garden also becomes a Ladybird Paradise, the adults will lay their eggs on the nettles and the larve will then hatch and start eating the aphids and you wont regret it once the ladybird army start going to work.

A Garden pond, or a small wooden barrel sunk in the ground with a few large stones allowing small amphibious creatures to get in and out will encourage frogs and toads, great to deter a  raging slug population.

Failing that, install a Slug Pub in your borders, an old gardeners favourite but great to involve the children with . insert a small plastic beaker into the soil and fill a small amount of cheap beer into the bottom, the sweet nectar entices a few slimy figures to congregate and then are lured to their death.

Biological control for Greenhouses: to help clear greenhouse pests, there are many products on the market that you can buy online. The one i have had great success with is  a Parasitic Wasp (Encarsia formosa), you recieve the wasps in a small vial in the post and you basically just tip a few on to the compost of the plants in the greenhouse. With the warmth and moisture  they will soon hatch and can start to grow. These really only have the lifespan of a summer, and they will not over winter. Once the adult have grown they will reproduce and the larve will then start feeding on any pests in the greenhouse. If like me you grow Tomatoes and cucumbers , i am often plagued with Whitefly and red spider mite, these little critters will then digest the pests in a matter of weeks. They work a treat, and have had numerous successes with them.

Next topic: Compost heaps.

 

Create your Own Hanging Basket

Now that we are getting to the time of year when we are past early morning frosts, you can start to think about your hanging baskets.

Choose a hanging basket that has good depth and diameter. Ideally choose a wire framed basket as these will provide your with a good longevity of service. When choosing how to line your basket there are a number of options to consider. These can be moss, coir, wool and plastic sheeting.

There are many advantages and disadvantages to each. Moss is costly and only really lasts one season, Coir is attractive but dries out very quickly, hanging basket wool is another oprion which is made up of recycled materials and then there is an inside out compost bag.

I prefer to use moss as it looks more natural and holds water better. The secret to a good hanging basket is to keep it sufficiently moist / damp whilst it is actively growing.

1. Line your basket with your preferred medium, in this case i am using moss.

2. start by filling up the base and lower insides edges with moss and packing it tightly to the edges, then fill in the central hollow with a cut out a disc shape from a compost bag and make lots of small holes inside it. Then place this disc at the bottom of the basket on top of the first layer of moss. This will act as reservoir with drainage, then add compost on top of this

3. Choose which trailing plants you wish to use and start inserting them round the edge of the basket so that they poke through the wires but the root sits on the compost and moss edges. Once you have done this start by packing more moss round the inner edges of the basket so that the trailing plant roots are within the basket, packing the moss to the sides.

4. Fill up the basket with more compost until you reach the top. make sure you pack the compost down to expel any air.

5 Begin planting the top of the basket starting with your (Dot Plant) this is the plant which will be in the middle of the basket. For Summer bedding i usually have a geranium (Pelagonium) , once this is in your start planting round the outside. Never be afraid to pack too many plants into a basket.

6. Once its all planted i suggest sprinkling a handful of slow release fertiliser granules and Swell Gell on top of the basket and round the plants. The slow release will feed the basket for the next few months and the swell gel is a granule which when , in contact with water, turns to jelly, this will help keep the compost moist during dry and windy spells.

7. Once the bedding starts to produce flower buds you then want to start applying a liquid plant food, usually once a week and then as flowering begins , twice a week. Hanging baskets must never be allowed to dry out.

Plants Suitable for Summer hanging  baskets are as follows:

Geraniums upright and trailing / Fushsias including Trailing forms, Petunias including trailing forms, Nepeta, Lysimachia, Helichrysum, Lobelia, Impatiens, ivy, begonias, cinerariaand many others.

Start a wildflower area in your garden.

Have you got an area of your garden that is unused or just simply neglected, does the grass look tired or worn out, then maybe you could consider letting it go rather wild. Wild that makes it beneficial for nature and create a new mini eco system.

1.Take an area of grass and cut it as low as possible with a lawn mower, strimmer or just a pair of shears.

2. Take a rake a rough up the area so that the existing soil and grass is almost ripped up and looking pretty harsh. What you are looking to create are bare patches of soil.

3. Because Hanwell Fields lies on a clay ironstone soil, then you need to select wildflower seeds that would be suitable for this soil. You can purchase these seeds from a good garden centre, online via amazon or even Ebay.

Ideally you need to get at least 4 of this selection in order to get a good variance.

Small Scabious / Rough Hawkbit / Yellow Rattle / Knapweed / Devils Bit Scabious / Wild Carrot / Birds foot Trefoil / Ox Eye Daisy.

4.Once you have made you selection, mix all the seeds together in a bowl or plastic tub ensure you mix them well.

5.Then take pinches of seed and scatter them liberally over the prepared area. Once sown , tread them down with your feet so they bed deep into the prepared roughed up soil, water in and then leave.

6. Allow the area to naturalise for at least a year, dont walk over the area and let the grass run wild in the prepared area.

7. After flowering has finished (Usually September) just trim the area with a pair of shears and let the debris settle on the ground so that the dried flower heads can release their bounty of new seeds to start the process all over again.

Make it a family exercise and involve the children.

Cost in seeds £5 – £15 . Time required including sowing 1 hour. Satisfaction £priceless.

Community Association AGM

Monday 19th May, 7.30pm is the Hanwell Fields Community Association AGM. As residents you are all entitled to come and have your say. Some of our members are wanting to step down from their current roles, and this is the opportunity for others in our community to step forward. Both the Chair and secretary (who basically does all admin, opening up and running of the community centre) want to step down. This is an opportunity to be part of something that benefits our community. Thanks

Community Fete

On Saturday June 28th, 2-4pm there is a community fete at Hanwell Fields Community School. This is a joint event with the School and Residents Group. If anyone would like to offer some time, either on the day or before hand, please let me know. Also if anyone has a good raffle prize they could offer it would be most appreciated. I will let you know more details soon. Thanks

Hanwell Fields Gardening Club

I have added a Gardening Club to this page for any residents who would be interested in forming a group for the benefit and enjoyment of anything garden related.

Naturally in order for the club to grow we need members to join us and then we can start looking at events etc for the group to partake in.

I am also happy to answer any gardening questions and queries or if you need help with a particular problem in your garden.

Such events can include, Garden talks, visiting local gardens not normally open to the public, garden shows like Chelsea, BBC Gardeners World Live  and Hampton Court, Planting demonstrations, how to get the best from your garden, how to make your garden low maintenance, lots of ideas i have and would happily ask anyone interested to join and see where things lead.