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Sally Nex

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Sally Nex

Tag Archives: Wisley

Of very small things

13 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

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floral art, flower arranging, miniatures, RHS Wisley, Wisley, Wisley Flower Show

I’ve mentioned my talented friend Pattie before on this blog: she’s a floral artist of the most patient and dedicated kind, and I am regularly rendered speechless by her extraordinary creations.

Here’s her latest.

She’s something of a specialist in miniatures, compositions made entirely from plant material but measuring no more than 10cm in any direction.

It was for the annual NAFAS competition at the Wisley Flower Show, this year moved out of the rather gloomy tent it’s usually in, to take up a much sunnier spot in the Bicentenary Glasshouse.

The theme for this year’s miniatures was ‘Just Perfick’. Which, I think, it is. Luckily the judges thought so too and gave it first prize.

The level of detail is just astounding: as you can see, it’s a little picnic scene with bowls of berry ‘apples’ and a basket of buns made from pearl barley kernels delicately painted red along the crease.

Here’s the second prize winner, by Rachel Sherwin: I can’t work out what the ‘apples’ are on this one (there’s one on the tree and a couple on the little chair underneath). They’re seedpods of some description, but nothing I recognise: these artists are geniuses at seeing miniature shapes in things you or I would just pop in a seed packet and forget about.

And third prize: perhaps a more straightforward arrangement from Anne Blunt, but nonetheless exquisitely pretty for all that. Those little blossoms so artfully arranged on the twig look just like a Japanese cherry in springtime. In fact now I come to think of it, there’s more than an echo of Japanese tradition in these delicate little creations.

If you’re one of the many people who scuttle past the floral art tent at flower shows on the way to something more obviously gardening-related, do stop next time and take a look, if only just for these little jewels. They’re like nothing else you’ll ever see.

Wisley Flower Show in pictures

07 Friday Sep 2012

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

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Tags

RHS Wisley, traffic jams, Wisley, Wisley Flower Show

Glorious sunshine beckons this weekend for the Wisley Flower Show: for my money, one of the very best small shows there is.

I popped by for the first day on Thursday and accidentally discovered the way to ‘do’ the show with minimal discomfort. As regulars will know there’s a killer of a traffic jam right down the A3 and on to the M25 which builds up gradually until by mid-morning you’re waiting well over an hour to get to the front gate.

Because I had a ridiculously over-committed day which involved collecting £200 of wood from a sawmill, visiting Wisley Flower Show and hacking the 2 1/2 hour drive back to Somerset, all by lunchtime, I turned up on the dot of 9am when the show opens. What a revelation.

I swept regally in without so much as a hesitation and was politely waved to my place in Car Park No 1 (right by the entrance) by a small phalanx of attendants. I strolled through the garden, almost alone bar feverishly lawnmowing gardeners, and had the whole show very nearly to myself for the first half-hour.

By the time I was ready to leave it was only 11am and the queues were well on the way back to Junction 9. Once again, I swept out, waving (slightly sadistically) at all the sweating punters on the other side of the A3 still waiting to get in. You couldn’t help but feel a bit smug.

Anyway: if you get the chance to go this weekend, don’t miss it. Here are a few of the many delights you’ll enjoy.
 


Crocosmia x crocosmiiflora ‘Emily Mackenzie’, Leonotis leonurus and Astilbe x chinensis taquetii ‘Superba’ in joyous union on the Best in Show stand by Madrona Nursery

Flower of the show was definitely Rudbeckia laciniata ‘Herbstonne’: it was everywhere, about 7ft tall and supremely elegant. Probably my favourite of all the rudbeckias and superb in big, in-yer-face planting schemes

Solanum quitoense, a gorgeous sultry big purple leaf with the dew still frosting its upper surfaces, from tropical woodland in central America – one of an extraordinary and inspiring display of exotics from Plantbase Nursery

Aralia cordata flowers catching the sunlight on the Edulis Nursery stand

I rather liked the funky pink frames used to set off the plants on Bean Place Nursery’s stand

Dichroa februga, an evergreen hydrangea relative (The Botanic Nursery)

An intriguing heather from Trewidden: don’t you just love the way the stems carry on up out of those huge blowsy flowers? It’s Erica verticillata – and 70s and boring it ain’t

And last but not least: one for all you heuchera lovers out there. Heuchera ‘Sashay’ from Heucheraholics had the most gorgeous ruched leaves with just the right touch of purple petticoat showing. Exquisite.

Wisley Flower Show in pictures

14 Monday Sep 2009

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

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Wisley

Further to the previous…

13 Sunday Sep 2009

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

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flower arranging, Wisley

Woooot! Well done Pattie!

Incidentally she also did another miniature in the show – actually I think technically it’s a ‘petite’ as it’s marginally bigger at about 25cm x 25cm (ish – not sure of the exact details). The theme was ‘Berried Treasure’.


This lot was a pile of peppercorns last time I saw it on Pattie’s mum’s living room table.

And guess what – she won first prize for this too!

Mystery caterpillar

12 Friday Sep 2008

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

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Tags

caterpillars, pests and diseases, Wisley

Can anyone identify this little chap?


One of my clients asked me to have a look at some bedding she had in her front garden, which she thought had been clobbered by slugs. The odd thing was, it was mostly pelargoniums, which in my experience aren’t that tasty to slugs so generally don’t suffer much damage.

It was pretty clear as soon as I looked at them that this wasn’t slug damage – no slime marks, and the holes were large and in the centre of the leaf – not like slugs at all, which usually attack the edges of leaves first and then if they are going to eat the centre of the leaf, they kind of scrape away a thin layer to begin with rather than eat it straight through all at once.

Anyway – it was all screaming caterpillar to me, so I hunted around for a bit and sure enough this is what I came up with. Trouble is, I have no idea what it might be – I’m not exactly an entomologist and my garden experience with caterpillars is limited to gooseberry sawfly and cabbage white butterfly caterpillars, both of which I can identify at a hundred paces and despatch accordingly.

I’m a bit concerned though that this little chap might be something interesting. I had a look on the pragmatically-named What’s This Caterpillar website but despite a happy hour browsing their gorgeously illustrated plates couldn’t come up with a conclusive ident – the closest I got was the unfeasibly rare Orache Moth.

Thinking it rather unlikely that we’ve turned up the kind of thing you send to the Natural History Museum, I sent these pics in to Wisley’s advice centre to see what their bug people can come up with. But if there’s anyone out there who’s looking at this and thinking to themselves, “Doesn’t she realise that’s a pelargonium leaf-stripper?” please don’t hesitate to enlighten me! Until then, we’re holding off the spraying/squashing/nematode treatments in the assumption that it’s innocent until proven guilty.

Mystery tree

25 Wednesday Apr 2007

Posted by sallynex in pond

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Cambridge University Botanic Gardens, forsythia, honeysuckle, jungle planting, kerria, Wisley

I found a tree at the bottom of the garden I had no idea I had the other day.

This is all part of my little project to clear the overgrown mess around my garden pond and make it into an intentionally overgrown jungle area, so I’ve been removing a big old forsythia and a massive clump of Kerria japonica (both great shrubs but only if you like that particular shade of brassy yellow… I don’t).

Having done that I realised there was a multi-stemmed something-or-other there and since I don’t get rid of things I can’t identify I’ve been watching it with interest as it leafed up and formed flower buds.

Well now it’s flowering – and looks just like a honeysuckle. Except that it’s about 20ft high… and the flowers are about half the size of a climbing honeysuckle – here’s a pic:

Pretty, isn’t it? I’ve been emailing the Cambridge University Botanic Gardens, which has a national collection of honeysuckle (Lonicera), and good old Wisley, both of whom have asked me to send them a sample. So I’ll chop off a bit today and post it. I think either way, it’s such a pretty thing it’s staying (even though it’s not very jungly) – how lovely, just like getting a present!

Plant-buying season again…

21 Wednesday Mar 2007

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Spiraea, Wisley

I have the extreme good fortune to live not very far from RHS Wisley, which is about as close to a centre of horticultural excellence as you can get. The gardens are wonderful at pretty much any time of year, and it’s one of the places I go as a reference for how things ought to be done.

They also have the best garden centre for miles there, and though the plants are a bit on the expensive side, they are without exception beautifully grown and the highest-quality plants it’s possible to buy. I’ve never had a single one I’ve got from there keel over on me, which is more than you can say for a lot of nurseries.

The garden centre runs an excellent ordering service, allowing you to source obscure plants simply by putting your name down for it at the information desk. I did exactly that for the last few plants on my list for my Dixter tribute border, and they’ve come up trumps – a postcard dropped through the letterbox yesterday telling me they’ve now got Spiraea japonica “Gold Mound”.

The young leaves on this compact shrub are more of a pale yellow than its parent, S. japonica “Gold Flame”, in which they’re a kind of butterscotch orange. I dislike “Gold Flame” for the revolting clash of colours which happens when it flowers – candy pink and butterscotch orange have to be the most horrible combination ever. But pink on greeny-yellow might look a lot nicer, and the habit of both is a really lovely compact fountain, which combined with the prettiness of their new spring foliage makes them very good garden shrubs, so I’m happy to give it another try.

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