My garden is at it's best in May, a riot of colour and lovely perfume. I fill the borders so that you can't see the soil, it helps to keep the weeds at bay.
Healthy hosta's I've been lucky this year as a Thrush had moved in, feeding its young on juicy snails. Yeah.
Gave all the topiary a good haircut.
Rhododendrons are doing well this year, they sometimes struggle as they are in neutral soil and they much prefer acid soil so I have fed them well.
A robin has moved into the bird box, you can see it's moss nest tumbling out of the front.
This Himalayan Lilac is compact enough to live a pot and its smells wonderful.
I love this combination of plants and shrubs, the pink & dark plum colour runs through them all. Repeating a colour in a garden is called The Rhythm of the Garden, when I was training I couldn't get my head around this terminology, all I could think about was a drum kit! Now that I am actually putting the theory into practice it makes more sense.
Forget me knots flower all over the garden, en mass they smell divine. They make a good edging plant for a border.
Here is the tamerisk tree (the pink fluffy one) a week later in full bloom.
Again, in full bloom.
A quiet shady corner to sit.
The apple tree had its crown lifted (removing lower branches) this last winter which has improved the overall shape of it. Buzz was looking for me.
A clematis in a pot.
My niece gave me this trough as a lovely pressy, thank you Zoe and Violet, perfect choice of plants.
Allium 'Purple Sensation' lives up to its name.
They are seeding themselves nicely, started out with just 3.
This garden has been 'work in progress' for nearly 30 years and very much on a budget, most of the plants have been grown from cuttings or put in as small cheap plants.
This lovely little shrub was a cutting from the one in the back garden that had "layered" itself so a shrub for free
Cheers
Sharon