Wednesday, 30 June 2010

Heating up for the Flower Show!




We’re now getting ready for the RHS Flower Show, which opens in 3 weeks time. In recent weeks we’ve sourced most of the plants for our back-to-back garden, The Mod-ieval Garden. Last week, with the weather being so hot, we have had to move the plants into a shaded area and keep them well watered to try and ‘slow them down’ so they are not past it by the time the show comes round! Because these plants are so important we really need to keep our eye on them for watering and watching out for unwanted pests.

In the glasshouses we have thinned out the vines to allow the grapes to swell – it gives more space for the fruit to see the sun. They’re pea sized at the moment and should be ready to pick later in the summer. The vines are pruned to two leaf buds after where the fruit is beginning to form. That was a hot job – it can be over 100 degrees in the glasshouses, especially around midday!

The last couple of days we’ve been transplanting the wallflowers, which have been grown from seed this year in the kitchen garden. Thousands will be planted over the next few days in the kitchen garden. They’ll then be transplanted for the autumn into the Italian and Charlotte’s Garden. Due to the heat, as soon as we lift the plants, they’re beginning to wilt so we have to be really fast with the planting and watering.

At the moment we’re getting a good crop of potatoes, cauliflowers, lettuce, cabbage, turnip and beetroot. We’ve also had some rhubarb and great strawberries – though we have had to net them to keep the squirrels and birds from the berries. All the produce is sold from the Garden Shop.

All the gardeners are wearing their hats, keeping covered up, slapping on the sunscreen and staying in the shade as much as possible. We’re also praying for rain!
Mark Blomeley
Craftsman Gardener
Images Left: Show plants in the shade. Right: Wallflower seedlings in Kitchen Garden

Thursday, 24 June 2010

The Italian Job Well Done!



My last blog was the 1st February, since that time we have completed the Italian Garden parterre and bedded it out – I’m really pleased with the outcome! Since we put the metalwork in place, we fertilised the soil, dug it over and added compost ready for planting. After the dirty soil work had been done we added the red and white gravel, which gave better definition to the beds.

Planting out started at the beginning of June for the summer bedding. All the plants were grown here in Tatton’s greenhouses, including Thrift, red and white Geraniums, Ageratum and Cineraria. It took three of us a day to plant it out .. but now there are plenty of jobs I need to do to keep it looking nice!

I’ve been dead-heading the beds, picking over (removing the dead leaves), mowing the lawns and edging with shears and keeping them well-watered during this dry spell. I’ve also applied a liquid fertiliser to the lawns to help keep the grass looking green.

It’s been great to complete this work and is particularly rewarding to hear all the positive public feedback. There are not many opportunities to work on ‘new’ or to reinstate old features of the garden and it’s been really enjoyable to play a part in this project.


Jamie Jackson, Craftsman Gardener

Wednesday, 9 June 2010

Blooming Borders


This is a very busy time of year for us in the gardens. During the last couple of weeks we have started to change over all the bedding from spring to summer, working on the formal flowerbeds, hanging baskets, tubs and containers.

Since last September we’ve been propagating cuttings from old varieties of Geraniums and Fuschias for the beds and then from February onwards, sowing seeds and potting up plugs. All the greenhouses and cold frames have been
bulging with plants and we are now slowly emptying them out.

We’ve now been able to slow down on the watering, which is very time consuming –it could be three times a day on a hot day. We’ve also now started tidying and cleaning the houses, ready for the next crop – our chilli collection!

We grow about 12 varieties of chilli plants and produce them for the garden shop. One variety I’m looking forward to seeing growing is a slow grower called Bhut Jolokia. This is one of the hottest chillies in the world and measures over one million on the Scovile Scale – which grades ‘heat’ intensity. We tried it last year and immediately reached for the hosepipe!

Now the bedding is nearly done, we’ve started planning for the RHS show in July. We’re doing a ‘Modeival Garden’. We’re already growing and sourcing plants for our garden and the props and materials for it. More to be revealed…

Bob Buckley

Glasshouse and Kitchen Garden Supervisor

Tuesday, 8 June 2010

Antiques Roadshow Arrives!




The whole team has been busier than one armed bricklayers at the moment getting the garden ready for two very important dates. Thankfully the first passed successfully on 20th May with the arrival of BBC’s Antiques Roadshow.

Four days spent tweaking and tickling the Italian Garden for one day of filming which will be shown in Autumn. I reckon it was good value as it is regularly seen by up to 7 million viewers, after digesting Sunday dinner and hopefully in need of some cheer on a cold wet Autumn night. Also, it has a healthy viewing across the globe and I’m glad to say the team and Mother Nature really shone. The Rhodos looked stunning, set off by beautiful lawns and late spring bedding.
The whole event went very smoothly, a great BBC team and the whole Tatton behind the day – makes you proud to be a part of it.

The other major event was our busiest Bank Holiday weekend for our predominantly spring garden. Getting it as good as possible was, as ever, our priority. I reckon nature has a big hand in it looking so good, but let us never forget that it’s the relationship between gardener and nature which is the real reason for it all looking so good. Why don’t you come and see it for yourself!

Simon Tetlow, Garden Team Leader