Thursday, June 13

Perfume on the plot

The sweet peas have now all been planted out. Four packets of mixed were sown but all with good perfume. We've grown the varieties before so we know we can count on them to have good scent. I think the best feature of a sweet pea is it's perfume and couldn't consider growing any that didn't have a scent!

As for our edible pea plants we have constructed a climbing frame from the prunings that resulted after coppicing one of the hazel bushes. Maybe coppicing is too technical a term and I should really have said hacked down. The bush at the back must be trembling to its roots as it will suffer the same fate next year. We have cut back the bushes in this way before and they grew back quickly.
Once the sweet peas scramble up the framework they should create a scented wall. You will notice that we have covered the ground with weed control fabric here too. In the past we have found it quite difficult to weed in amongst the sweet peas and under the framework.
Cucumbers will be trained up the struts on the road side of the framework - they grew really well here last year. The cucumbers thrived in the wet conditions so the fabric should keep the ground from drying up too much around their roots. 

We may also grow some squash plants to scramble under the archway. These will be planted in slits cut into the fabric which extends under the mulch to the edge of the road.

Even before the sweet peas start to flower we have wafts of perfume drifting across the plot. In one bed along the roadside edge of one plot we have a shrub and flower border in which are planted some shrub roses. 
 As when choosing sweet peas these roses were chosen for their perfume as much as the flowers. Some flowers are just beginning to open.
Others are covering the bush with blooms. The shrub roses start off looking really healthy but then unfortunately succumb to black spot so I have bought a fungicide with which to spray them. I avoided an all purpose pesticide as I don't want to kill the bugs. A couple are now looking rather weak so may need replacing.
At the moment they are under-planted with a carpet of poached egg plants - limnanthes. I say planted but these are self sown seedlings that come up every year and will die off completely once they have flowered and set even more seeds.
Then there is the perfume from unexpected sources such as the broad bean flowers. If you have ever caught a whiff of a lovely perfume in the vegetable plot and have wondered where it was coming from, then have a sniff at your broad bean flowers.
Finally not forgetting the garden mint that has strayed into a nearby grass path and releases its scent whenever the grass is cut or it is walked on.


Copyright: Original post from Our Plot at Green Lane Allotments http://glallotments.blogspot.co.uk/ author S Garrett

24 comments:

  1. It's going to look, and smell, stunning when the sweet peas are in flower, it's a good sized patch you've got.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The sweet peas do look good when in flower, JO but take some dead heading to keep them going

      Delete
  2. I wish I had a Hazel I would certainly be coppicing it.I think there are some lovely scents around at the moment I wish they could be bottled. We have Eleagnus Quicksilver and Philadelphus wafting at us as we walk out of the back door at the moment

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's catching that subtle scent isn't it Flowerlady - not overpowering just 'there' and intriguing

      Delete
  3. Gosh! I didn't realise that broad beans were heavily scented. I love sweet peas - we haven't grown any this year and I'm already regretting the decision to take a break from them. I agree with you about fragrance - although heavily scented plants give me a sore throat, I will always choose scented over unscented.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm not sure I'd say heavily scented, Crystal but it sort of seems to depend on time of day and weather conditions.

      Delete
  4. I think scent is as wonderful as sight in the garden. I love the poached egg plants, I didn't realise they were so prolific at self seeding, I may invest in some to brighten up the bee plot!! You sure have thought things out well regarding your pea and squash plants...I never do anything more than split the plot into four categories.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They would be good to have on a bee plot, Tanya

      Delete
  5. It's so nice to smell blooms when pottering around in the garden isn't it.
    Sweet Pea ar one of my favourite cut flowers and I grow them every year inside the polytunnel and outside too, I even have my first sewwtpea flowers open today which is the earliest ever for me.
    I'm jealous of your roses lol. To have blooms already would be amazing and you have so many of them. none of my roses (and I have plenty) are showing any sign of wanting to break bud just yet though the climber 'compassion' is the closest to it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's only the shrub roses that are flowering Linda - the garden climbing floribundas are still in bud. I bet that polytunnel smells gorgeous.

      Delete
  6. Good to see you living off the land with those hazel branches, they look very sturdy- and attractive.
    Your poached egg plant looks great. I like the bold use of plants.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can't take credit for the bold use Roger, The poached egg plants decided themselves to be bold and I just leave them be!

      Delete
  7. I love the scent of broad bean flowers, it is one I would quite happily bottle.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's surprising when you first noice it isn't it, Jo?

      Delete
  8. AnonymousJune 13, 2013

    Sweet pea... I have sowed the seeds directly into the ground all over our little garden. I can't wait for it to flower and spread the perfume, hmmm...
    I love roses, but the one I bought for our garden somehow I managed to kill :( I am not giving up though, will try again to grow them:)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hope your seeds all germinate successfully Aga and you manage to grow a rose.

      Delete
  9. Teh vegetable bed look so good!
    All the flowers are new to me! I like limnanthes!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We can show one another new flowers, Malar.

      Delete
  10. What beautiful images. I'm always amazed at how much you grow and the size of your plot. How lovely to have a wall of scented sweet peas! I too love their scent.Right! Off to have a sniff of my broad bean flowers!xxxx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So what did you think of the broad beans, Snowbird?

      Delete
  11. That bed looks wonderful and all the pollinators will thank you for it :}

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's a shame that it also has lots of weeds, Bilbo which will be dealt with in due course

      Delete
  12. I love sweet peas but haven't felt I had room for any until this year - I found some that only grows to about 30-35 cm and flowers repeatedly! I am eagerly awaiting buds, they are about 20 cm tall right now and I got 5 plants in a container.

    Your roses look lovely, and I so agree that roses should have scent too, I didn’t think about that way back when I started so some of my roses are not scented.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm sure that your garden will be filled with scent once the sweet peas get going!

      Delete

Thank you for visiting and leaving a comment - it is great to hear from you and know that there are people out there actually reading what I write! Come back soon.
(By the way any comments just to promote a commercial site, or any comments not directly linked to the theme of my blog, will be deleted)
I am getting quite a lot of spam. It is not published and is just deleted. I have stopped sifting through it and just delete any that ends up in my spam folder in one go so I am sorry if one of your messages is deleted accidentally.
Comments to posts over five days old are all moderated.