
I’ve spent the day clearing out my 20ft second-hand Alton Cedar greenhouse. This was purchased for £260, the best £260 I’ve ever spent. Admittedly, it was 32 years ago- but the greenhouse is still almost as good as new. I’ve painted it black, although it was a harsh bright red when it arrived. The staging is also painted black which really sets off the pelargoniums housed there. Plants live in pots along the front path in front of the greenhouse during the summer. It just gets too hot indoors, and they appreciate some fresh air and rainwater. But at this time of the year, I sweep it out, wash down the windows and give it all a quick re-paint. Everything must be back inside before the first frosts.

In the background you can see my 10ft sunflowers that I thought were small multi-headed types for cutting. I’d need a ladder to harvest those! Instead I’m leaving most of them to dry out for bird seed. A few blew down in the recent storms, so I’ve put them in jam jars on the kitchen table. I’ve made a note to carefully check the seed packets next summer so I don’t make the same mistake twice! They are beautiful though, and the bees and butterflies enjoying the pollen are currently a wonderful sight.

Next to the greenhouse there’s a matching 20ft polytunnel where I grow fruit, vegetables and flowers. Tomatoes and peaches have done really well this summer. You’ll also see a little pile of cobnuts in the basket. Alongside the greenhouse there’s a huge hazel tree which squirrels usually strip overnight. This year there were more nuts than they could manage, so I’ve harvested some to make into cakes and biscuits.

Peaches have been a great success this summer. My trees are grown in large 15” containers in the poly tunnel. This protects them from peach leaf curl which thrives in wet conditions. Keeping leaves dry is the best way to combat the disease.

Baskets nearly always contain flowers as well as fruit and veg. This is Rose of the Year 2022, ‘It’s a Wonderful Life.’ Highly recommended for fabulous scent, repeat flowering and disease resistance. I’ve also picked some seedling nasturtiums. I’m particularly fond of this peachy-coloured one and keep it going by taking cuttings which root in water. I collect seeds too, but it might not come back exactly the same colour as nasturtiums readily hybridise. There’s also a few herbs, mint, marjoram and rosemary which add a lovely scent to any jam jar flower arrangement. The climbing beans are pink-flowered Celebration which don’t go stringy and crop late into the season.

Still on the theme of peaches, these are the little pastry custard tarts I made with slices of fresh peach, autumn raspberries and home-grown blueberries. The recipe is for my column in Garden News Magazine which I’ll share next week. They are very quick and easy to make.

I’ve had this potted purple bougainvillea for about 30 years. I’ve trained it into a round-headed shape so that it doesn’t take up too much room. It will be the first plant to go back in the greenhouse as it’s not at all hardy. Bracts stay colourful until December and I often use it in my Christmas table arrangements.

In pots alongside the bougainvillea are these beautiful grey-leaved tender perennial plants. They have long sprays of pale blue flowers. I’ve temporarily forgotten the name! Each winter I take insurance policy cuttings just incase I lose the parent plants.

There’s a border full of low-maintenance day lilies in front of the greenhouse. In autumn when the day lilies are starting to die back, these beautiful spires of persicaria appear. This one is Persicaria Rosea.


There’s also a white persicaria. Sadly, the label has been lost so I’m not sure of the variety. It thrives in dappled shade and flowers from August to November. The photo is out of focus as it was such a windy day, but it’s a very pretty flower nonetheless.

And finally, this one is also growing in with the daylilies. This persicaria is either Firetail or Firedance. They are good for cut flowers, lasting at least a week to 10 days in a vase if you change the water each day. The spire shape gives a nice contrast to round, daisy flowers.

In amongst them are several types of phlox. This one is Blue Paradise- very highly scented and long-flowering in late summer.

The back field behind the summerhouse had oats growing there this summer. It’s been wonderful to sit in the shade and watch the field slowly turning to a shimmering gold. On a windy day, the crop ripples like waves and before it ripens the green-grey colour reminds me of the ocean. Instead of seagulls we have barn owls silently gliding by at dusk. There’s no sound at all from the beating wings and they quarter the field without knowing we are watching from the little wooden house.

We are always pleased and much relieved when the farmer manages to get the crop in before bad weather arrives. They work through sunset and into the night if rain is threatened. We lie in bed and listen to the tractors going up and down the fields and along the lane. At 2am there’s suddenly silence again and we know they have successfully got in the crops. Rain falls the next day and it’s wet for a week.

This is the view from our five bar gate at the top of the paddock. For a few weeks after the harvest, the fields retain their golden glow, and I drink in the scene and hold on to the memory as autumn and then winter darkness descends.

When we moved here, it was just a decrepit house and no garden. The farmer who built the house sold us an acre of land alongside it, and we planted 250 sapling trees given to us by the woodland trust and local council. At the time, there was a scheme giving free trees to anyone returning farm land to nature and we planted a small woodland area. All along the boundary, we left viewing points through to the fields beyond. The ever-changing seasons are a delight to spy through these holes in the treescape.
Thank you for reading my blog. Please sign up for e mail updates and I would love you to press ‘follow’. I often join in with Cathy for her ‘In a Vase on Monday’ meme. Mostly I write about what flowers I’m growing to give to my friends and family, and what produce I’m growing for family meals. I don’t grow in traditional rows, everything is mingled together and much is grown in window boxes and containers, with many different varieties ripening early, mid-season and late. There’s nearly always something to ‘forage’ from the plot.
Hi Karen, love your blog and fascinating story. Desperate to contact you about speaking to us on Monday, Tom from Nether Heyford
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Hello Tim. Thank you very much. Sorry the internet is playing up. Will ring you. Karen
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You have such a wonderful garden and it really looks to be thriving! What great goodies it produces! 🙂
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Thank you! Yes I can forage about and find something tasty to add to the cooking most days. I’m just sowing winter salads in containers. Spinach and mizuna should be ok growing in the greenhouse. Thanks for reading my blog.
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So lovely to read about your wonderfully productive garden Karen – how wonderful to grow your own peaches, Those tartlets looked amazing!
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Thank you Sue, I’m currently lying down having moved all the pots back into the greenhouse for winter. Wow, they were heavy! I’m still using the peaches. I never imagined I could grow them in my cold windswept garden, but the poly tunnel just gives them enough protection to thrive, and the taste is out of this world. Thank you for reading my blog. See you at the GMG lunch, I hope! Enjoy your weekend. Karen x
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Hello dear Karen!! I am Margarita, from Madrid, Spain. I haven’t written in so long that maybe you don’t remember me anymore. I have been absent for health reasons: I will write to you by email to tell you.
Visiting your adorable garden again has reminded me of good times. Your harvest of vegetables and fruits is magnificent and appetizing. The rose is divine, I love it. And the other flowers are wonderful along with the trees and plants: I love everything. The sunset is magical. You have done an exceptional job in these 25 years creating and modeling the wonderful garden from farmland.
I hope you are all in good health. And I send you all my love. Very affectionate greetings from Margarita xx
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Hello Margarita, it’s so good to hear from you after such a long time. I am so sorry to hear about your health issues. Not an easy time for you at all. Thank you for reading the blog and sending such lovely comments. I have missed you! I look forward to your update via e mail. Sending lots of love from us all here. Affectionate greetings and best wishes from Karen xx ❤️
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Hi Karen,
Beautiful photos and a lovely guided walk through your Acre and its history.
Re: un-named plants. If you have an Apple IPhone there is a very easy way to identify a plant.
Go to your photos:
Tap on one to bring it up/download:
Tap on the ‘I’ that you will see. Mine is is usually at the bottom of the screen on my phone.
You may be given options and one should be to identify the plant in the photo.
We’ve had much fun using it to I.D plant species, most recently to get the background info on Snowberries.
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Hello there. Thank you for reading the blog. I’ll have a go at that plant I.D option. Yes, I’ve got an i-phone but it’s only a 5. Thanks for your kind words about the photos and garden tour. Have a great week! Karen
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You’ve transformed the landscape beautifully over the years, Karen. It’s nice you still have farms around you. We had so many when I was young, now there are only a few farms left and much of the land has returned to forest.
Your gray plant is Plectranthus argentatus. I had one I kept going for years, but it grew so large, I gave it up. They are quite beautiful.
Hope the gale doesn’t harm your garden!
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Thank you Eliza. Ah that’s it! I just couldn’t think for a moment what it was called. It’s currently flowering beautifully. I try to keep it going by taking small cuttings each summer. It does get rather large I must admit. the gale has brought a lot of leaves off the trees well ahead of when they usually fall. The hedges are looking a bit thin. Thanks for reading the blog. I hope you are having a good week. All the best. Karen
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A lovely post Karen. Always a pleasure to see what is growing in your garden!
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Thank you Cathy. It’s turned really chilly tonight. 9C. And rain and gale force winds are predicted for tomorrow! I’ve just finished cleaning out the greenhouse in time! Hope you are ok over there. Xx
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Very enjoyable thank you,look forward to next one .
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Thank you Jean. The season is moving on so fast. Only 9C at night. Urgently getting plants indoors for winter! Thanks for reading my blog.
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