Blog
The onset of late autumn encourages us to look hard at the things in the gardens that are really earning their keep. Plants flowering or adding to the garden scene now tend to be extremely healthy and need very little care through the year. Here are some of the best plants in the gardens at Easton now.

Cotinus coggygria ‘Grace’ with Rubus thibetanus ‘Silver Fern’ in the Velvet Border. ‘Grace’ is an exceptional smokebush cultivar for autumn colour.

Colchicums in the Cedar Meadow. Although they are coming to the end of their flowering time and the slugs have had a little taste, these have been up for at least 3 weeks. This meadow is managed as a spring meadow and is mown from July onwards. When the temperature starts to drop, we stop mowing to prevent the heads of these lovely autumn bulbs from being decapitated.

Perhaps not to everyone’s taste is Prunus laurocastus ‘Marbled White’ but to my mind, beautifully marked. For us, this is the perfect shrub, being totally hardy, disease free, offering something all year round, easy to grow and not attractive to our resident rabbit population. It is growing quite densely but I am hoping to remove the lower branches as it grows. This will allow light underneath and we can plant delicate woodland plants below.

Rudbeckia triloba or Brown Eyed Susan. Technically a biennial this has flowered with us as a shortlived perennial. In flower for at least a month and totally unaffected by the frosts of the last couple of nights. This is still flowering in the long border with Aster turbellinus, see below.

The last of our Asters to flower with a wiry but graceful habit, this perennial makes about 1 metre in our beds. The tiny buds and airy foliage have been attractive for months but it’s lovely to see the flowers now.
If you would like to see these plants and great autumn colour, the gardens are open on Sundays in November for FREE!
Well, O.k. Mostly it is… but its even better if you can do something everyone enjoys. We have been working hard scrubbing, mowing, polishing and devising to make sure you have a great visit to the gardens this week. Lots of our team at Easton have small children and we have spent time making sure your visit will be fun for everyone.
So… the children get to make grass hedgehogs, plant hyacinths to take home, play on the swing, play in the den and make collages out of autumn leaves. Together, you can explore the gardens enjoying the Autumn colour, plant a bulb in the meadows for posterity, roll pumpkins together and Christmas shop while the children colour in! Round off your visit to the tearoom and sample hedgehog cupcakes (which may have more chocolate than hedgehog in them).
A few things to do on your visit:
Roll a pumpkin, press gang small children into bringing them back.
Swing under the Cedar tree and discover a den.
Make a bald hedgehog, take him home and water him and watch the grass grow on his back
Feed our snails and pot up a hyacinth to take home.
Plant a bulb for posterity in the meadow near our giraffes
Borrow our footballs, play games and run around A LOT…
…go home tired and happy. zzzz.
The gardens are open Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday October 24-26th and 28th
For more information please click here
This week we launched our bulb collections available in two sizes.This makes a fantastic present for an anniversary or as a thank you. Visit www.shopateaston.co.uk to order. Below are the bulbs we have chosen, all of which we grow in the gardens here so they have been thoroughly tested for reliability and ease of growing.
I have chosen the bulbs which have worked really well for us and give a succession of colour. They are good doers and will give your garden colour from February to May with surprisingly little effort. Each bulb collection comes with hints and tips to get the most out of your bulbs and can be sent with a gift message.
Gift boxes include the following:
Iris ‘Harmony’
A stunning sky blue flower with royal blue and yellow markings, reaches 15cm high. This hardy bulb needs well-drained soil and good light. Flowering between February-March, its ancestors are native to Western Asia’s mountainsides and cultivated fields.
Crocus tommasinianus ‘Ruby Giant’
A beautiful, fast-growing crocus flowering between February-March, thrives in rocky and stony areas, with ancestors from the light woodland of South-East Europe.
Anenome blanda Mixed
These charming daisy-like flowers come in gentle shades of pink, blue and white. The bulbs tend to lie dormant in the summer, so are perfect for planting around the base of perennials yet to come up.
Scilla sibirica 'Alba'
A beautiful white form of the better known blue Scilla, these delicate stars flower in early Spring. Excellent in pots or blank spaces in your border, Scilla are traditionally found in meadows and woodland all the way from Southern Russia down to NW Iran.
Chionodoxa luciliae
One of our favourite bulbs! Flowering when little else is, these true blue flowers with white centres are perfect for either borders or turf. Flowering in March and April, they are a hardy bulb, happy in both sun and partial shade.
Puschkinia libanotica
Light blue and white flowers reaching 15cm high, flowering in early spring. Originally from the mountains of Turkey, these delightful bulbs will spread a little from original planting, but not so much as to take over.
Narcissus 'Tete a Tete'
One of the world's most popular daffodils and deservedly so! Making an early show in March, these beautiful, small daffodils give a good strong yellow that looks excellent with blue. Perfect for growing in pots or in gardens.
Fritillaria meleagris
The Snakeshead Lily. Every aspiring patch of meadow should include these beautiful flowers. Native to West and Southern Europe’s damp meadowland and light woodland, with purple and white chequerboard petals, they are perfect for grassy areas, especially if damp. Flowers in mid to late Spring.
Tulipa sylvestris
A surprisingly tall species tulip growing to 30cm, the thin stems and elegant shaped yellow flowers work well in informal settings such as the edge of borders or in turf. Flowering in April, the bulbs like a sunny spot.Native to Northern Europe.
Narcissus 'Thalia'
A refined and elegant daffodil with white clusters of flowers on each stem, bringing style to any pot or garden. Their ancestors are native to Finisterre in France.
All these bulbs come from cultivated stock, they are not removed from their native habitat.You can buy them online at www.shopateaston.co.uk along with our sweet pea seeds.
Once a year I feel ashamed of the garden and it is always in August. There comes a week when nothing goes right. The garden has ‘Gone August’. 100 years ago, when the family spent a full month in the big house, no wonder the gardeners relied on bedding. The hedgerows and trees take on a tired look and the delicate blue and pink perennials and shrubs go over, sometimes not very attractively. The colours of autumn arrive – dirty pinks and strong orange and yellow. They will glow in the September light but the flat harshness of an August day does not show them at their best.
Grubby colours in harsh light. Yeuch! Scroll down for some more uplifting images!
The weather knows all this. So, we get drought, torrential downpours and richocheting temperatures to add to our troubles. Both of our mowers, challenged by incessant mowing of wet grass early in the year are getting more and more temperamental and the continued strong growth of hedges and grasses in the meadows means the job list is stretched. On top of this, we have lots of visitors who deserve a friendly stress-free welcome and many of the team take a well-earned break this month. ‘You shouldn’t give holidays in August’ people tell me to my moaning but I think they work incredibly hard all year and many have family commitments and basically, they need the break.
This feeling used to last the month when we first started out but now we have a better structure and some student labour to help out so I have cut it down to about one week. I am very aware that, although we see the gardens all the time and carry memories in our head of spring and summer, a few of our visitors will only give us one chance to persuade them that this is a garden worth telling their friends about (and we need that, for sure.) So last week, when the feeling started to creep in that we were not on top of the extra work, I pulled in help from wherever I could get it.
This Sunday, the Meet the Artist day as part of the textile exhibition was a great event and although I chuntered about the odd weed (cheeky ragwort in the meadows mostly) I felt we could head on into Autumn confidently.
Next year, I hope my July diary entry will read: ‘Dont forget the gardens will ‘Go August’. GET PLANNING. No-one wants to hear you fretting, thank you!’ (Best Mary Poppins' voice)
On the upside here are some Good Things about August:
The Long Border (but see a few weeds sneaking onto the gravel)
Agapanthus flourish between the greenhouses and seed themselves here, adding to their number year on year.
The greenhouse goes bonkers with lush growth and produce.
Late Annuals in the Pickery start to take over from cornflowers and calendulas.
The beautiful wildflowers left in the meadows are swamped by insects: Scabious, Wild Marjoram and Knapweed in particular. Butterfly colonies are good. The swallows are clustering overhead ready to make the most of the insect feast as it rises from the grasses and trees.
In our Cedar meadow, where the giraffes are now, we have four fine specimen conifers. Despite their size I think they were only planted in the nineteenth century.
Sequoiadendron giganteum, better known as The Giant Sequoia or Wellingtonia arrived in Britain no earlier than 1847 and the Cedars possibly replaced some much larger specimens. In the 1880's the winters here were so severe that the ancient trees were killed outright. I think the plants we see today are the successors.
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only visible with a magnifying glass the
tips on these needles are translucent. |
It has taken me sometime to identify the Cedars correctly as they are closely related to the better known Cedar of Lebanon. Thanks to Hugh Johnson's book 'Trees' I finally got out there with a magnifying glass to spot the only sure difference: A tiny translucent tip on the end of the needles which requires very close inspection. Ours have this and therefore are definitely Atlas Cedars (C.atlantica).
We have two fine specimens of Sequoiadendron giganteum, Wellingtonia or Giant Sequoia but, up until now, no specimens of the even taller Sequoia sempervirens or Dawn Redwood. So I started at the bottom and grew this baby (below) from seed. We have two and they are now around 7' tall. Draped in ghostly fleece all last winter they should now be strong enough to go it alone. You can see them near the carpark.
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Sequoia sempervirens
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