My six for this Saturday includes a random selection as I dodge the showers and mosquitoes. Rain, glorious rain. I never thought as a Brit I’d be praying and then celebrating the heavy downpours we’ve experienced recently. Designed to retain moisture with slow drainage, my raised vegetable beds are flooded, but that’s okay.
First Seed Sowing
Last year, Fred, the French Gardener, kindly sent me a selection of tomato seeds (the seeds in neat poly bags). Today, I planted the cherry tomatoes ‘Black Cocktail’ and another cherry tomato ‘Orange Hat’. I also planted some of the black tomatoes and yellow peppers, which I had great success with last year. Unfortunately, most of the black tomato seeds I’d saved had turned mouldy in the humidity.

Once I’d planted the seeds—of course, one job leads to another—Mr Piglet had to move one of the cold frames to a more accessible space. (It was previously tucked in by the hedge, and I’d seen a snake hiding there last year.)

I lined the bottom with plastic, put on the lid, and covered it with open plastic crates to offer some filtered shade.



Now we wait.
Hand Rail
I asked Mr Piglet to make a rustic handrail to help me balance as I walk down the steps to the pool area. Just a simple rail has made all the difference. All the posts were repurposed from around the garden. And yes, the sky was really that black. Sun and blue skies at the front of the house and black at the back.


Dragona
I acquired some cuttings of Dragona plants. Yellow, red and white. I hope I have labelled them correctly as the guy said the yellow flowers are the prettiest.


He said this is the Dragona fruit. Are you familiar with it? I’m not.

Arum Lily
I love Arum lilies, so when I saw one for sale on a market stall in Lagos, I could not resist. When I bought it, it was a little waterlogged. A week later, the excess water seems to have had no adverse effect.

A New Bromeliad

When I bought a new bromeliad from a small garden centre that had just opened, I knew the plant was pot-bound. However, I didn’t realise the roots must have been sitting in water for some time. When I cut away the pot, the roots were brown and the soil waterlogged.

I divided the plant into four and then repotted in dry soil. After watching the YouTube video, which advises, I’m not convinced I planted them snug enough. “Tight in the pot. allow and inch or two around outside and a couple of inches around the bottom.”

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Freesias Growing in Pots
I grow most of my Freesias in pots. Once they have flowered, I feed the plants and let the foliage die off and the soil dry out before storing them in a corner of the garden until late autumn, out of view. They make excellent cut flowers.

For more gardening blogs check out Jim’s blog

Nice to see some images from your garden again. Hope the flooiding has passed.
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Hi Anna, we still have more rain forecast. We’ve had a lot of rain but because we are hoigh up not the flooding as down in the village and lower fields.
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What a gorgeous selection of plants you have. I hope your bromeliad divisions grow well for you!
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Thanks, Catherine. I am now beginning to wonder if the pots on the divided plants are too big.
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I often have the same thoughts when I’m potting plants on. 🤔
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Wow! What gorgeous diversity you have happening in your garden! So many textures and tones, I’m quite inspired! Thank you for saving that poor Bromeliad! I trust it will reward you for your efforts 🙂 And hey, if you get too much rain, please send some our way! We are dry dry dry. Happy gardening!
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Hi Melissa, I love collecting new plants and they soon tell me if the salty humidity is not to their liking. As for the rain we are making the most of it as last year we were on a hose ban. We are praying all this rain fills the barrigems.
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Great photos and post, Carole! We do have dragon fruit in the grocery stores at home in Canada. I’ve never tasted it but it always looks and sounds intriguing.
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Oh, your garden looks glorious! As someone who has creaky knees and sometimes walks with a cane, I know all too well how helpful a rail can be. I love, too, how it was made with materials on hand. As for moving the bed because of a snake hideout…the sooner, the better.
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thanks, Laurie. As you can probably tell the garden is my passion. It is surprising how the simple rail has already made a difference. Haha … the snake. Hmmm I am sure he will be pleased I will not be disturbing him on a daily basis.
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Hi Terry, now I’m intrigued. IT will probably be years before I get to sample a fruit from my own plants.
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I’ve seen dragon fruit in the shops but have never tried one. Maybe I should!
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I am the same. I’m sure we must have them in the supermarkets here but I’ve never paid much attention.
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I’ve seen that dragona fruit on cooking shows but have zero idea what it’s like. The contract in skies was quite marked!
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Hi Bernie, you are one step ahead of me re dragona fruit I’ve never seen one yet alone tasted one. This is stepping outsdie of my comfort zone
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Hi, Carole – I admire all who have passion and talent for gardening. I used to be okay with any indoor plants in pot, but lately even that has not worked out so well. I am losing what ever green I once had in my thumb! Your gardening efforts look fantastic!
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Thanks, Donna. I am not sure if my thumbs are green but I know gardening is my passion and I continue to learn and experiment.
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Ooh those tomato seedlings are nice! I started most of mine today too. Fingers crossed the seeds I sent you give you lots of lovely cherry tomatoes. Otherwise awesome division of the bromeliads! 4 instead of 1 pot 👏
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Thanks, Fred. Here’s to hoping if they grow they are then not hit by early blight. I did keep a few seeds back just in case. I have my fingers crossed re the broms. … we will see
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And now you have 4 Billbergias instead of 1. Can it live outside in Portugal? How lovely to grow your own freesias.
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Hi Chloris, yes, if they survive. Although I’ve already given away one as a thankyou for the Dragona cuttings. As for living outside I have one that lives outside and I am told this one will as well. Although it is in a sheltered position and undercover at the moment. the freeisias are a bonus
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It’s lovely to see things thriving, isn’t it? I’m not at all good at gardening. I just like to talk to them and admire. Sometimes they’re appreciative, sometimes not… xx
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Hi Jo, I am relieved someone else talks to their plants. I wonder what they’d say if they could speak.
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H-E-L-P! xx
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