We have so much to do in the garden, I honestly don’t know where to start. I also don’t want to hurt my back while stretching, digging, and lifting. So, as I often said to my team during my working life: How do we eat the elephant? No, not with a large knife and fork, but one piece at a time.
Repotting
On Sunday, we repotted the Crown of Thorns and added more soil. The blackbirds are little devils and love digging up the soil in their search for worms and bugs. I need to find some stones to prevent them from doing this again.


Cleaning the Purple Bromeliad
This Bromeliad grows outside. Unfortunately, due to the continuous rain, the trumpets are collecting and holding too much water, rotting and dying off more than usual. Today (Monday), I removed all the rotting trumpets from all three clumps. This task involved quite a lot of yanking and stretching so no more gardening today.



Cleaning the Cannas
Tuesday’s task (Tuesday) was to clean the Cannas growing in a large pot.


Pruning the Bougainvillaea
STORM KRISTIN arrived last night (Tues) … and kept me awake. As the wind howled and the rain thundered on the vaulted ceiling, I looked outside the window to scan for damage. The bourgainvillea looked like it might break free from its restraints. Worrying, I couldn’t sleep, so the moment Mr P opened his eyes, I was on his case. We need to prune the bougainvillaea back before the wind tears it down.
Off I went to line dancing and thought no more about it. Late afternoon, I suggested we prune it back hard. Mr P made a noncommittal grunt. I huffed. We were expecting another storm tonight. Considered doing it myself and went outside… to discover


A nice surprise! He’d already pruned it. It still needs some work, but it will do for now and not be as unruly as before.
Cuttings etc


*



Lampranthus
Tuesday, I persuaded Mr P that I needed some retail therapy at a garden centre or two. I only managed to choose 3 small Lampranthus before the heavens opened and abandoned the idea.


Thursday, despite the continuous, depressing mizzle, I donned my raincoat, repotted them into larger pots, and transferred them to a terracotta trough. The original plan was to plant them directly into the front rockery, but on seeing the sodden roots, I decided to try and destress the plant, let the roots dry out and make a display using one of the troughs I had ‘wombled’ from our local communal rubbish bins. Even though they are under the terrace, they will still get plenty of winter sun (if it ever shines)

Birds of Paradise (Stelitzia Nicolai)
The flowers are suffering and rotting in the rain. I did manage to rescue one. I also fed the plant some fertilizer granules.


That’s my Six for this Saturday, folks. Now I’m off to do more gardening chores before the sun dissapears behind a cloud. My thanks to Jim for hosting the six on Saturday meme.
How is your garden coping with the wet and windy weather?
Related January gardening post

You got so much done!!! Mr. P. did an excellent trimming job on the bougainvillea. Your garden looks fantastic, like spring. Is it still raining?
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Hi Tracy, it’s surprising how a quick break in the weather between gale force winds and torrential rain focuses the mind in getting a job done as quickly as possible. And the list helped me stay on task otherwise I am the worlds worst procrastinator
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You have been busy. Such a shame about the plants rotting. Is that an unusual problem for you to have?
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We’ve had too much rain. Continueal rain so the pots etc are not getting time to dry out.
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I hope those storms were not too bad in your area. I heard some areas of Portugal were hit extremely hard. Your plants are gorgeous! Enjoy the beautiful colors. That bird of paradise really pops. Here everything is just either white or gray. Lots of white at the moment.
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Thanks, ephesians413. We are forunate not to get snow where we are and dare I say frost. We still get the gray … lots of it at the moment
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Well done Mr P! These storms are getting boring.
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They certainly are, Trowel. Even now as I write this Mr. P is outside battling against the wind as he tries to empty more water out of the pool after last night’s heavy rain and upright some of the pots
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I’m always learning new things about gardening and plant maintenance from you. Thanks so much!
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Hi Terry, gardening is one big learning curve!
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It sure is, Carole. My Mom was an excellent gardener and for several years had a successful greenhouse business. I learned a lot from her. The only thing she was unable to teach me was planting and caring for tropical and subtropical plants … because … well it was Canada after all 😂
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It was lovely to see the sunshine again today. You have a lot of pot plants. A lot of ours aren’t used to this level of water and are sulking a bit but they’ll mostly perk up again. I enjoy pottering and tidying them up, a bit at a time xx
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Sorry, Jo. I can’t believe I missed your comment! Yep, the plants are sulking, poor things. We have since moved more of ours under cover for some respite.
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Good old Mr P! Glad your property was not storm damaged too.
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You’ve been very busy! There is lot to do in our garden but everything is so wet it is hard to get to it. Hope no more storms are on the horizon for you.
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You are such a hard worker. You take very good care of your garden indeed. I am trying something new with my indoor and outdoor pots that I’ve read about online. It is a mineral mix called LECHUZA PON. I’ve been reading about it for some time in different forums and ordered some yesterday. You can use either only this mix instead of soil, or use it at the top and bottom of your pots, to prevent over watering, and avoid bugs/insects that enjoy living in the soil. Since I haven’t tried it yet I can’t say if it works, I’ll get back to you on that. I am planning on repotting most of my indoor plants in self-watering pots using this mineral instead of soil. It is suppose to be particularly good for self-watering pots (but can be used for any container). We’ll see. I like having many plants at home but sometimes my allergies can’t take having so much soil inside.
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Hi Maria, I’ve never heard of LECHUZA PON but it sounds interesting for indoor plants. I will be interested to see how it works out for you.
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I hadn’t heard of it either until people started to talk about it in several gardening forums I am a part of. They arrived today, I’ll see when I get around to re-pot my plants.
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Hello, where you live, were you affected by the heavy rains, wind and flooding? Bad news I watched on TV
There’s a lot going on in your garden this week! I also pruned my bougainvillea, though it’s in a pot, and it’s already showing signs of growth after just a week!
Regarding the cannas, besides removing the dry leaves, do you change the soil and break/separate the rhizomes? I like the colour of your shutters.
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Hi Fred, thankfull the worst of the weather was further North. We had heavy rains and strong winds but we escaped the snow. Many people further North are still without power. So far so good.
Once established they grow VERY quickly!
Yes, but next year. This year I will probably jsut water with liquid manure. Several of the rhizomes had rotted in the wet weather so there is pleanty of room for the plant to expand this year.
Yes, they are Chelsea blue. :)
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Those are perfect answers! Tks. 😀
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