Has anyone seen any daffodils yet? Not the dwarf early ones, although they have only just opened in the last few days, but the taller ones. Its all so late this year, it seems to me. I heard that the annual daffodil weekend at Thriplow in Cambridgeshire had very few of these flowers out for what can be a very popular event. On the plus side the Magnolia in the garden is full of buds so I do hope they won’t get spoilt by late frosts.

Last week I was able to do quite a lot of cuttting back of ornamental grasses and other perennials which was quite satisfying. The ground had begun to dry out a bit and there were no squelchy noises when I walked around the garden. But after another inch of rain (and snow) over the weekend we are back to square one and there is surface water lying around everywhere. My activities in the garden will be severely curtailed for the next week or more and I will have to restrict my movements to the hard surfaces.

Lots of potting has been done recently and the polytunnels are nearly full. There’s a problem at this time of year making decisions about when to put plants out from the cosy protection of the tunnel to the raw weather outside. One day the temperature on the min/max thermometre was a high of 22 degrees c and a low of -1 degree c. Poor plants having to adjust themselves to such a wide variation in such a short period of time. The longer they stay under cover the more soft growth there is and then the more vulnerable that soft growth is to being damaged by late frosts.

One thought on “Daffodils

  • March 24, 2013 at 11:49 am
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    I have daffodils in suburban London. Narcissus KING ALFRED, and nearby are N Tete-a-Tete, N FEBRUARY GOLD but there were much the same varieties out in the NW. Friends in Northants also have no daffs out yet. I forget at times how cold it is so far from the sea or the heat island effect of a sprawly city.

    It’s still unseasonally cold like everywhere. White chaenomeles was out in Chiswick working out there by the Thames on Friday last – probably C. speciosa NIVALIS. Daphne odora-type hybrids also. D. bholua up in Sale, Gtr Manchester last week.

    We’ve had the Equinox. Where is Spring?

    I’ve delayed sowing a lot of seeds. It’s not possible to keep the seedlings warm enough without having poly-tunnels etc., which I lack here.

    I was up in Port Sunlight and Manchester for nearly 2 weeks. I was shocked at the appalling lack of knowledge and skill of landscapers working at Port Sunlight. Cutting japonica and forsythia back to the roots before they even get to flower. I’m so incensed I’m going to blog on the topic.

    Let’s hope proper spring is not so far away now.

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