Wakehurst Place today
Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos
at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Regards Bob |
Wakehurst Place today
"FrankB" wrote
"Bob Hobden" wrote Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Some really nice photos.I used to visit Wakehurst nearly every year in the 90s. There's a Himalayan area there which was covered with Meconopsis in June, so it's worth a revisit just for that. We used to get there quite often when Stonehurst Nursery (Orchids and Camellias) was literally just down the road, gone now like so many others. Although there is still Laurence Hobbs Orchids at Crawley Down but it's by appointment only. The drive used to be Herons Bonsai (still there), then Stonehurst, then Wakehurst for P & T and then onto McBeans (under new ownership after a fraught few months) down in Cooksbridge. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
Wakehurst Place today
"Bob Hobden" wrote in message ... Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Some really nice photos.I used to visit Wakehurst nearly every year in the 90s. There's a Himalayan area there which was covered with Meconopsis in June, so it's worth a revisit just for that. |
Wakehurst Place today
On 31/03/2015 17:15, Bob Hobden wrote:
Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Regards Bob Lovely pics, Bob. You may very well be the cause of our diriving down there in the near future. Thanks for sharing. -- Spider. On high ground in SE London gardening on heavy clay |
Wakehurst Place today
"Spider" wrote
Bob Hobden wrote: Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Lovely pics, Bob. You may very well be the cause of our diriving down there in the near future. Thanks for sharing. Thank you. Unfortunately unless you are Friends of Kew, Day Ticket visitors or Season ticket holders you now have to pay for the car park, in other words that's National Trust members then. http://www.kew.org/visit-wakehurst/p...arking-charges -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
Wakehurst Place today
On 01/04/2015 17:09, Bob Hobden wrote:
"Spider" wrote Bob Hobden wrote: Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Lovely pics, Bob. You may very well be the cause of our diriving down there in the near future. Thanks for sharing. Thank you. Unfortunately unless you are Friends of Kew, Day Ticket visitors or Season ticket holders you now have to pay for the car park, in other words that's National Trust members then. http://www.kew.org/visit-wakehurst/p...arking-charges Thanks for the warning, Bob. Alas, RG has just today come down with a cold (man flu!), so we may not be going until he's better:~(. Nevermind, I could drop a hint to go on my birthday in a few weeks time. I'll miss the magnolias, of course, but there'll still be plenty to see. -- Spider. On high ground in SE London gardening on heavy clay |
Wakehurst Place today
On Tue, 31 Mar 2015 17:15:17 +0100, "Bob Hobden"
wrote: Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Nice. I love Magnolias, have tried to grow them here but the frosts get the better of them. |
Wakehurst Place today
In article ,
Jeff Layman wrote: On 01/04/15 23:55, wrote: On Tue, 31 Mar 2015 17:15:17 +0100, "Bob Hobden" wrote: Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Nice. I love Magnolias, have tried to grow them here but the frosts get the better of them. The flowers or the plants themselves? There are late spring or summer-flowering ones which could be OK for you, depending on where you are. Quite a few are hardy down to USA Zone 4 or 5. The problem here is our very maritime climate, with spring being a mixture of warm and cold spells. The usual problem with such flowers is that they come out of bud in a warm spell, only to be caught by a cold spell or sharp frost. That is much less of a problem in continental climates, like those in the USA. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
Wakehurst Place today
On 01/04/2015 17:09, Bob Hobden wrote:
"Spider" wrote Bob Hobden wrote: Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Lovely pics, Bob. You may very well be the cause of our diriving down there in the near future. Thanks for sharing. Thank you. Unfortunately unless you are Friends of Kew, Day Ticket visitors or Season ticket holders you now have to pay for the car park, in other words that's National Trust members then. http://www.kew.org/visit-wakehurst/p...arking-charges Thanks for the warning. I just looked that up. "First 30 minutes of parking free" What on earth use is that? By the time you've walked from the car park and through the gate it'll be time to leave! -- RG (ah-choo!) |
Wakehurst Place today
In article , RG wrote:
On 01/04/2015 17:09, Bob Hobden wrote: Thank you. Unfortunately unless you are Friends of Kew, Day Ticket visitors or Season ticket holders you now have to pay for the car park, in other words that's National Trust members then. http://www.kew.org/visit-wakehurst/p...arking-charges Thanks for the warning. I just looked that up. "First 30 minutes of parking free" What on earth use is that? By the time you've walked from the car park and through the gate it'll be time to leave! Well, it allows you time to drop someone who needs a wheelchair, and pick them up later. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
Wakehurst Place today
"Nick Maclaren" wrote
RG wrote: Bob Hobden wrote: Thank you. Unfortunately unless you are Friends of Kew, Day Ticket visitors or Season ticket holders you now have to pay for the car park, in other words that's National Trust members then. http://www.kew.org/visit-wakehurst/p...arking-charges Thanks for the warning. I just looked that up. "First 30 minutes of parking free" What on earth use is that? By the time you've walked from the car park and through the gate it'll be time to leave! Well, it allows you time to drop someone who needs a wheelchair, and pick them up later. Or buy something in the shop, have a coffee, or a P. All in the "newish" visitors centre right next to the carpark. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
Wakehurst Place today
On 02/04/2015 22:53, Bob Hobden wrote:
"Nick Maclaren" wrote RG wrote: Bob Hobden wrote: Thank you. Unfortunately unless you are Friends of Kew, Day Ticket visitors or Season ticket holders you now have to pay for the car park, in other words that's National Trust members then. http://www.kew.org/visit-wakehurst/p...arking-charges Thanks for the warning. I just looked that up. "First 30 minutes of parking free" What on earth use is that? By the time you've walked from the car park and through the gate it'll be time to leave! Well, it allows you time to drop someone who needs a wheelchair, and pick them up later. Or buy something in the shop, have a coffee, or a P. All in the "newish" visitors centre right next to the carpark. But for everyone except the most local visitors, there will be somewhere nearer home where they can do all of those things. Why go to Wakehurst and NOT see the plants? -- RG |
Wakehurst Place today
On Thu, 02 Apr 2015 09:54:19 +0100, Jeff Layman
wrote: On 01/04/15 23:55, wrote: On Tue, 31 Mar 2015 17:15:17 +0100, "Bob Hobden" wrote: Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Nice. I love Magnolias, have tried to grow them here but the frosts get the better of them. The flowers or the plants themselves? Certainly the flowers, but the couple of Magnolias I had have either died, or died back to ground level and never grow back past that stage. The few flowers I have had do not look properly developed either, I suspect we simply run out of summer before the flowering really gets going. The latter problem happens with many other plants here too. There are late spring or summer-flowering ones which could be OK for you, depending on where you are. Quite a few are hardy down to USA Zone 4 or 5. Thanks Jeff, I will have to look into other varieties of Magnolia. I am in Tasmania. I just looked into this USA zone business, and it looks like I'm in zone 2 or 3... more like zone 2 though, as I live in the mountains: https://www.anbg.gov.au/gardens/rese...rch/zones.html |
Wakehurst Place today
In article ,
says... On Thu, 02 Apr 2015 09:54:19 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote: On 01/04/15 23:55, wrote: On Tue, 31 Mar 2015 17:15:17 +0100, "Bob Hobden" wrote: Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Nice. I love Magnolias, have tried to grow them here but the frosts get the better of them. The flowers or the plants themselves? Certainly the flowers, but the couple of Magnolias I had have either died, or died back to ground level and never grow back past that stage. The few flowers I have had do not look properly developed either, I suspect we simply run out of summer before the flowering really gets going. The latter problem happens with many other plants here too. There are late spring or summer-flowering ones which could be OK for you, depending on where you are. Quite a few are hardy down to USA Zone 4 or 5. Thanks Jeff, I will have to look into other varieties of Magnolia. I am in Tasmania. I just looked into this USA zone business, and it looks like I'm in zone 2 or 3... more like zone 2 though, as I live in the mountains: https://www.anbg.gov.au/gardens/rese...rch/zones.html If minus 10 is your coldest, stellata magnolias are pretty hardy IME and they flower at a very young age. Janet |
Wakehurst Place today
On 04/04/15 08:40, wrote:
On Thu, 02 Apr 2015 09:54:19 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote: On 01/04/15 23:55, wrote: On Tue, 31 Mar 2015 17:15:17 +0100, "Bob Hobden" wrote: Drove over to Wakehurst to look at the Magnolias and spring flowers, photos at... https://www.flickr.com/photos/bobhob...7651263189080/ Nice. I love Magnolias, have tried to grow them here but the frosts get the better of them. The flowers or the plants themselves? Certainly the flowers, but the couple of Magnolias I had have either died, or died back to ground level and never grow back past that stage. The few flowers I have had do not look properly developed either, I suspect we simply run out of summer before the flowering really gets going. The latter problem happens with many other plants here too. There are late spring or summer-flowering ones which could be OK for you, depending on where you are. Quite a few are hardy down to USA Zone 4 or 5. Thanks Jeff, I will have to look into other varieties of Magnolia. I am in Tasmania. I just looked into this USA zone business, and it looks like I'm in zone 2 or 3... more like zone 2 though, as I live in the mountains: https://www.anbg.gov.au/gardens/rese...rch/zones.html Well, Zone 2/3 in Australia is very similar to much of southern UK (Zone 7 USA). However, if you get snow which covers plants you can often get away with more cold-sensitive plants if they are covered by snow and so protected from much lower temperatures and desiccating winds. Does Eucryphia lucida (Leatherwood) grow anywhere near you? If so, I am surprised that you are having a problem with magnolias. Even if it doesn't, there are quite a few Magnolias you could try. These are from the RHS Dictionary of Gardening (from 1992, so there will be many others now). All are USA Zone 6 or lower. Also look at the cultivars and hybrids from the list below. Just about all should withstand -15â°C. Most magnolias will flower before or as the leaves open, so "running out of summer" should not be a reason for poor flowering. In general, magnolias will not withstand drying out or being waterlogged for any length of time. M. acuminata M. x Brooklyiensis M. 'Charles Coates' M. cylindrica M. denudata M. De Vos and Kosar hybrids M. fraseri M. Freeman hybrids M. Gresham hybrids M. hypoleuca M. 'Kewensis' M. kobus M. liliflora M. x loebneri M. x proctoriana M. salicifolia M. x soulangiana M. stellata M. x thompsoniana M. virginiana M. x wiesneri I have tried to avoid evergreen and very large-leaved magnolias as these do not like windy conditions. Of course, how many of these are available in Tasmania is another thing entirely! I believe that Australia has some of the most restrictive practices when it comes to importing any plant material. Good luck! I love magnolias, and couldn't imagine a garden without them. -- Jeff |
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