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  • 5 days ago
At one time they were all the rage and were sitting pretty in gardens and parklands everywhere, but you’d be hard pressed to find some of these 10 throwback plants today – unless you grow them yourself that is. #gardening
#1980s
#gardeningwithbrendan
#derry
#derryjournal
#flowers
#Ireland
#ireland

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Transcript
00:00So, in today's video I'm just going to take you through some of the old style plants that
00:19I'm bringing back this year. These are plants that would have been about in the 70s and
00:2480s, and these are Lunaria or Honesty, or probably better known as Silver Pennies because
00:33of their seed pods. And I'll just take you through and show you all the different things
00:37I'm growing. First up we have some Honesty here, and this is Biennial, and you can just
00:47see it here, it's about three to four foot tall. These were grown from seed last year
00:52and then planted out overwintered fine in the ground. And these would have been very
00:57popular back in the 70s and 80s. And they're grown, the purple flowers are lovely and they've
01:05been flowering since early March. They're not grown for the flowers, even though these
01:10are a B-magnet, so they've got multiple benefits. They're grown for the seed pods. The seeds
01:19are contained within these large, kind of lunar-like pods, that when you peel them away,
01:27have this pearlescent sheen to them. And they're great for drying, great for crafts, or even
01:34just for having dried flowers in the house. So I have to say, this is my first time ever
01:41growing them. And as you see how we bee over at the other one there, and the bees have
01:47been regular visitors since they started flowering. So I'm expecting them to go to
01:52seed pretty soon. And if I just turn the camera, you can see there one behind. Here we have
02:00another old-time favourite that's kind of gone out of favour, and this is wallflowers.
02:06So these have a lovely clove kind of vanilla-y scent, quite light, but on a warm day they
02:14really do smell amazing. These are an all-out bulletproof one as well, slugs haven't touched
02:18them. They were planted out last year, have overwintered fine, can survive frost, same
02:26as the honesty, no problem at all. And they've been flowering since before Christmas. The
02:32yellow ones have been one of the first to open. Then if you see over here, we have rusty
02:37kind of coloured ones. Then another one there. And they also come in like almost an orange-brown
02:48colour, which will... I see some darker ones there, and a kind of burgundy as well. So
02:54I think there's still a lot of them to open, but they are really long flowering. These
03:00have been going now for, since Christmas really, so that's at almost four months, and they're
03:06still flowering away. So another great choice for some late-winter, early-spring colour.
03:12There's another one here, a rusted orange colour. I'll just take you over to another
03:21old favourite right beside it here. These are not in flower yet, probably another month
03:26or so, but you can see them already forming. I have quite a few of these, and these are
03:31Sweet William. They produce masses of colourful flowers. And again, these were grown from
03:38seed last year, planted out, survived the winter no problem. No bother with slugs or
03:43snails. They've done absolutely fine. So there's a lot to be said for biennials. You do the
03:51hard work and it does the growing the first year, and then you get the flowers the next.
03:57Here, although it looks like nothing yet, this is a calendula that's coming back, and
04:01sometimes calendula will come back, not all the time. It's a short-lived perennial, but most
04:07people treat it as an annual, and it reseeds itself very readily, but you can just gather
04:16the seed heads too and just grow them indoors. But again, very hardy, can survive the frost,
04:23can be winter soon, like almost everything here. And just two more old-fashioned plants
04:31down here. These are oxeye daisies, so that's the big white daisies you would normally see
04:36on the roadside, kind of growing wild. They're native, so these are the cousins of the tiny
04:41daisies that you see in the grass, much, much bigger. They should flower well, well into the
04:50autumn. Here we see a head here, and it's already flowered this year. And just down below them,
05:00I've just seen a few heads starting to come on these tiny little things, and these are
05:05forget-me-nots, which are great. And then amongst them too, you can see these are some
05:10cornflowers, beautiful blue plant, are ones that have overwintered. These are miniature
05:20cornflowers, so actually the other ones in there will get maybe three times this size.
05:25These are about a foot long. I want to keep them to the front of the border.
05:31I just have one more little tiny flower starting to open there, and this is pheasancy,
05:36which is a native flower, but it's on the endangered list at the moment, and so I thought I
05:42would grow it. It's supposed to be good for pollinators. There's another one down there.
05:48Lovely wee red flower, tiny flowers, but really pretty. These are some sweet pea that I've potted
05:56up. I was growing them in a tray, which is a mistake, because they have big long roots and
06:01they need a lot of room for the roots to go down. So if you are on and on growing sweet pea from seed,
06:10I would suggest planting it on the pots, big long pots, or direct sowing it. It's another
06:17hardy one. It can survive frost and prefers cooler temperatures. If you grow it indoor,
06:23it'll get very leggy, and it's just better to keep it cool. Very windy today, so you hear
06:30banging, that's what it is, and here I'll just show you quickly what I'm growing since the last
06:35time we were in only a week ago now. Loads of different types of cosmos here. The carnations
06:41is one of the ones as well, which you don't see many people growing these days. Now you still get
06:47them in the florists and amongst bouquets and that, but they're just not as popular as they used to be,
06:52and then on over here we've got some stock rudbeckia, some more cosmos, and here we have
07:03more down here. These are the blue cornflower seeds, seedlings. So these are coming up now.
07:09I could move these outside, no problem. You can put them in the ground now and they would do fine,
07:14but I just want to bring them on a bit further so they don't get lost in amongst the bigger plants.
07:19These are another brilliant plant. You can winter sow them, you can spring sow them.
07:25They're hardy, they'll survive frost, and now when I say survive frost, they'll survive
07:31Irish frost, which is usually we don't get really, really cold winters, so
07:39at most it's usually minus five, something like that, and that's centigrade.
07:45And then on down here, I'll just show you quickly as well, we have some purple broccoli and the green
07:54broccoli has now sprouted, so the two of them's now up, which is great, just growing in the greenhouse.
08:02I also, they're not here, but they're out there, some money sunflowers too that have popped up.
08:08There's been quite a lot of movement and we have a week now of sunny weather,
08:13hopefully that one will die down, and then that should bring everything on a bit.
08:20And finally on this tour, we have the Godisha, which is another very hardy plant. It's an annual, so
08:30you would have to sow it every year, but these are from seeds I collected from last year's.
08:37I think the name's been changed to Clarkia, but most people would know them as Godisha if you
08:42know about plants. These have been out since early February, no problem with the cold temperatures,
08:50just grew at their own pace, and these are now ready for transplanting on the ground.
08:56They're very, very healthy looking as you can see, just masses of beautiful flowers,
09:02no fuss plants, and I just don't know why they haven't come out, and as you can see,
09:07they naturally branch as well. Why they've come out of favour, I don't know, but
09:13you can see their little stems, wooden stems coming out. So they're fantastic plants,
09:20flower for months on end, and looking forward to getting them in the ground now.
09:42you

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