Tag Archives: Abbie Jury

Cicely’s gardens

My mother and sister at the start of another of her gardens

My mother and sister at the start of another of her gardens

I have been thinking of my late mother, Cicely Denz, this week and realised I have never paid tribute to the fact that I, as well as Mark, grew up in lovely gardens. The difference is the plural – Mark grew up in the one garden that is now our home at Tikorangi. I grew up in multiple gardens, mostly around Dunedin.

She was a fine garden maker, my mother, though the gardens were distinctly clonal. She worked from the same plant list of favourites and she never stuck around long enough to see them mature. I am sure it would have been different had my father lived longer and she had her lifelong love next to her in body and not just memory. She would have put down roots and may well have earned a place in the modern garden history of this country.

Instead for a woman of her generation, intelligent but under educated with no recognised career, lacking a man at her side when solo parents were almost unknown, leading a distinctly precarious financial existence and lacking the usual anchors in life, my mother turned her gardening into her public face and her claim to status.

She was always a gardener. Her first was an acre in size. When my father was demobbed post WW2, he went to work at Porton Down in Salisbury. As that place was a military scientific research facility, this may well have contributed to his premature demise (think nerve gas research, organophosphates and other agricultural chemicals). With the shortage of housing in bombed Britain, they relocated two military huts and my mother built her first garden around them. Despite extensive reading of the major English garden writers, she never deviated from the romantic English country cottage style of gardening of that era.

By the time I was born, my parents decided to return to New Zealand with the four children in search of the traditional NZ family life and employment opportunities meant Dunedin. That English style of gardening translated well to Dunedin which may never get as cold as most of the UK but has similarly low sunshine hours, never gets hot and is characterised by a soft light unknown to most of us north of there.

Every garden had Prunus Kanzan

Every garden had Prunus Kanzan

She was always renowned for her proper English primroses. They will grow here in more northerly climes but they hardly flower whereas my childhood was spent with vases of them in season. Along with violets, hellebores and London Pride. Roses were always of the old fashioned variety, not a vulgar hybrid tea in sight. And herbaceous paeonies, big clumps of these spring delights. We all grew up knowing the name of Paeonia mlokosewitschii – she was a demon for botanical names. Every garden had at least one Prunus Kanzan (in pink) and one Prunus Tai Haku (in white).

The paeony with the impossible name

The paeony with the impossible name

Lawnmowers were not her friend. She attempted to pressgang any passing young male into using the push mower on grass which tended to be overgrown. At one stage, she decided that a brand new motor mower might do the trick. This required site visits from the poor young salesman, whom she probably reduced to tears with her complete inability to start the engine and her tendency to blame the machine. The shop took the mower back.

In due course, Cicely gave up on all lawns. She figured that it cost money to maintain a lawn (it does) and she would rather have gravel paths and garden.

Not only did she not have lawns, there was a total lack of hard landscaping. Good gardener she may have been and certainly she had no fear of hard work, but she lacked any home handywoman skills and she rarely had sufficient money to pay for someone else to come and install anything like fencing or paving. Garden ornaments were completely absent. Mind you, this was in the days before it became fashionable to adorn your garden like an overstuffed display cabinet.

I quipped many years ago that all she needed to keep her happy were five plants, a spade and a wheelbarrow. She could then move the plants like chess, as she was wont to do. But she was a garden maker at heart. The joy for her lay in breaking in a piece of ground and planting it up, garnering much admiration from passersby and neighbours. She had little interest in maintaining the garden once established so soon became bored, finding some compelling reason to move. I kid you not. In my lifetime, I can recall about ten gardens she made. There may have been more.

Her mantra was ground cover. She firmly believed that if you plant ground cover densely, it suppresses the weeds. Well, no. She didn’t like weeding and ground cover plants mask the weed infestations, rather than suppressing them. It also makes weeding more difficult because the weeds and plants become deeply intertwined. Her style of gardening was hugely labour intensive and generally involved lifting all the ground cover perennials once a year and dividing them so the weeds did at least get dealt to annually. She spent pretty much every single day in her garden.

Cicely’s style of gardening was transient. These gardens lacked the bones to carry them through the decades. There was a lack of good long term trees and a lack of structure or form. I doubt that any survive now. She never went back to look. But for the few years of their glory, they were a delight and a fine example of that particular garden style.

First published in the Waikato Times and reprinted here with their permission.

Plant Collector: Cordyline stricta

Cordyline stricta - blue flowers but no scent

Cordyline stricta – blue flowers but no scent

Cordylines are commonly known as cabbage trees in this country. Some wit branded them as Torbay Palms for the UK market and we know that most of them are ours, native to New Zealand. Not this one, however. The blue flowers and the unchewed foliage are a hint – C. stricta belongs across the Tasman, native to coastal New South Wales through to southern Queensland. It is a native moth – Epiphryne verriculata – that chews our cordylines but it does not fancy the foreign varieties so C. stricta doesn’t get the moth eaten look.

It is an excellent garden plant, being tolerant of a wide range of conditions and relatively hardy. It will take coastal winds, even dry conditions, grows in sun or shade and is okay with light to moderate frosts. We have never had it reach much over 3m tall and it clumps so if it is getting unwieldy, it is easy to chop out the longest stems. The leaves are a little fleshier than the stringiness of our native varieties so it is more amenable with the lawnmower. Then there are the lovely blue flowers in summer. But it doesn’t have everything – there is no scent and that is one of the hallmarks of our native ones.
Cord stricta - Copy

First published in the Waikato Times and reprinted here with their permission.

Garden lore

” There are some botanical names that are teasers. Where the Polish discoverers or Russian explorers come upon the scene the result is apt to be an appalling jungle of horrors. Michaux, Stribnry, Przewalsky, Tchihatchew are responsible for some real jawbreakers; and when it comes to Michauxia tchihatchewi, exhausted humanity gives up in despair.”

My Rock Garden by Reginald Farrer (1907)

Just a few of my aged concrete pots - far too heavy to use with ease

Just a few of my aged concrete pots – far too heavy to use with ease

Making your own plant containers

I was looking at step by step instructions for DIY concrete pots in a NZ publication and have one word of advice: don’t. I inherited concrete pots from my in-laws, made in the days before mass produced ceramic pots became so cheap and widely available. They look aged and anonymous but over the years, I have found I use them less and less because they are just too heavy to be convenient. If you want that aged look, go back to hypertufa which has been used since 1930 to recreate a weathered stone look. There is plenty of information on the internet but the general recipe for hypertufa is 1 part cement to 3 parts aggregate (often a mix of perlite, peat moss or river sand). It is no more bother than making pots completely out of concrete but much lighter to handle.

First published in the Waikato Times and reprinted here with their permission.

Plant Collector: Hydrangea serrata “Preziosa”

Hydrangea "Preziosa" - generally colour stable in all soil conditions.

Hydrangea “Preziosa” – generally colour stable in all soil conditions.

In the world of summer flowering shrubs, hydrangeas are surely king. There are many others beyond the common macrophylla types and the serrata family from Japan and Korea are perhaps a little more refined. Certainly they are smaller growing and perfect for semi shaded positions. “Preziosa” is a hybrid but predominantly of serrata lineage. It is a smaller moptop – the pompom type of flowers. Two factors set it apart from many others. Its colouring is not affected by soil type and its flowers change colour as they age so you get a range of different colours on the one bush. They open green, changing through yellow tones to cream, fading to white with pink tinges on the petals, then deepening to pink shades and ending up dark cherry red. It also has attractive red stems and the foliage is often tinged red.

“Preziosa” is a not happy in full sun and it particularly dislikes hot, dry conditions. I moved these plants from an area where there was too much root competition from surrounding trees and they perked up enormously in well dug soil with plenty of compost added but still in open shade. They reach about 150cm in height and a metre wide, making them a good option for smaller, town gardens.

First published in the Waikato Times and reprinted here with their permission.

Lower maintenance gardening

Do away with island beds in the midst of the lawn if you want to reduce maintenance

Do away with island beds in the midst of the lawn if you want to reduce maintenance

I thought I would spare readers from the New Year’s gardening resolution column. Most will resolve to weed more often and keep their garden looking tidier, only to fall by the wayside very quickly. So it is onto lower maintenance gardening this week.

Note the qualifier – lower maintenance. I don’t think there is any such thing as low maintenance gardening. These are mutually exclusive concepts. The only way to eliminate gardening altogether is by living on the upper floor of an apartment block.

You can do away with plants and pave, seal or turf your entire section but that should not be confused with gardening. Nor does it eliminate all maintenance. Paved areas need attention. Weeds will forever pop up in any cracks or gaps. Dust and grit accumulate and need to be swept or blown away. Shaded areas will grow moss and lichen and may become slippery. There is nowhere for the family pet to do its business.

You can grass out your section but it will need mowing. It will need a whole lot more than just mowing if you want a proper lawn. Maintaining even a half way decent lawn takes a surprisingly large amount of time and effort. But at least you can get a lawn mowing contractor in and trust him or her to get the grass down. But that is not a garden, either.

Gardens have plants and plants are tricky, messy and unreliable living organisms. They grow. They drop bits. Some grow too well, others not well enough. They also have the capacity to delight and to surprise, to soften a view and to blur the hard edges, particularly in an urban environment. It is about much more than just feeding the body by growing edible plants. You can wrap it up in a spiritual framework if you wish or you can be more prosaic in your terminology but the bottom line is that it is a rare person who remains oblivious to the beauty that is in nature and plants are integral to that. Most of us are driven to recreate some of that nature in our immediate environs. And if you want to stay on good terms with neighbours, an ugly wasteland is not going to do it.

So, to dispute some common myths about low maintenance gardening.

  • Evergreen plants are not low maintenance. They still drop a full set of leaves every year. They just do it gently all year round rather than in one big hit like deciduous plants.
  • Vegetable gardening is probably the highest maintenance form of gardening there is. Forget any advice that you can have a low maintenance yet productive vegetable garden.
  • Similarly, you can’t just plant an orchard and leave it, expecting to harvest fruit in season. Most fruit trees require regular attention; some require a great deal of care.
  • Simple gardens or formal gardens defined by sculptured plants (hedges and the like) are not easy care. They depend on pristine maintenance for their effect. It is like doing the housework but outdoors and no sooner have you done it than the wind will blow or the plants will grow. You can’t keep the outdoors static.
Roses need more care than many other plants if they are to look good

Roses need more care than many other plants if they are to look good

If you want to reduce your workload however, there are certain things you can do.

Shun plants which need staking each season if you want an easier care garden

Shun plants which need staking each season if you want an easier care garden

  • Don’t have island beds and specimen trees or shrubs sitting in the middle of the lawn. It is easier to do a clean sweep with the lawnmower than to be weaving around curvy obstacles. It also cuts out the potentially messy edges you get around island beds.
  • Reduce the number of itsy bitsy little beds and plantings that you have. Keep the lines simple.
  • Reduce the number of plants you have growing in pots and containers. These take quite a bit of effort to keep them looking good, as evidenced by the number of sad, neglected, even dying plants you can see all round different gardens.
  • Weed thoroughly and then lay a weed free mulch to suppress further germination. Try and get weeds before they are large enough to set seed and remember the old adage: “one year’s seeding, seven years’ weeding”.
  • Leave enough space around plants to be able to use the push hoe and if you haven’t got a push hoe then get one, learn how to use it and keep it sharp. You can then do the summer weeding without bending – but only if you do it before the weeds set seed. There is no point in hoeing out weeds and then leaving them lying on top if they are going to spit out their seeds on the spot.
  • Do away with plants which require frequent attention to keep them looking good. The prettiest but worst offenders are probably roses and wisterias. Most plants will need a little attention once a year, but some plants need much more than that. Similarly, do away with plants that need to be staked to stop them flopping all over the place.
  • Do not garden in such a manner that you have to water frequently in summer.

When I used to pay someone to do my housework, I felt privileged but not ashamed. The same goes for gardening. If you don’t get pleasure from doing it yourself and you can afford it, pay someone else to come and do it for you. A lovely garden is a joy to all, but getting there is not always fun.

First published in the Waikato Times and reprinted here with their permission.