Lecture Day 2024 – a great success!

What persuaded 80 keen gardeners to spend a whole day indoors, happily, on the hottest, most beautiful spring day of the year so far? It had to be the Hardy Plant Society Essex Group’s Lecture Day and what a privilege it was to be part of it. 

You realised from the very beginning the quality we could expect, when former HPS Chair, Cathy Rollinson, now chair of the RHS Herbaceous Plant Committee, started the day by presenting the Alan Bloom Award for a lifetime’s achievement in horticulture to David Ward who recently retired after 40 years at Beth Chatto’s Plants and Gardens. 

Colin Moat recently closed Pineview Plants, but shows little intention of retiring. His advocacy of the taller plants (ie those over one metre in height) for the herbaceous or mixed border demonstrated his intimate knowledge of these plants and the conditions in which they thrive. For me, a relative newcomer, it was thrilling to be introduced to white sanguisorbas. As Joanne Philip said in her vote of thanks, Colin showed those of us who think we have run out of space in our gardens that we can still increase vertically.

Luci Skinner was a returning speaker, and I soon learnt why. She covered the entire Iris genus, comprehensively and clearly, in one hour, and its place within the Iridaceae. Perhaps it was the bearded irises that interested most of us, because they are suited to neutral to alkaline soil, which is typical of so much of East Anglia. In covering the whole genus, Luci showed us how it was possible to have irises flowering throughout the year. For a grower of Iris danfordiae and the reticulatas it was useful to learn that these need a lot of phosphorus through the winter, as do the winter irises, Iris lazica which prefers a moister soil, and Iris Iguicularis which wants a hot dry sunny spot. the. For those who like Iris pseudacorus it was good to know that it is better behaved in the border than in the wet.

I shall not try to cover Toby Buckland’s virtuoso performance in any detail. Speaking without notes for well over an hour, he managed to engage with the audience, finding out and addressing our peculiar garden delights, frustrations, triumphs, or sheer selfishness (“What do you do with your slugs – over the neighbours wall?” Murmurs of assent.) He used his slides, an eclectic selection of plants, as prompts for an outpouring of enthusiasm, experience and advice. I am sure everyone took away their own nugget. For me it was, trim the taproot of your Erysimum to get a bushy plant. 

The HPS Essex Group plant sales table offered plants of an unusual, even for us, quality and we were lucky to have Daisy Roots, Woottens Nursery and Pineview Plants as well. Such was the enthusiasm of the audience to buy plants, it was hard to say who went away more satisfied, the nursery people or their customers. 

The volunteers who staffed reception, the raffle, plant sales, the sound system, setting up, and catering were a well-oiled machine, and thanks to their professionalism everyone could relax, enjoy the day, learn and be entertained.It all proves the value of experience.

The success of the day owed most to our longest serving committee members to whom I express profound thanks. If Linda Crowther meant to end her chairmanship by giving us all something to remember, she couldn’t have done it with a bigger bang!

Tom Fenton, Chair



Next Meeting Sunday 14th April

Our next meeting is this Sunday 14th April at Wickham Bishops Village Hall. For those who have booked a place we start with our seedling swap at midday. For anyone that has not booked a placed for the seedling swap you need to let us know as soon as possible so that we know numbers for lunch.

This is followed at 2.00pm by our guest speaker Simon Gulliver – ‘Around the World in 80 Plants’.

Drawing on 20 years experience in horticultural landscape and plant collection management and over 35 years of wider business experience. Specialising in the management of plant collections in historic landscapes. Able to identify the spirit of place and significance of a designed landscapes and give clear advice and recommendations for its ongoing management. Development of Conservation and Landscape Development plans. Recording and interpretation of plant collections.

Experienced educationalist with over 10 years experience of the selection development and mentoring of horticultural students. Able to bring practical experience and scientific fundamentals together, ensuring the best possible understanding and delivering successful outcomes. Expertise in Amenity horticulture, Plant identification, Botany and Taxonomy, delivered at Higher & Further Education levels to horticulturists. Also lectures on Biodiversity. Industry Adviser at Pershore (Warwickshire) College.

Particularly interested in woody plant collections and in the development of urban treescapes. Committee Member of Birmingham Trees for Life. Also a keen advocate for the growing of food in urban environments.

We look forward to seeing you there, don’t forget to wear your name badges.

Special Interest Group -Ranunculaceae

What a vast array of plants you will get to explore if you join the ranunc group. They will keep you going all year. Study days around the country, newsletters and zoom lectures, the last being Andrew Ward on his exciting sand beds. Needless to say, all members are enthusiastic and friendly just like the Essex HPS group.

To whet your appetite, at this time of year, hepaticas and helleborus orientalis. Both are jewels in the floral department. Hepaticas, japonica can be more difficult to grow but noblis can seed anywhere, even in the cracks in the paving.

Both benefit from being displayed floating in a dish of water, hellebores especially so as they shyly droop their heads, but some can be quite pretty viewed from above. Cut the leaves off in November or December so that they can display their beauty to the full. Ashwood Nursey are renowned for their stunning cultivars but treasures can be picked up in  local garden centres. The market now has many hybrids but Anna’s red and Penny’s pink are hard to beat. Their silver veined leaves add to their attraction. There are of course many more hellebores to enjoy, why not explore. Just what we need to cheer us up in February and March.

Margot Grice

To find out more follow this link https://hardy-plant.org.uk/group/ranunculaceae

Next Meeting Sunday 17th March

Our next meeting is this Sunday 17th March at Wickham Bishops Village Hall. Our guest speaker is Tony Goode. His talk is ‘Bulbs for all Seasons’. Doors open at 1.30pm.

‘A long time member of the Alpine Garden Society, Tony’s passion for growing bulbs goes back to childhood.   He has been an occasional contributor to gardening journals, lectured around the UK for over twenty years.  His photos have enjoyed some success in plant photography competitions.  He grew a wide range of bulbs in his Norwich garden for thirty years, including a National Collection of Species Crocus, before relocating to Wales.   In Wales he continues to grow (too) many bulbs and has discovered a passion for pottery too.  Bulbs for All Seasons covers a selection of those that Tony has grown, covering bulbs that provide colour at different times of year. Tony will bring photocards and some plant related pottery for sale plus maybe a few plants.’

We look forward to seeing you all there!

Meeting Sunday 18th February

Our next meeting is this Sunday 18th February at Wickham Bishops Village Hall. Our guest speaker is Lynne Moore from Moore & Moore Plants based in Billericay. Her talk is ’52 Weeks in the Shade Garden’. Doors open at 1.30pm.

Lynne has gardened for as long as she can remember. Her first memories are picking snowdrops from her grandparents garden (snowdrops are still a favourite). Always encouraged by her grandad Jack, her knowledge and enthusiasm grew until such times that she had her own little garden at her first flat. Grandad duly propagated a number of plants to fill this little plot, many of which Lynne still has today in her current garden. “Without my Grandad I wouldn’t be doing what I am. I owe him so much.” She’s a complete plantaholic who’s always on the look out for something new, different or unusual to grow. Lynne gave up working as a Senior Fingerprint Expert in the Metropolitan Police Forensic Directorate in February 2016 after 25 years service to work with the plants full time. “I love what I do. I’m so lucky.”

We look forward to see you there.

Galanthus Special Interest Group

Galanthus ‘Golden Tears’

What do you do in January/February? Some people suffer from SAD.

My remedy is to get out in the garden.

These tough little beauties are prostrate in the frost but a bit of sunshine and warmth revives them. Supported by a host of other winter flowers they lift the spirits. The HPS special interest group host a meeting at this time of year and also run zoom lectures. A boon on long winter evenings. Why don’t you join?

galanthus@hardy-plant.org.uk

But beware, galanthomania can bcome an addiction! The most expensive snowdrop so far on ebay was ‘Galanthus Golden Tears’ price for one bulb £1850.00! Of course you do not have to spend that much to enjoy the drifts on display at National Garden Scheme gardens http://www.ngs.org.uk where cheaper varieties will be on offer.

Margot Grice

Galanthus ‘Chameleon’, Galanthus ‘Reginae olgae, Galanthus ‘Dragon’.

Prostrate in the frost!

A spring view of ‘Dragons’ opening for the National Garden Scheme on Wednesday 14 February (11am to 3pm). Admission for adults £5, children free. Refreshments available.

Visits also by arrangement 7 February to 15 October for groups of 10 +.

NGS Gardens open for Snowdrops

Snowdrop gardens full of winter joy opening in Essex this February

Photo Val Corbett

In 2023, the National Garden Scheme set a new record by donating over £3,400,000 to the charity’s beneficiaries which include Marie Curie, Macmillan Cancer Support, Hospice UK, Carers Trust, The Queen’s Nursing Institute and Parkinson’s UK. Essex garden owners and garden visitors played no small part in this by raising just under £170,000, also a record amount.

Garden visiting continues to be an enjoyable and inexpensive day out for the family, with children usually going free. In 2024, 86 glorious gardens will open to visitors with 20 of them new. The garden visiting season starts with great excitement, in February, with five special snowdrop openings:

The first to open is Dragons in Boyton Cross, Chelmsford, CM1 4LS. This is eagerly anticipated every year for its displays of snowdrops, hellebores and other exquisite winter plants which really shine out at this time of year. It is also popular for the sales of some of the more unusual snowdrop varieties.

Opening Wednesday 14 February (11am to 3pm). Admission for adults £5, children free. Refreshments available. Visits also by arrangement 7 February to 15 October for groups of 10 +.

Fans of the gardens at Ulting Wick, Crouchmans Farm Road, Ulting, Maldon, CM9 6QX will be interested to visit in February and March – a first for Philippa Burrough who normally opens her gardens later in the year for tulips and later summer flowers. Philippa started developing areas of snowdrops during the lockdown and now has them in beds near the house as well as drifts in the woodland area. These are joined by early flowering narcissus and increasingly by larger swathes of daffodils which cover the banks around the lake.

Pre-booking is essential for the openings on Friday 16 Feb and Wednesday 27 March (11.30am to 2pm). Admission £15, please visit http://www.ngs.org.uk for information and booking.

Homemade soup and rolls will be offered as well as homemade cakes. Visits also by arrangement 12 Feb to 1 Oct for groups of 15 to 50.

The snowdrop opening at Horkesley Hall Vinesse Road, Little Horkesley, Colchester, CO6 4DB is on Saturday 17 February. New this year is a talk by snowdrop specialist, Chris Wiley of Sow Successful, starting at 11.30am (visitors please bring their own mugs for coffee!) and the gardens will open between 1.00 and 4.30pm. Visitors can walk around the eight acres of magical parkland at their leisure, taking in the developing snowdrop collection, views across the lake and important collection of mature trees. Admission for adults £6, children free.

Ticket for snowdrop talk £5. Light refreshments of soups, home-made cakes, sausage rolls and hot drinks will be served in St Peter and St Paul’s Church and snowdrops will be available to purchase. Visits also by arrangement for groups of 10 to 20.

Opening on two consecutive Sundays, 18 and 25 February, the garden at Grove Lodge 3 Chater’s Hill, Saffron Walden, CB10 2AB manages to create a secluded early spring woodland in the centre of this market town. The spread of snowdrops and winter aconites has been steadily increasing over the last few years and is a joy to see. Open between 2 and 5pm with admission for adults £6, children free. Homemade teas served in the conservatory. Group visits also by arrangement from 2 January to 20 December.

Brookfield, Church Road, Boreham, CM3 3EB . Visitors who are used to seeing the three and a half acres of garden and meadow covered in summer perennials, roses and wild flowers will find a much quieter but no less impressive covering of snowdrops, aconites and crocus on Sunday 25 February, (11am to 4pm). Admission for adults £5, children free. Homemade tea and cake will be served in the conservatory with views across the garden.

Four of the gardens mentioned above also offer private group visits, by arrangement with the garden owners. Visit the National Garden Scheme website ngs.org.uk for more details. Checking the website for any last-minute changes is also recommended before setting out.

Photographs can be accessed here: Essex Snowdrop Gardens 2024 (smugmug.com)

About the National Garden Scheme

The National Garden Scheme gives visitors unique, affordable access to over 3,500 exceptional private gardens and raises impressive amounts of money for nursing and health charities through admissions, teas and cake.

Thanks to the generosity of garden owners, volunteers and visitors we have donated over £70million to nursing and health charities. Founded in 1927 to support district nurses, we are now the most significant charitable funder of nursing in the UK and our beneficiaries include Macmillan Cancer Support, Marie Curie, Hospice UK and The Queen’s Nursing Institute.

The National Garden Scheme doesn’t just open beautiful gardens for charity – we are passionate about the physical and mental health benefits of gardens too. We fund projects which promote gardens and gardening as therapy, and in 2017, we launched our annual Gardens and Health Week to raise awareness of the topic.

To find your perfect garden, visit ngs.org.uk, download the National Garden Scheme app or purchase the National Garden Scheme’s Garden Visitor’s Handbook, which is published annually and available via http://www.ngs.org.uk/shop and at all good book retailers.

Registered Charity 1112664 www.ngs.org.uk

For more information contact Debbie Thomson, Publicity Coordinator for the National Garden Scheme in Essex Debbie.thomson@ngs.org.uk 07759 226579

Shade & Woodland Group

Brunnera Jack Frost

Whilst the Essex group is great for meeting friends at a local level the specialist groups offer an insight into the passion of members countrywide. Either online or at an annual get together.

Shade and Woodland does not provide a great burst of colour but it is amazing what you can do with leaves of different sizes, texture and colour. Ferns of course are a must, and polystichum setiferum Bevis is a particularly fine form. Cylamen, coum and hederifolium provide an immense variety of leaf patterns even when not in flower. Brunnera Jack Frost lights up the darkest corner. Arum italicum, if you dare introduce these (they are prolific seeders) also provide many different leaf forms. As for snowdrops that is entirely a different obsession.

From left to Right : Arum Italicum Pictum, Cyclamen Coum, Cyclamen Hederifolium, Garrya Eliptica, Galanthus Reginae Olgae, Polystichum Bevis, Ribes Laurifolium.

More information is on the HPS national website www.hardy-plant.org.uk or contact the HPS Shade and Woodland Plants Group Secretary, Diana Garner, at shade@hardy-plant.org.uk or the HPS Administrator, e-mail admin@hardy-plant.org.uk ,or in writing to 3 Basepoint Business Centre, Crab Apple Way, Evesham WR11 1GP