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Four Points of the Compass Special: East v West

As part of GQT's 70th anniversary celebrations, the team visit the four points of the UK compass to explore the variety of climate and environment. This week it's East v West.

As part of GQT's 70th anniversary celebrations, the team visit gardeners at the four points of the UK compass to explore the incredible variety of climate and environment in this country - something that makes gardening here so endlessly fascinating.

This week it's East v West as Eric Robson is joined by Bob Flowerdew, Anne Swithinbank and Neil Porteous in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, with a wet climate to the very west of the UK, while Peter Gibbs, Christine Walkden, Matthew Wilson and Bunny Guinness set up camp some 400 miles east in Lowestoft, Suffolk, where life is markedly drier.

Both panels answer questions from local residents and explore how garden can thrive in these contrasting extremes.

Produced by Dan Cocker, Hannah Newton and Darby Dorras
Assistant Producer: Laurence Bassett

A Somethin' Else production for Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 4.

Available now

43 minutes

Last on

Sun 6 Aug 2017 14:00

Fact Sheet

Q - ÌýI garden in a wet climate on heavy clay soil.Ìý My garden is in a frost pocket too.Ìý What plants could you suggest?

Ìý

Bob – Leeks. ÌýCabbages.Ìý Spinach.Ìý Roses.Ìý

Ìý

Anne – Try and create little microclimates within your garden.Ìý We have a Gunnera in ours that wouldn’t normally work because we’ve protected it.

Ìý

Neil – Wingnuts.Ìý ‘Bloodroot’ (Sanguinaria canadensis).Ìý

Ìý

Q – My son’s lawn is very damp – can we run drainage pipes into the storm drain?

Ìý

Bob – You’ll have to check with the council.Ìý Alternatively, you could put lots of sharp sand in and then re-soil six inches (15cm) higher.Ìý

Ìý

Q – We’ve a large bank area at the back of house that used to have Conifers and Heathers growing in it.Ìý We took them out and now we’ve got a big, bare space – what can we plant there?

Ìý

Neil – Nasturtiums.Ìý

Ìý

Anne – Go for Alpines like Helianthemums or Rock Roses’.Ìý And ‘Sun Roses’.

Ìý

Bob – Raspberry canes

Ìý

Q – What type of fertiliser will be most resistant to the heavy rainfall?

Ìý

Neil – We put a mulch end-of-February/early-March.Ìý Grazing rye and vetch would lock the nutrients up

Ìý

Bob – Ground rock potash is very slow-release.Ìý Coarse ground bone meal.Ìý Blood fish and bone.Ìý

Ìý

Q – All my plants prefer rainwater to tap water.Ìý If there’s a light shower should I not water with the hose and let them reap the benefits of the rainwater?

Ìý

Christine – Do you want to wet a large volume of soil so I would use the hose.Ìý You want to give it a gentle soak with a small droplet spray.Ìý

Ìý

Q – Any suggestions for architectural green plants to give a jungle/oasis feeling to the garden?

Ìý

Bunny – Palm.Ìý Castor oil plants.Ìý Tithonia. Canna ehemanii.

Ìý

Matthew – Tetrapanax papyrifer.Ìý Paulownia tomentosa (‘Foxglove Tree’).Ìý ‘Indian Bean Tree’ (Catalpa bignonioides).Ìý ‘Angel’s Fishing Rod’ (Dierama pulcherrimum).Ìý

Ìý

Christine – Acanthus ‘Archer’s Gold’.Ìý Nandina domestica (‘Sacred Bamboo’).Ìý Cercis canadensis or siliquastrum.Ìý

Ìý

Q – I would like to grow Streptocarpus but I’m not having any success.Ìý Advice?

Ìý

Christine – It needs to be damp but well-drained – which is a skill.Ìý

Ìý

Q – I would like to plant a Camomile lawn – approx. 3m x 6m (10ft x 20ft) – will I be able to grow enough plants from seed and how many plants will I need?

Ìý

Bunny – You don’t want the flowering seed for a lawn, you want Camomile treneague and that you do from cuttings.Ìý You’ll need to have more cuttings to fill in the gaps as it gets older.

Ìý

Q – I have banana trees that are 12ft-15ft (3.5m-4.5m) on the stem.Ìý How do I protect them during winter?

Ìý

Christine – I would create a structure round them and fill it with straw.Ìý

Ìý

Matthew – this must be the ‘Japanese Hardy Banana’ (Musa basjoo) – I don’t think you need to be overly cautious

Ìý

Bunny – I slot interlocking clay drainage pipes and encase them that way

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