Sunday, July 29, 2007

"A Garden by the Sea"

If you are lucky enough to have a cottage by the sea; then please buy Leila Hadley’s book “A Garden by the Sea”. She and her husband, Henry Luce, planned and planted lovely organic flower gardens around their summer home on Fishers Island in Long Island Sound. This informative and readable book offers guidance for garden lovers who want to plant near the sea.

Every summer I spend about two weeks a year on Fishers Island. The Hydrangea macrophylla with blue bloom clusters the size of baseballs grace every yard. Marsh mallow shrubs with pink flowers line the brackish ponds and the coastline.

My favorite shrub is the rosa rugosa with white, pink or magenta flowers. Today after kayaking friends and I picked a few rosehips as we walked up from the beach. The fleshy part of rose hips can be eaten or throw into boiling water for tea. This fruit of the rosa is tasty and an excellent source of vitamin C.

While walking along the coastline nothing is better than juicy blackberries plucked from their vines and popped into your mouth.

**********************************************************************
July brings hot humid days. Flower boxes, containers, vegetable gardens and the newly planted should be watered frequently. Even your compost may need watering. Fertilize your tomatoes. After harvesting the last raspberry cut back the smaller canes to the soil line; leaving the stronger canes for next season. Pull your weeds before they go to seed.

1 comment:

Elaine Greywalker said...

The hydrangea are (or were) beautiful! I get to walk by a nice specimen on the way to work. I love watching it blossom and change from white to blue to green.

I eat rosehips, too. And rose petals, but that's another story.