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  • Sunshine at Wisley, spring is here.

    Blog post by Jim Gardiner on 02 Mar 2010

    Well, with a little bit of sunshine the garden is a different place. It has been buzzing with visitors, coming out to enjoy the warm rays, just like the crocuses that open up with bright light and the winter stems that look amazing in the sunlight. It strikes me that we've got it all right now. The... Read more..

  • Check out these colour combos

    Blog post by Tutti Fruit on 16 Aug 2010

    Here you can see my summer squash (patty pan 'Sunburst) trained up a bamboo 'tee-pee' structure together with runner bean 'Saint George'. The runners won the race to the top (no surprise there) but the squash are making a sure and steady progress. I first became aware of vertically... Read more..

  • Potager of fruity hues

    Blog post by Tutti Fruit on 20 Jun 2010

    Fancy learning some Norwegian? Here's a great expression for you... 'TING TAR TID' (tid - pronounced 'tee') Remember those tiny seedlings and all that bare earth? I was fortunate to spend 7 days away working at the Chelsea Flower Show and when I came back the whole thing had just... Read more..

  • Pinks and greens, a sight to be seen

    Blog post by Tutti Fruit on 25 Apr 2010

    The apple stepovers are now coming into their own, putting on a show that defies the barren soil beneath them (it's been so dry I've held off seed sowing). One of the earlier apples here is 'Katy' (syn. 'Katya') a Swedish variety, producing lovely bright red apples. I'm happy... Read more..

  • Is this the new string theory?

    Blog post by Tutti Fruit on 09 Apr 2010

    ..or just the work of a rather large spider? perhaps it's just my own 'Theory of Everything' potager related... Well...ok, you're right, it's none of these things. In putting together this potager design I realised it was important to keep it simple (unlike String Theory ?) while... Read more..

  • Stepover makeover!

    Blog post by Tutti Fruit on 28 Mar 2010

    This is how the potager looked back in February. Box hedges dividing the plot( Buxus - no record of species or cultivars) - that one on the middle-left is completely out of proportion with the others. These plants can work beautifully in a formal potager, providing all year round interest. Also they... Read more..

  • Trainee takes on Potager

    Blog post by Tutti Fruit on 17 Mar 2010

    Hello! I'm Sigrid a Trainee on the Fruit Department at Wisley and this year as part of my project work I get to re-design, plant up and look after the Potager, located in the Model Veg Garden. It's an exciting opportunity to create something hopefully both productive and aesthetically interesting... Read more..

  • my july spuds

    Photo uploaded by Tutti Fruit on 15 Aug 2010

    Photo: SA SHARP 7/7/2010 These are my first earlies harvested in early july. Not much of a crop, averaging 3-4 potatoes per plant, but then the seed potatoes I planted were only the size of a ping pong ball. I choose the smallest of the batch deliberately, just to see what would happen. Limnanthes in... Read more..

  • lettuce and beans

    Photo uploaded by Tutti Fruit on 15 Aug 2010

    Photo: SA SHARP 25/6/2010 Unrecognisable now on their tall woody stems, these lettuce have gone to seed. I cut their flowers off and they keep going, but many visitors have wondered what they are. The speckled pink borlotto beans show off well against them. Read more..

  • Where am I?

    Photo uploaded by Tutti Fruit on 19 Jun 2010

    Photo: SA SHARP 11/6/2010 ..or rather, where is the Potager? Well if you've never been to the RHS garden at Wisley, let me tell you it's HUGE. And the Potager is located in a tiny corner of what we call 'Model Veg', which is a demonstration vegetable garden. Perhaps you're trying... Read more..