Island Life Magazine Ltd June/July 2015 | Page 52

GARDENING IN THE GARDEN With Tina Hughes Top of the pots O ne of the best ways to improve soil, retain moisture and reduce weeding is to keep the soil well mulched. Depending on the type of plants and effect you want to create a wide variety of materials can be used. Bark chippings, gravel, well rotted compost, straw, even grass clippings are all suitable. Mulches can be highly ornamental as well as functional, and one area where I think their potential has not been fully explored is around container grown specimen plants. Over the years I’ve built up a collection of large specimen plants in pots. To reduce maintenance I prefer to grow them without adding much other than a few spring bulbs. This means there’s a large dull expanse of bare soil to cover and I en joy coming up with different ornamental mulching materials to enhance the overall effect of the plant and the container. Stones and slate are obvious choices. Available in a huge range of natural colours to harmonise or contrast with the pots, the plants or even the flowers they’re always a safe bet, but the relatively small area in a container lends itself to more creative possibilities. Pots offer the perfect chance to experiment and create a theme; a tiny seaside garden perhaps with a mulch of all those lovely sea shells you’ve collected, but never used, fragments of sea worn glass and other flotsam such as small pieces of driftwood. Corks are an entertaining possibility although these are harder to come by these days. They work nicely under a small standard rosemary, olive or lemon tree in a Mediterranean themed scheme. Pine cones are one of my personal favourites, they’re light and free to collect. Some years ago I planted a beautiful Victorian copper with ornamental grasses and covered the compost with cones collected from a Macrocarpa, arranged in concentric circles the effect was interesting and restful and kept weeding to a minimum. 52 www.visitilife.com