The Link Early Spring 2020 The Link Feb-Mar 2020 v1 | Page 11

will focus the eye down the centre of a garden, where you could create another area of the garden for an interested person to walk to. Placing a simple structure or a feature at the end of the avenue, almost as a full stop in a garden, will also attract the eye down the avenue towards it. A structure such as a gazebo that you sit underneath or something that comes off the house, this is great for shade, but you also want to take into consideration what you might be growing on it. For arguments sake, it is very nice to sit under roses, etc., but when they drop their blossom this can cover everything. Wisteria would be far better, since it drops less. A grapevine again would drop less petals and flowers. time to start to use it on your beds. The bulbs you planted in November have started to come up. I recommend taking photos of the area to record and remind you where the bulbs are. You may wish to put a new plant in that area, or add more bulbs the following year. If you have any fencing or wooden structure that need attention, now is the time to act as most plants are dormant and you can get behind them to repair or paint. It is also much easier to see what needs to be done when all herbaceous plants are cut down to ground level. Any replacement work can be done at the same time. When pruning climbers on a rose arch or wooden structure, make sure you prune back to the main structure of the plant. For example, Honeysuckle grows from a top joint and then falls over the old growth cutting off the light and killing it off. It then becomes much thicker, which is obviously great for wildlife, but it can make a rose arch etc. look lopsided and this additional weight can cause damage or pull them down in winds. Things to do in the garden this month Remember to keep turning your compost and then re-sheet. February/March will be the The Link 11