December

Icing-sugar dusted

December

Evergreens and berries

We’re cheating this month. Escaping lockdown we’ve been out and about rather than in our garden. Most of our best pictures are from parks and countryside. The one below was a must…

The Smoke Bush above, which we think is Palace Purple, is typical of the unexpected delights to be found in December. We’ve added more misty vistas below.

Misty vistas, water droplets, viridian green leaves with ice-crystal edges make it a month for photography rather than gardening.

Misty vistas

Plant of the month - Mahonia

Our Mahonia is Soft Caress but it's not yet flowering so we've pictured this wonderful Charity we came across on our rambles. Mahonia's unusual in offering flowers in December, rather than berries but this is the month to admire our evergreens and we have a good selection. Here's our winter top ten...

Top plants – when they flower – what they bring to the garden

1. Mahonia Soft CaressOct–JanSpiky lemon fingers on dark green
2. Pyracantha Orange GlowOct–DecFestoons of apricot berry clusters
3. Choisya SundanceAll-seasonsHundreds of upturned yellow palms
4. Bodnantense DawnAll-seasonsViburnum with fragrant pink flowers
5. Cotoneaster WatereriAll-seasonsWillowy shrub with red berries
6. Spotted LaurelAll-seasonsShiny green leaves dotted yellow
7. Variagated Euonymous All-seasonsBalls of clipped silvery green
8. Variagated MyrtleAll-seasonsPearl buds open to white spiders
9. AbeleaAll-seasonsEager shrub with small white trumpets
10. Elaeagnus LimelightAll seasons Glossy green and yellow lances
Choisya Sundance contrasts with dark Viburnum Davidii

The Front Garden

We’re not doing much wandering or sitting in our own garden this month. We are rejuvenating some garden beds. The Front Garden gets the vote because this month as many of the evergreens shown in our top ten call it home and it’s visible from our kitchen and study

Wild spectacle: ivy

Ivy thrives in the cold. As a result it’s hugely important for wildlife. It flowers from August to November and is rich in pollen, becoming a key plant in building up reserves before hibernation. The berries also arrive in late winter and form part of the diet of blackbirds and thrushes.

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