Hi, Paul. I'm from Russia. I live in Moscow. I'm 57 years old. I learn English and I very like gardens. I have a garden too. You have very beautiful garden . Thank you for video. It's interesting
Hi Paul, it's a delightful tour . You are so attentive and sensitive to your plants. It shows your love and passion, daily watching them grow, weather as season changes. I so appreciate your descriptive manner !!! Thank you for showing us your garden.
Absolutely beautiful. Enjoyed every minute and learned so much, thank you! It was a vacation in itself. You might consider narrating audiobooks, as your voice is perfection!
Good Morning...Sir. Your garden is truly wonderful.... Those flowers are so beautiful/colorful and enchanting...i love it very much..💙💚💛💜💖 Thank you for sharing...Paul T's World. Have a pleasant weekend..Sir!
Such a beautiful and peaceful garden Paul. Very happy to spend a little time by the pond 😊 it’s going to be a great array of color when those canas are blooming 💗
@@paultsworld , yes mine are starting to bloom and I love it. We’ve had such a cold wet spring we are almost a month behind last year. I’m very thankful for UA-cam and especially your channel for giving me my dose of blooms when I don’t have my own yet. Actually I had overwintered my canas in their pots so I did get an earlier start with them. My regards to your lovely pond 😊❤️
Your cannas will bloom far earlier than mine here - the lack of consistent hot weather slows them up - but I really love the leaves - seeing them emerge and unfold is a joy. Had the first large dragonfly at the pond today - hopefully she’s laying eggs.
@@paultsworld , oh that’s good news 😁 I’m going to go back and watch your pond video. That should hold me over till you put out a new one 😁 It has been a strange gardening year so far but am so enjoying it. Take care Paul 😊
Hope you re-enjoy my pond videos - I have about 3 or 4 when the pond was looking really good. I’m putting in a lot of work to re-arrange the plants, particularly the overgrown ones. Hope you have a good growing season Vicki. 🌻
Hi Paul, your garden looks stunning I love the lamium with your hostas they go so well together & your Japanese maples are beautiful. Your plug plants are thriving well done mate
Thank you Stephen - I am delighted with the plug plants - lots of work getting them going but they’ve done well. How is your Grimaldi doing? Are the leaves looking good?
@@paultsworld Hi Paul, Sorry to see your Grimaldi is suffering a bit could well be the cool weather yet your other brug looks fine? Sure it'll recover OK. Mine was an 8 inch cutting with tiny yellow leaves when I received it. The leaves dropped off one by one but im glad to say there's new growth appearing which looks a bit greener! At least it's still alive as I'd nearly given up on the poor thing. I've never known a more mature brug to have yellow leaves like yours but as you say yours is not the only one so must be the cool weather & it's supposed to hot up next week so it might take off like a triffid.. hope so!
Hi Stephen, I do think different brugs are easier than others. I’ve decided Grimaldi is a difficult one to get going. I have never failed with the 30 or so cuttings I’ve done over the years of other Brugs- plus I bought 4 cuttings over the post 2 years ago - 100% success rate. This year I bought 3 Grimaldi cuttings through the post. One died straight off, one I struggled with and then died and this is the third which took off no problem but is now struggling. I think it’s the cold weather and maybe insects. It could do with a bigger pot and I’m confident with a bit more heat it’ll do OK. The one in the ground grew little yellow leaves when I brought it out of the garage , as you say now it’s fine. Quite excited as I’ve never put one in the ground before.
@@paultsworld Hi Paul, Thanks for all the info it's much appreciated. So one out of 3 of your Gimaldis survived? I've just looked at mine & the tiny new growth seems OK so fingers crossed it pulls thru. I'm sure your other one in the ground will take off when we get some warmer weather & hopefully your Grimaldi will too. We gardeners do put ourselves thru it sometimes but that's what makes it so interesting..I'm just gonna cut back my ceanothus as its finished now..was earlier than yours. Have a great gardening Sunday & here's to the difficult Grimaldis!
Just one more thing I forgot to mention. I think I did the two other cuttings in by over watering. A few experts have told me not to over water young cuttings as it’s the best way to kill them. Good luck with yours. That’s right - the ceanothus I have in the back garden is always very late - could be because it’s in a shady spot. All the best, Paul
Paul your garden is divine. The corner of the shed came out incredibly well. Love to see you and see all of your work and how you explain things so well with their names and your experiences with them.
Hello Paul. I’m writing from Georgia. I’m enjoying your garden very much. It’s unbelievable that I’m on my couch and your in England. Your garden is just lovely. Thank you for taking the time to share with us. Pam McGinnis🤗
Hi Pam and greetings to Georgia. It is amazing how we are now all so immediately connected and can share things with no time delay. I am so pleased you enjoyed a tour of my garden.
I have never seen such a wide variety in a single garden and the plants look so healthy. Composting is the secret probably besides a lot of TLC that I can tell. :)
Enjoyed the tour, I especially liked the gold colored heuchera, it is beautiful. Ive never seen one like that. I bought some dark burgundy ones and the deer ate them in half, I try to plant what they don't care for and leave them the grass. The grandmas bonnet are pretty. Ive tried to grow them and I think it is a little too hot here,(Georgia USA) I may try again in a shadier spot. I like using that name for them. Calling them columbine has too many negative connotations here, I think that is why they have fallen out of popularity, such a shame. My garden has turned white this week with lots of camilia and queen anne's lace. Plant away!
I agree, that heuchera is quite stunning in full flower. It must be so disappointing when the deer eat your plants. I am also starting to like ‘Grandma’s Bonnets’ more and more - particularly these cute ones. Must be beautiful in your garden with so many flowers showing.
An Evening tour with Me - My English Garden - June 2022. Good video. I support your video. Watched the video on June 12, 2022 very like. Thank you SO MUCH
Lovely. For those new to your garden it would have been fun to know what trees you have in your garden - aside from the apple tree that you hit our head on!!!
Oh Paul you have SO much beauty in your garden. Isn’t it a wonderful time of the year? Your garden is just fabulous, I could walk round with you all day. Have a wonderful weekend 😍 love your new tropical border.
Creeping phlox grows in our Eastern Washington State (USA) desert here often near larger rocks. It is definitely reaching for sunlight. If the height is a problem, consider moving to exposed place with no shade.
I could just spend all day in your garden. It is spectacular. Your hydrangeas are looking splendid. We had a late frost that damaged some of the hydrangeas here on the east coast US. Such is gardening. Thank you for taking the time to show us what’s happening in your ever changing garden.
How reward and satisfying it must be to tour the results of your years of hard work. Thank you so much for your kindness in sharing. I love your channel and your gardens. ❤️
Good Evening Paul, how beautiful is your garden looking. It is loving the rain and humidity now. Every plant is looking so healthy. Oh my! The hydrangea Sham Rock is my favourite this video, the green and pink/red blooms are spectacular. I WANT that plant. : D. Lamium is the plant that gives, I like the London Pride, I haven't seen that here. The video was so peaceful in the evening, I am having a glass of red after another freezing, windy, unpleasant day. I am just going to live vicariously through your garden until September/ October, lol.
Hi Margaret, yes! That ‘glam Rock’ is starting to really show now. It was growing last year and not much happened - but this year wo hoo 😀. I’ve been told the lamium needs watching but I’m excited about its ground covering possibilities. Sorry about your weather - but in a few months you’ll be out enjoying your garden when we’re all tucked up inside.. Keep warm!
Just got the industrial mulcher out and filled a bay with what will be lovely compost on a sunny, still day, at last ! Lamium should be manageable, it spreads but is not a thug. It is pretty, isn't it. The only problem I have with mine is that grass grows amongst it, but it's not it's fault. ; ) haha. Oh! The Glam Rock hydrangea is even better than the Shamrock one! lol ! Have a wonderful Sunday Summer's day!
I’m off out now…..to buy some plants 😀 Need something to go with the cannas in pots. Industrial mulcher - sounds like a great Winter job. As you know, I love compost & leafmould!
I haven't bought cannas, but I feel the need in Spring to give them a try. I will start in pots. I like the ones you have chosen, especially the pink flowering one. Also I'd like to see how your dwarf ones go. I didn't know they existed until I saw yours. I'd be interested to see what you buy as the filler in your canna pots. 😎
Yes, give the cannas a go - I am supposing you have a lot of heat in the Summer? They'll love it. Ha, ha - I bought the fillers today. One tip - get the biggest pot you can and it must slowly get wider from the bottom to the top. They'll fill the pot big-time and you need to cut round them to slide them out at the end of the season.
Lovely, it's all filling in so fast. You have 2 more hours of sunlight than I do here in Maryland. Today's sun rise was 5:39, it's actually sunny closer to 6, sunset will be at 8:28, dark around 8:50. Sad to think come June 22 the days will get shorter every 2 mins.
First time I heard about the Chelsea chop, was from James the Gardener (an Englishman) in Potsdam. I visited the "Garten der Geheimnisse"- the Secretive Garden in Stroheim, Austria 2 weeks ago. The Phlox there had been given the Chelsea chop and was interesting explaining to other visitors who were sort of appalled to see bits of Phlox tips lying around. Best gardening wishes from Berlin, Germany
@dahlialady That’s funny - I hope you reassured the aghast visitors that the phlox would survive 😀. I’ve visited gardens in Potsdam but can’t remember the name. Greetings to 🇩🇪
It's pretty beautiful and cozy seeing every single second of you showing your garden. Remember back in a year wanting to have one like yours, but I've been busy, hope when I get free, I would start taking care of numerous plants.
Enjoyed the evening tour very much. Seemed Robeson Enjoyed your evening tour in the garden. It felt so tranquil to watch. I sure envy your ability to grow tropical plants in your garden . It was a good idea to add a tropical bed to your garden. I think the larger the variety of plants the greater the enjoyment. Absolutely love the idea of lamium between the hosta . Might try that myself . They really seem to compliment each other.
Thanks Douglas, the bees like the lamium which is a nice bonus. Just need a nice Summer for the tropicals - luckily it’s getting hotter this week. All the best.
I love that you’ve planted some North American natives- Virginia creeper & echinacea. I assume you know those peniculata will get huge! I have one flowering now that’s 7 feet tall and 5 feet wide here in coastal Virginia. Lovely garden!
There are so many American natives that I really like! I know these hydrangeas get huge 😀 I’ll just have to see what happens and how to manage the space - I’m excited - and apprehensive!
Thank you for the compliment- I do my best. But oh dear, I’ve just this morning published a video where I say how big my garden is. I suppose you have 1,000 acres in Texas or Wyoming? lol
Lamium has been trying to cover my entire garden for years. Perhaps yours is less invasive but who knows, beware of the lamia ;-) BTW, could you, please, send me some of your silence? I need it urgently and lots of it! Thank you for the lovely walk, Sir :-)
Thank you for the timely lamium warning! As it’s growing so fast I wondered if it might need controlling at some stage. I do love it though. I agree on the ‘silence’ - it is golden. 🎶 So pleased you liked the walk.
Hi, Paul love to watch your perfectly harmonised garden, dreaming of having my own garden one day! sometimes i’m surprised to see some wildflowers in ur garden which i thought they must be our domestic ones. when looking at same flowers and trees in ur garden, i feel a sense of closeness living in faraway country. Thanks Paul for another lovely video!!😍🪲
Hi Paul. Your garden is looking lovely. What a great tip about the chrysanthemum s.. Would you consider growing the creeping phlox in a pot to enjoy it. I'm looking forward to seeing your new tropical garden. 🇮🇪
Hi Catherine, I am delighted the burying trick worked! That’s an idea - having creeping phlox tumbling over a pot - maybe a taller plant behind that flowers at the same time? Bit windy at the moment isn’t it!
Excellent video you have so much variety of plants, I am looking forward to seeing your lacecap hydrangeas in flower next month. At 11:02 I wonder is it wild grass or ornamental? Wild grasses are of course vital for caterpillars of the brown butterfly species :) Yes well spotted with the aphids and ants - they have a symbiotic relationship - I have a lot of aphids on the buddleia at the moment - I noticed no ants but a few ladybirds including two mating - one predominately red and one predominantly black but you can get that variation apparently in some species.
Thank you - so pleased you like the variety of plants. The grass is ornamental - it’s from when I cut the turf out of the lawn to make the lawn bed. I put the sods there - grass to grass - so it would rot down and make loam. Unfortunately the grass grew through the sod! So nice you have lots of insects and ladybirds in particular.
@@paultsworld Oh I was hoping it was wild grasses - they are apparently much better for butterfly caterpillars than lawn grass or ornamental grass. Yorkshire fog is a nice native wild grass with purple/pink flowerheads - that's what I have in my garden.
@@paultsworld I am in Northern Ireland.... yes the pink/purple flowered Yorkshire Fog grass is native to here as well. I am still not very good at identifying other types of grasses yet. We dont have as many butterfly species as England sadly, the Comma and Brimstone are extremely rare here and the Brown Argus and Marbled White are not present here. I did see a Small Copper recently in my garden which is supposed to be quite common but I really don't see it very often. So I have bought and sowed some sorrel seeds, the caterpillar foodplant of the Small Copper. The young leaves of sorrel are also edible for humans of course too!
That's so good of you providing the butterflies' food plants. I have commas and brimstone in the garden - unfortunately they're not common now though. The comma was very common when I was a boy. The most common are the peacock, red admiral and small tortoiseshell and we get clouds of painted ladies flying up from Continental Europe some years. I hadn't realised you don't have as many species as us.
Your garden is looking really lovely Paul. I always think how nice your grass and edges are which I know take up a lot of time but are well worth it. By the way, I bought a white Weigela this week. A couple of David Austin roses also ended up in the trolley!
I have a dark red hydrangea, grown from a cutting 30 years ago and not fed/watered properly. Now it's fine but it never changes colour, it's always a rich red; perhaps some strains are better in keeping their colour. Great foxgloves there Paul.
Dark red is a gorgeous colour for a hydrangea. I do believe many of the newer strains of macrophylla keep their colour regardless of pH - obviously not in the case of yours though as it's 30 years old!
The cutting from a friend's large potted hydrangea, itself grown from a cutting of her late mother's huge plant; I saw photos of that. Mine seems to have stayed true to its original plants.
Beautiful. I do have a question for you. You talk about taking cuttings and propagating your plants, but how do you do it? What is your process? If you could do a video on that it would be most appreciated! thx :)
Thank you Pauline. Generally I just leave the azaleas - no real need to deadhead - however I have started to tidy them up a little and trim them - while I do that I pull away the brown spent flowers and feel they look nicer and fresher afterwards. I enjoy seeing them grow new fresh, green leaves.
That’s brilliant you picked that up from a short call. Yes, there are jackdaws about - usually a noisy flock of them passing overhead - as that was a lone call I lazily assumed a crow. Thanks for letting me know 👍
Thank you - I think you’re right! 👍 Because it grows a panicle I assumed it was also referred to as a paniculata. But looks as though it’s simply classed as quercifolia.
Hi, Paul. I'm from Russia. I live in Moscow. I'm 57 years old. I learn English and I very like gardens. I have a garden too. You have very beautiful garden . Thank you for video. It's interesting
Good afternoon, I am very pleased you enjoyed my garden video.
Perfect timing, I just made myself a cup of coffee and I get to watch Paul T’s garden!
So nice of you - hope you liked the tour.
Hi Paul, it's a delightful tour . You are so attentive and sensitive to your plants. It shows your love and passion, daily watching them grow, weather as season changes. I so appreciate your descriptive manner !!! Thank you for showing us your garden.
Hi Kim, thank you for appreciating my garden - it's a pleasure for me to share it.
Как же Вы любите своих питомцев! 👏🙏 Я люблю все стричь, хотя и жалко, но потом все аккуратное, плотное, молодое!
Pruning is good for most plants - I agree with you that it gives plants a nice shape and rejuvenates them.
Absolutely beautiful. Enjoyed every minute and learned so much, thank you! It was a vacation in itself. You might consider narrating audiobooks, as your voice is perfection!
Wow, thank you for your kind words.
Good Morning...Sir. Your garden is truly wonderful....
Those flowers are so beautiful/colorful and enchanting...i love it very much..💙💚💛💜💖
Thank you for sharing...Paul T's World.
Have a pleasant weekend..Sir!
Good Evening Zaleha! So pleased you liked my garden. Have a lovely Sunday. 🌻
Such a beautiful and peaceful garden Paul. Very happy to spend a little time by the pond 😊 it’s going to be a great array of color when those canas are blooming 💗
Hi Vicki, I hoped you’d like the pond visit. I’m sure your cannas are really moving now - mine have started but just need a bit more heat. 🌞
@@paultsworld , yes mine are starting to bloom and I love it. We’ve had such a cold wet spring we are almost a month behind last year. I’m very thankful for UA-cam and especially your channel for giving me my dose of blooms when I don’t have my own yet. Actually I had overwintered my canas in their pots so I did get an earlier start with them. My regards to your lovely pond 😊❤️
Your cannas will bloom far earlier than mine here - the lack of consistent hot weather slows them up - but I really love the leaves - seeing them emerge and unfold is a joy. Had the first large dragonfly at the pond today - hopefully she’s laying eggs.
@@paultsworld , oh that’s good news 😁 I’m going to go back and watch your pond video. That should hold me over till you put out a new one 😁 It has been a strange gardening year so far but am so enjoying it. Take care Paul 😊
Hope you re-enjoy my pond videos - I have about 3 or 4 when the pond was looking really good. I’m putting in a lot of work to re-arrange the plants, particularly the overgrown ones. Hope you have a good growing season Vicki. 🌻
Hi Paul, your garden looks stunning I love the lamium with your hostas they go so well together & your Japanese maples are beautiful. Your plug plants are thriving well done mate
Thank you Stephen - I am delighted with the plug plants - lots of work getting them going but they’ve done well.
How is your Grimaldi doing? Are the leaves looking good?
@@paultsworld Hi Paul,
Sorry to see your Grimaldi is suffering a bit could well be the cool weather yet your other brug looks fine? Sure it'll recover OK. Mine was an 8 inch cutting with tiny yellow leaves when I received it. The leaves dropped off one by one but im glad to say there's new growth appearing which looks a bit greener! At least it's still alive as I'd nearly given up on the poor thing. I've never known a more mature brug to have yellow leaves like yours but as you say yours is not the only one so must be the cool weather & it's supposed to hot up next week so it might take off like a triffid.. hope so!
Hi Stephen,
I do think different brugs are easier than others. I’ve decided Grimaldi is a difficult one to get going.
I have never failed with the 30 or so cuttings I’ve done over the years of other Brugs- plus I bought 4 cuttings over the post 2 years ago - 100% success rate.
This year I bought 3 Grimaldi cuttings through the post. One died straight off, one I struggled with and then died and this is the third which took off no problem but is now struggling. I think it’s the cold weather and maybe insects. It could do with a bigger pot and I’m confident with a bit more heat it’ll do OK.
The one in the ground grew little yellow leaves when I brought it out of the garage , as you say now it’s fine. Quite excited as I’ve never put one in the ground before.
@@paultsworld Hi Paul,
Thanks for all the info it's much appreciated. So one out of 3 of your Gimaldis survived? I've just looked at mine & the tiny new growth seems OK so fingers crossed it pulls thru. I'm sure your other one in the ground will take off when we get some warmer weather & hopefully your Grimaldi will too. We gardeners do put ourselves thru it sometimes but that's what makes it so interesting..I'm just gonna cut back my ceanothus as its finished now..was earlier than yours. Have a great gardening Sunday & here's to the difficult Grimaldis!
Just one more thing I forgot to mention. I think I did the two other cuttings in by over watering. A few experts have told me not to over water young cuttings as it’s the best way to kill them.
Good luck with yours.
That’s right - the ceanothus I have in the back garden is always very late - could be because it’s in a shady spot.
All the best, Paul
Чудесные растения, красивый сад у Вас. Гейхеры замечательные, особенно золотистая, так ярко сияет! Благодарю за возможность прогулки по Вашему саду.)
Thank you for watching and liking my garden.
Thanks.Its absolutely a great relief for exhausted Friday 💐💐💐
love from
Sri Lanka
Thank you - hope you have a nice weekend. Greeting to Sri Lanka.
Paul your garden is divine. The corner of the shed came out incredibly well. Love to see you and see all of your work and how you explain things so well with their names and your experiences with them.
It is amazing how quickly some of the plants grow and fill out. So pleased you are enjoying the garden Peter.
siempre esperando sus vídeos, bellas plantas 🌱 🪴🌺🌼🙏🙌😄
Gracia Tomasa, es un placer haciendo los vídeos.
What a lovely tour of your garden in the evening - soft light, stillness & beautiful birdsong ❤️
Thank you. I love the stillness of late evening.
Hello Paul. I’m writing from Georgia. I’m enjoying your garden very much. It’s unbelievable that I’m on my couch and your in England. Your garden is just lovely. Thank you for taking the time to share with us. Pam McGinnis🤗
Hi Pam and greetings to Georgia.
It is amazing how we are now all so immediately connected and can share things with no time delay.
I am so pleased you enjoyed a tour of my garden.
Добрый вечер, Пол! Случайно попала к вам на канал, очень понравилось ваше преподношение садов, очень приятный голос и сад. Спасибо!👍💐
I'm pleased you enjoy the garden.
I have never seen such a wide variety in a single garden and the plants look so healthy. Composting is the secret probably besides a lot of TLC that I can tell. :)
Thank you - glad you like the variety of plants. Yes, I do like to add compost - particularly when I plant something.
So relaxing to watch this video while resting my back from gardening all day😰😂 thank you Paul for a lovely video.
You are welcome Alice.
It is so satisfying being out in the garden all day - I was as well, doing some digging, so back the same as yours!
Enjoyed the tour, I especially liked the gold colored heuchera, it is beautiful. Ive never seen one like that. I bought some dark burgundy ones and the deer ate them in half, I try to plant what they don't care for and leave them the grass. The grandmas bonnet are pretty. Ive tried to grow them and I think it is a little too hot here,(Georgia USA) I may try again in a shadier spot. I like using that name for them. Calling them columbine has too many negative connotations here, I think that is why they have fallen out of popularity, such a shame. My garden has turned white this week with lots of camilia and queen anne's lace. Plant away!
I agree, that heuchera is quite stunning in full flower. It must be so disappointing when the deer eat your plants.
I am also starting to like ‘Grandma’s Bonnets’ more and more - particularly these cute ones.
Must be beautiful in your garden with so many flowers showing.
An Evening tour with Me - My English Garden - June 2022. Good video. I support your video. Watched the video on June 12, 2022 very like. Thank you SO MUCH
Thank you so much for watching.
So lush and diverse. This was wonderful in the evening.
So pleased you enjoyed the calmness of the evening.
That Japanese tree is called Autumn Moon.
What a lovely name - thank you for letting me know.
Thank you, Paul, for another excellent tour.
Thank you Laura
Garden is looking lovely Paul.
Thank you Lynn 🌻
Magnificent Paul, as usual!! I copied you and added rocks to my potted maple, I like it very much! Cheers
That’s lovely you’ve adorned your maple🍁 all the best Laura.
Thank you very much Paul for another garden tour your garden so beautiful many different kinds of plants thank you for sharing 👍❤️
You’re welcome Khay.
That was a great tour Paul. Your garden is beautiful. Really appreciate the work you put in to your videos. Michael in the West of Ireland.
Nice of you to say so Michael.
A lovely tour, Paul. Thank you for sharing your garden. 💚
Glad you liked the tour J C.
Lovely tour Paul thank you, everything looking glorious. Hope you enjoyed your well earned cuppa.
Thank you Lil, yes - enjoyed the cuppa ☕️
New Subscriber from Philippines... 🙏❤️🙏 GOd Bless
Welcome to my channel - greetings to the Philippines. 🇵🇭
Прекрасный сад, очень красиво, спасибо!!!
Спасибо за ваши добрые слова.
Привет! Пол, вы садовый волшебник! Люблю гулять в вашем саду и слушать ваши комментарии! Всех благ🌞
I'm so glad you like my garden and thanks for letting me know.
Lovely. For those new to your garden it would have been fun to know what trees you have in your garden - aside from the apple tree that you hit our head on!!!
That’s a good idea - I’ll give a run down on my trees - while being careful going past Mr. James Grieve!
Oh Paul you have SO much beauty in your garden. Isn’t it a wonderful time of the year? Your garden is just fabulous, I could walk round with you all day. Have a wonderful weekend 😍 love your new tropical border.
So nice of you Janette.
I agree - I would love two Mays and two Junes every year 😊
@@paultsworld oh yes, me too. 🤣🤣
What a great tour!
Thanks!
Creeping phlox grows in our Eastern Washington State (USA) desert here often near larger rocks. It is definitely reaching for sunlight. If the height is a problem, consider moving to exposed place with no shade.
Thank you for the tip. It’s nice to see these plants growing in the wild. I’ll bear in mind they want full sun.
I could just spend all day in your garden. It is spectacular. Your hydrangeas are looking splendid. We had a late frost that damaged some of the hydrangeas here on the east coast US. Such is gardening. Thank you for taking the time to show us what’s happening in your ever changing garden.
I'm happy you enjoy my garden. Sorry about your hydrangeas - hopefully they'll be flowering soon.
Stunning Paul 🌸💕🌸
Thanks so much Jasmine 🌻
How reward and satisfying it must be to tour the results of your years of hard work. Thank you so much for your kindness in sharing. I love your channel and your gardens. ❤️
It is Colleen - I am now enjoying more than ever how it all 'feels'. So kind of you to let me know how much you enjoy my channel 🌞
Good Evening Paul, how beautiful is your garden looking. It is loving the rain and humidity now. Every plant is looking so healthy. Oh my! The hydrangea Sham Rock is my favourite this video, the green and pink/red blooms are spectacular. I WANT that plant. : D. Lamium is the plant that gives, I like the London Pride, I haven't seen that here. The video was so peaceful in the evening, I am having a glass of red after another freezing, windy, unpleasant day. I am just going to live vicariously through your garden until September/ October, lol.
Hi Margaret, yes! That ‘glam Rock’ is starting to really show now. It was growing last year and not much happened - but this year wo hoo 😀.
I’ve been told the lamium needs watching but I’m excited about its ground covering possibilities.
Sorry about your weather - but in a few months you’ll be out enjoying your garden when we’re all tucked up inside..
Keep warm!
Just got the industrial mulcher out and filled a bay with what will be lovely compost on a sunny, still day, at last ! Lamium should be manageable, it spreads but is not a thug. It is pretty, isn't it. The only problem I have with mine is that grass grows amongst it, but it's not it's fault. ; ) haha. Oh! The Glam Rock hydrangea is even better than the Shamrock one! lol ! Have a wonderful Sunday Summer's day!
I’m off out now…..to buy some plants 😀
Need something to go with the cannas in pots.
Industrial mulcher - sounds like a great Winter job. As you know, I love compost & leafmould!
I haven't bought cannas, but I feel the need in Spring to give them a try. I will start in pots. I like the ones you have chosen, especially the pink flowering one. Also I'd like to see how your dwarf ones go. I didn't know they existed until I saw yours.
I'd be interested to see what you buy as the filler in your canna pots. 😎
Yes, give the cannas a go - I am supposing you have a lot of heat in the Summer? They'll love it.
Ha, ha - I bought the fillers today. One tip - get the biggest pot you can and it must slowly get wider from the bottom to the top. They'll fill the pot big-time and you need to cut round them to slide them out at the end of the season.
Lovely, it's all filling in so fast. You have 2 more hours of sunlight than I do here in Maryland. Today's sun rise was 5:39, it's actually sunny closer to 6, sunset will be at 8:28, dark around 8:50. Sad to think come June 22 the days will get shorter every 2 mins.
That’s a good point about 22nd June. I always have a happy smile on 22nd December, knowing the days are now getting longer!
@@paultsworld
Indeed, that's better than a Christmas present 3 days later.
First time I heard about the Chelsea chop, was from James the Gardener (an Englishman) in Potsdam. I visited the "Garten der Geheimnisse"- the Secretive Garden in Stroheim, Austria 2 weeks ago. The Phlox there had been given the Chelsea chop and was interesting explaining to other visitors who were sort of appalled to see bits of Phlox tips lying around. Best gardening wishes from Berlin, Germany
You live close to my most favourite botanic garden, I simply love it!
@dahlialady That’s funny - I hope you reassured the aghast visitors that the phlox would survive 😀.
I’ve visited gardens in Potsdam but can’t remember the name. Greetings to 🇩🇪
🤗 PAUL…IS IT OKAY TO WATCH THIS IN THE MORNING 🤔🌞😁😍😍😍
Ha, ha - I’ve decided any time is a good time to watch my videos! 👍😀
@@paultsworld WE AGREE 🤗😍😍😍
It's pretty beautiful and cozy seeing every single second of you showing your garden.
Remember back in a year wanting to have one like yours, but I've been busy, hope when I get free, I would start taking care of numerous plants.
Thank you for enjoying my garden - hope you have time in the future to start enjoying your very own plants.
Enjoyed the evening tour very much. Seemed Robeson
Enjoyed your evening tour in the garden. It felt so tranquil to watch. I sure envy your ability to grow tropical plants in your garden . It was a good idea to add a tropical bed to your garden. I think the larger the variety of plants the greater the enjoyment. Absolutely love the idea of lamium between the hosta . Might try that myself . They really seem to compliment each other.
Thanks Douglas, the bees like the lamium which is a nice bonus. Just need a nice Summer for the tropicals - luckily it’s getting hotter this week.
All the best.
Hi Paul! Your garden is lovely. I love the azaleas but can't grow them here. Thank you for the tour. Glad your back!
Hi Evita, thank you - it’s good to be back. 🌻
Enjoyed this so much! Thanks for taking us along for the tour!
You're welcome - my pleasure.
I love that you’ve planted some North American natives- Virginia creeper & echinacea. I assume you know those peniculata will get huge! I have one flowering now that’s 7 feet tall and 5 feet wide here in coastal Virginia. Lovely garden!
There are so many American natives that I really like!
I know these hydrangeas get huge 😀 I’ll just have to see what happens and how to manage the space - I’m excited - and apprehensive!
Such great video, beautiful beautiful garden!!!
Thank you. 🌻
It is about size of a postage stamp but he makes it interesting
Thank you for the compliment- I do my best.
But oh dear, I’ve just this morning published a video where I say how big my garden is. I suppose you have 1,000 acres in Texas or Wyoming? lol
Your garden is so lovely Thank you so much for sharing it with us
It’s a pleasure to share my garden - thank you Joanna.
Everything looks so good.
So nice of you - thank you.
Thank you for showing us your stunning garden Paul, and your beautiful blue eyes ❤️. So glad you are back 😊😊😊😊
So nice of you Alicia, it’s nice to be back. 🌸
Another lovely tour and you have such a soothing voice:) ty so much for sharing your space with us:)
Thank you so much. 🌻
Just love your garden and your vlogs. Thank you .🌼
Thank you Wendy.
Lamium has been trying to cover my entire garden for years. Perhaps yours is less invasive but who knows, beware of the lamia ;-) BTW, could you, please, send me some of your silence? I need it urgently and lots of it! Thank you for the lovely walk, Sir :-)
Thank you for the timely lamium warning! As it’s growing so fast I wondered if it might need controlling at some stage. I do love it though.
I agree on the ‘silence’ - it is golden. 🎶
So pleased you liked the walk.
Hi, Paul
love to watch your perfectly harmonised garden, dreaming of having my own garden one day!
sometimes i’m surprised to see some wildflowers in ur garden which i thought they must be our domestic ones.
when looking at same flowers and trees in ur garden, i feel a sense of closeness living in faraway country.
Thanks Paul for another lovely video!!😍🪲
Hi Rachel,
That’s so nice you have a connection with plants in your country and ones I have in my garden.
I am so pleased you enjoyed this video. 🌸
le jardin est magnifique en ce mois de juin Paul , bravo !
C’est vrai Roger - le mois de juin es un mois plein de croissance.
Большое спасибо за субтитры!🤩
Добро пожаловать и спасибо за ваше сообщение.
Hi Paul. Your garden is looking lovely. What a great tip about the chrysanthemum s.. Would you consider growing the creeping phlox in a pot to enjoy it. I'm looking forward to seeing your new tropical garden. 🇮🇪
Hi Catherine,
I am delighted the burying trick worked!
That’s an idea - having creeping phlox tumbling over a pot - maybe a taller plant behind that flowers at the same time?
Bit windy at the moment isn’t it!
Hello from London! 💚🌴🌵🌹🌸🏵🌻🌼🌺🥀🌷🍀
Hi to London 🌼
beautiful Paul, have a great weekend 😀
Thank you Helen, have a lovely gardening weekend in this warm weather. 🌻
Absolutely incredible! The beauty in your garden is just magnificent and so peaceful! Thank you for allowing us to be apart of it! 🌸
Thank you very much for watching and enjoying my garden 🌻
Excellent video you have so much variety of plants, I am looking forward to seeing your lacecap hydrangeas in flower next month.
At 11:02 I wonder is it wild grass or ornamental? Wild grasses are of course vital for caterpillars of the brown butterfly species :)
Yes well spotted with the aphids and ants - they have a symbiotic relationship - I have a lot of aphids on the buddleia at the moment - I noticed no ants but a few ladybirds including two mating - one predominately red and one predominantly black but you can get that variation apparently in some species.
Thank you - so pleased you like the variety of plants.
The grass is ornamental - it’s from when I cut the turf out of the lawn to make the lawn bed. I put the sods there - grass to grass - so it would rot down and make loam. Unfortunately the grass grew through the sod!
So nice you have lots of insects and ladybirds in particular.
@@paultsworld Oh I was hoping it was wild grasses - they are apparently much better for butterfly caterpillars than lawn grass or ornamental grass. Yorkshire fog is a nice native wild grass with purple/pink flowerheads - that's what I have in my garden.
That sounds a nice grass - native as well. Are you in Britain? Is it native to Britain?
@@paultsworld I am in Northern Ireland.... yes the pink/purple flowered Yorkshire Fog grass is native to here as well. I am still not very good at identifying other types of grasses yet.
We dont have as many butterfly species as England sadly, the Comma and Brimstone are extremely rare here and the Brown Argus and Marbled White are not present here.
I did see a Small Copper recently in my garden which is supposed to be quite common but I really don't see it very often. So I have bought and sowed some sorrel seeds, the caterpillar foodplant of the Small Copper. The young leaves of sorrel are also edible for humans of course too!
That's so good of you providing the butterflies' food plants. I have commas and brimstone in the garden - unfortunately they're not common now though. The comma was very common when I was a boy. The most common are the peacock, red admiral and small tortoiseshell and we get clouds of painted ladies flying up from Continental Europe some years. I hadn't realised you don't have as many species as us.
Beautiful garden! I will have to try the pruning tip with my phlox!! Thanks for that.
Let me know how it goes with your phlox!
Красота!!!
Thank you!
Благодаря ти!
Beautiful! Thank you for the tour!
You’re welcome Dawn.
I love your channel. You are so fun 😊
So nice of you - thank you 🌻
Lovely garden I have really garden envy its beautiful... fighting the wind and rain here in Ireland.. Great video as usual
Same over here - very unseasonably high wind - going on for days! Sunny though!
It's amazing how quickly your shed bed has filled out. Beautiful as ever 😊
I agree, it’s great how quickly the perennials grow.
Your garden is looking really lovely Paul. I always think how nice your grass and edges are which I know take up a lot of time but are well worth it. By the way, I bought a white Weigela this week. A couple of David Austin roses also ended up in the trolley!
I use a trimmer for the edges now - speed things up!
Funny how these plants jump into the trolley. Nice choice, I like how rapidly the weigelas grow.
So beautiful!
Thank you 🌻
I have a dark red hydrangea, grown from a cutting 30 years ago and not fed/watered properly. Now it's fine but it never changes colour, it's always a rich red; perhaps some strains are better in keeping their colour. Great foxgloves there Paul.
Dark red is a gorgeous colour for a hydrangea. I do believe many of the newer strains of macrophylla keep their colour regardless of pH - obviously not in the case of yours though as it's 30 years old!
The cutting from a friend's large potted hydrangea, itself grown from a cutting of her late mother's huge plant; I saw photos of that. Mine seems to have stayed true to its original plants.
Isn’t that lovely having the hydrangea passing along the generations ….and staying true.
Just remembered, I grew a few from my plant to give away, and kept one. Last year I took a few more but they're not even toddlers yet!
Excellent idea to keep propagating - luckily hydrangeas ‘take’ readily.
So lovely👌👌
Thank you.
Beautiful. I do have a question for you. You talk about taking cuttings and propagating your plants, but how do you do it? What is your process? If you could do a video on that it would be most appreciated! thx :)
Hello Kat, I have been pondering doing a ‘cuttings’ video. OK - I will 😀
Thank you, Paul!!!! 😁
❤️❤️❤️
Thank you.
Wow~ Wonderful Garden and Flowers^^
Include Like 548 , I leave 3 Presents.
Have a good relationship.
My friend, always stay Connected.
Thank you for watching - it’s appreciated.
Always enjoy seeing your garden. Do you deadhead your azaleas or just leave them?
Thank you Pauline.
Generally I just leave the azaleas - no real need to deadhead - however I have started to tidy them up a little and trim them - while I do that I pull away the brown spent flowers and feel they look nicer and fresher afterwards. I enjoy seeing them grow new fresh, green leaves.
Thanks you
it was a jackdaw calling
That’s brilliant you picked that up from a short call. Yes, there are jackdaws about - usually a noisy flock of them passing overhead - as that was a lone call I lazily assumed a crow. Thanks for letting me know 👍
Oak wood hydrangea i don't think is A paniculata?
Thank you - I think you’re right! 👍
Because it grows a panicle I assumed it was also referred to as a paniculata. But looks as though it’s simply classed as quercifolia.
Oakleaf (quercifolia), refers to leaf shape native to mid to southeast of the U.S. whereas panicle hydrangeas are from Asia
Thank you for that extra information Pamela. I find it really interesting knowing where the plants originate.
🥰😇❤❤❤🥇
😊🌸👍
i can not communicate
Hello, I can see this message.
The columbian
Thank you for your comment but I don’t understand what you mean.