Hello. I'm an Aussie moved permanently to East Yorkshire. Does anyone have some suggestions about a good gardening book for this area? I have a lot to learn about Yorkshire plants and seasons!
Even within Yorkshire there are huge variations of sunshine hours, wind, rain, soil types, shelter and exposure so the best thing I can suggest is to find a local gardening club to join so you can chat to people about where to get plants/seeds/materials and also what grows well for them.
Join the RHS which will get you free access to Harlow Carr garden all year plus many partner gardens in the area - https://www.rhs.org.uk/ plus a monthly magazine and free access to experts for advice.
There is a chap who's been managing 2 or 3 allotment plots near Huddersfield for decades. He was an engineer in real life and very organised so he wrote an almanac pf what and when - http://www.thegardenersalmanac.co.uk/index.htm Well worth a look as sowing and planting times and so on will be a good guide for you because his experience over the years is based on observation of daylight hours, temperatures etc.
Something else you need to know about is compost formulations for sowing, transplanting and planting in the UK. John Innes types are loam based. No 1 is low nutrients for seeds, 2 is medium for potting on and 3 is stronger nutrition for mature plants. Levingtons is a similar sequence but plant based rather than loam and then there are multi-purpose composts which, in my experience, are just claggy and best used as a soil conditioner. Finally there's ericaceous compost which is lime free for plants like rhodos, azaleas, ericas, skimmias etc. Be aware also that nutrients in commercial composts are only good for 90 days max so you need to add more to keep plants growing or use liquid feeds.
Vendée - 20kms from Atlantic coast. "We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." - George Bernard Shaw
The local Hardy Plant Society is always a good bet. Obvisouly, they will not have meetings or a speaker programme at present but societies such as these will introduce you to lots of local gardeners and plant enthusiasts. https://www.hardy-plant.org.uk/eastyorks
Thanks everyone for your suggestions. Moving to Barmby on the Marsh near Howden so not coastal. In Australia I was a big fan of having a mass colour display of annuals (to make it look pretty for Christmas - which is our summer) but here the seasons are obviously different so I am not sure how I can make my garden look colourful at Christmas with the winter weather. You do have plants here I havent seen before so I am learning more as I go. Yes I have been walking around Trust/Heritage estates when I can (thanks COVID-19!) - I have some inspiration. I must say after 15 years of drought in Australia, where children have never seen rain in some parts, I am very much enjoying the lovely green and damp weather - I know...I'm mad right....
I live on the Yorkshire Coast and I can tell you we have our own weather system so it is very hard to predict weather patterns and sometimes even believe the weather forecasters.
I grow a wide variety of different plants and flowers in my garden and I do get lots of inspiration from looking at other peoples gardens when walking past their houses and also from Monty and also on here. I just need to bear in mind that we have very clay soil so best to have plants that can cope with this type of soil. So you are best off checking your soil type. Otherwise we can grow most things.
I will tell you this though, my garden is often 2 - 4 weeks behind other gardens inland and in southern areas. I used to get down hearted that the blooms seemed slow to appear and thought I was doing something wrong when people posted pictures on here and I just had buds forming. I have got used to that now though.
This is a very friendly forum with a lot of knowledge amongst it members so any question, please ask. I am sure that you will get good answers.
I hope that this has helped. Enjoy getting to know your garden.
Thank you PurpleRose I might have to see a full year out before I learn the weather and seasons. Your point about the soil is a good one - clay can be an enemy if not tamed.
Clay is very fertile but needs breaking up by the addition of loads and loads and more loads of well-rotted manure and other organic matter and if you lay it on thick in autumn the lovely worms and other micro organisms will do most of the working in over winter.
There are some cherries that flower over winter, some clematis but only in mild, sheltered areas in my experience, and you can also look at things like cornus alba sibirica which will give colourful, bright red winter stems if pruned back hard in spring. All sorts of early bulbs too.
Weather patterns can vary greatly for one year to the next. We had a 13 month drought when we arrived in October '16 then heavy rain, drought, scorchio heatwaves, the first snow in years over the next 12 months. This last winter was very wet and now we're very dry again........ Climate change on the go.
Hope for the best and plan for the worst.
Vendée - 20kms from Atlantic coast. "We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." - George Bernard Shaw
Welcome to the forum and to Britain. My eldest son is in Australia and I find it really difficult to garden there as even the weeds are different so I would suggest that Ken Thompson book on weeds might be a good standby. At least that way you'll be able to know if the plants in front of you are good or bad. (Even if you plant a wildflower garden there are definitely some you won't want). Winter Gardens here in the UK tend to rely on evergreen plants, although there are some which have colourful stems or which flower in winter. Fairy lights at Christmas do brighten up some of the gloomiest days, and needn't be too tacky (just a thought)
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Join the RHS which will get you free access to Harlow Carr garden all year plus many partner gardens in the area - https://www.rhs.org.uk/ plus a monthly magazine and free access to experts for advice.
Visit as many local gardens as possible - https://www.opengardens.co.uk/open_gardens_in_yorkshire.php or join the Yellow Book scheme which organises private gardens open for charity on specific days - https://ngs.org.uk/
"We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." - George Bernard Shaw
Something else you need to know about is compost formulations for sowing, transplanting and planting in the UK. John Innes types are loam based. No 1 is low nutrients for seeds, 2 is medium for potting on and 3 is stronger nutrition for mature plants. Levingtons is a similar sequence but plant based rather than loam and then there are multi-purpose composts which, in my experience, are just claggy and best used as a soil conditioner. Finally there's ericaceous compost which is lime free for plants like rhodos, azaleas, ericas, skimmias etc. Be aware also that nutrients in commercial composts are only good for 90 days max so you need to add more to keep plants growing or use liquid feeds.
"We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." - George Bernard Shaw
I live on the Yorkshire Coast and I can tell you we have our own weather system so it is very hard to predict weather patterns and sometimes even believe the weather forecasters.
I grow a wide variety of different plants and flowers in my garden and I do get lots of inspiration from looking at other peoples gardens when walking past their houses and also from Monty and also on here. I just need to bear in mind that we have very clay soil so best to have plants that can cope with this type of soil. So you are best off checking your soil type. Otherwise we can grow most things.
I will tell you this though, my garden is often 2 - 4 weeks behind other gardens inland and in southern areas. I used to get down hearted that the blooms seemed slow to appear and thought I was doing something wrong when people posted pictures on here and I just had buds forming. I have got used to that now though.
This is a very friendly forum with a lot of knowledge amongst it members so any question, please ask. I am sure that you will get good answers.
I hope that this has helped. Enjoy getting to know your garden.
There are some cherries that flower over winter, some clematis but only in mild, sheltered areas in my experience, and you can also look at things like cornus alba sibirica which will give colourful, bright red winter stems if pruned back hard in spring. All sorts of early bulbs too.
Weather patterns can vary greatly for one year to the next. We had a 13 month drought when we arrived in October '16 then heavy rain, drought, scorchio heatwaves, the first snow in years over the next 12 months. This last winter was very wet and now we're very dry again........ Climate change on the go.
Hope for the best and plan for the worst.
"We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." - George Bernard Shaw
Winter Gardens here in the UK tend to rely on evergreen plants, although there are some which have colourful stems or which flower in winter.
Fairy lights at Christmas do brighten up some of the gloomiest days, and needn't be too tacky (just a thought)