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Clashing colours
Country Life UK
|January 29, 2025
MINIATURE electric-pink ears are emerging through a tapestry of leaves and bare brown ground. It is January and this is the first wonder of the gardening year. Cyclamen coum also come in paling shades from the plush of ruby to snow white. However, my gardening partner and husband covets only the deepest magenta flowers, combing plant nurseries and DIY shops for the most colour-saturated flowers wriggling through the pots and trays of small heart-shaped leaves. He remarks on the energy of these miniature enamel beauties and says he finds it strengthening. He is, however, not a purist collector and, although he loves to set these garnets on a velvety ground under trees when planting these small corms, he also loves creating swathes of them in grass and beds, all muddled up with snowdrops and winter aconites. Snowdrops, yes, any time, but yellow aconites, Eranthis hyemalis, with puce cyclamen? Really? I, too, rejoice in the fringe of first green the aconites bring, that little lion's mane of chrome, but I recoil rather at the brassy cocktail of lemoncello aconites with the cherry brandy-coloured C. coum, except perhaps in a jug indoors. Isn't this rather sickly? Mr B feels strongly that it all helps to brighten up the dull days of February.
Ten years ago, feeling seasonally affected, we made a late-January pilgrimage to a Devon garden, still open for the National Garden Scheme, that is aptly named Higher Cheerubeere. We set off across Dartmoor, stopping to see St Mary's Honeychurch, a shadow-filled 12th-century reliquary of lime plaster, no electricity and pigment-painted wall saints. It was mid afternoon, but felt later, raining horizontally when we arrived at the garden on its windswept bluff. Here, Jo Hynes and her family have devoted 30 years to making a garden teased out of acid clay. Jo says that, luckily, many galanthus and cyclamen like plenty of rain. Somehow, she grows 22 of the 23 known species of cyclamen, as well as 400 different snowdrops and a panoply of winter-flowering treats. A beekeeper, she homed in on winter flowerers to up the pollen and nectar forage on offer for her honeybees and the more needy bumblebees that keep no
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FLERE HISTORIER FRA Country Life UK
Country Life UK
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