Linda Hellyer

TLC keeps them blooming

TLC keeps them blooming

To keep roses at their best and encourage a non-stop display of flowers, a few simple summer tasks may help you along the way.

Perennial brings colour

Perennial brings colour

One of the first of the spring-flowering perennials to emerge after winter and provide wonderful flower colour as well as interesting foliage is Pulmonaria.

Ensuring a rosy future

Ensuring a rosy future

Bare-rooted roses will begin to arrive in the garden centres and nurseries from June.

Boost for roses after tough times

Boost for roses after tough times

This is a tough time of year for your roses, especially after the summer we have had. To help maintain their health and vigour as well as extend the flowering, it is best to keep up with a few basic tasks.

Stunning lush growth, attractive flowers

Stunning lush growth, attractive flowers

One plant that has stunning lush new growth and attractive spring flowers at the same time is Dicentra spectabilis.

Spring tasks to grow good-looking roses

Spring tasks to grow good-looking roses

There is still time to plant roses.

Encourage growth by pruning

Encourage growth by pruning

Why prune? Pruning is undertaken to encourage new growth by removing old and spindly growth.

Plant Life: Versatile annuals add interest

Plant Life: Versatile annuals add interest

With careful planning, the advantage of using annuals is their ability to provide change and interest as often and whenever it is desired.

Many roses still flowering

Many roses still flowering

After a stroll around the rose garden at this time of year, many people may think roses are past their best.

Plant life: Roses ideal for a host of occasions

Plant life: Roses ideal for a host of occasions

This year the Otago Rose Society celebrates its diamond jubilee year and I was thinking how appropriate the rose Diamond Jubilee, a tall hybrid tea with scented creamy white blooms, would be for acknowledging this occasion.