They had been delivered early and so spent most of the winter in compost on the patio whilst we prepared the area we were going to plant them in. This took a little longer than we thought it would. We had originally hopped to plant these whilst they were still dormant. The combination of a mild winter and a hectic time at work meant that by the time we got around to planting the trees they already had leaves on them.
The hedge was another matter. This has so far managed to spend all of 2007 in a large tub as the work at the end of the garden had a major set back with the near constant rain during May, June and July. The photo below shows the end of the garden on 28th July 2007. As you can see, there is a lot of surface water and this stopped us working on the end of the garden.
Aside: If you look at the water level and the raised beds you can see the amount of work that needs to be done to level the garden. All of the raised beds were put in using the first bed as a reference point (this sat level with the ground). All of the beds were levelled and each bed is level with the closest edge of the adjacent beds. I know they are not perfectly level but they are close enough given the scale and nature of the project. The water level under the closest bed is about 15cm under the bottom of the wooden surround.
Back to the trees. These had been selected by Karen with a few criteria in mind:
- Either self pollinating or complementary
- Make the season as long as possible
- No varieties which are commonly available in the shops
We also selected a tree which is not common but we hope will solve our drainage problem - a quince. These trees are supposed to love water and we are hoping that nature will help us at the end of the garden.
Leaving the existing apple tree to one side, we have added two rows (three trees per row) and a row of cordon trees (five trees) and the quince and we now have:
- One greengage
- Two plums
- Two pears
- Two cherries
- One Damson
- One quince
- Three apples
The two pears and three apple trees have been set as cordons. This is hoped to provide a natural divide in the garden between the orchard and the vegetable plot.
Mark
