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Nasturtium
South American nasturtiums add instant flare with their spreading stems and hothouse colours. Let them pour out of pots, dangle from hanging baskets or shoot up a trellis.
Nasturtiums are either annuals or perennials, but in the UK neither type is hardy. However, perennials are easily dug up in the autumn and kept frost-free over winter for planting out the following spring.
Both kinds are invaluable. Use them to fill gaps or shoot over adjacent shrubs, or cover special bamboo wigwams, with the young plants at the bottom being trained up and over.
The following need plenty of space to romp about:
These nasturtiums won't get out of hand and can be grown in small border gaps or pots:
Nasturtiums need wall-to-wall sun and average soil that never bakes dry. T. majus and T. speciosum tolerate poorer ground.
Annuals can be sown in spring directly into well-weeded soil. Keep a close eye on them and keep watering in dry spells.
One of the best tricks is to let nasturtiums grow across a path, instead of making them climb. Monet famously did it at his French garden in Giverny.
In early summer, the plants are still in place at the path's edge but by the end of summer they've swarmed across the track turning into a great length of colour, making it impossible to walk along. Choose a colourful climbing variety and sow the seeds up both edges.
Take shoot tip cuttings, for example of T. majus 'Hermine Grashoff', during the summer and pot them up. Keep them frost-free over winter and plant out the following spring, after the last of the frosts.
The perennials aren't completely hardy and need digging up, with their top growth cut off, for storing over winter in a cool, dry, frost-free garage. They can also be divided at the same time to create new plants.
Watch Monty Don's guide to sowing nasturtium seeds:
Play video clip
Keep an eye out for caterpillars and slugs.
National Collections of nasturtiums:
Clare Reaney, Head Gardener Inveresk Lodge Garden Musselburgh East Lothian EH21 7TE Tel: 0131 665 1855 Website: (External) www.nts.org.uk
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