Hollyhock towers
This month is a busy one, indeed, as there are just so many seed varieties waiting to be sown. Here are just some of them:
In the flower garden: Let’s start with some stately beauty for the back of the border and other places where tall growing flowers can make their statement. Hollyhocks are always an excellent choice — once they begin to bloom, they continue to do so for an amazing length of time. Select a colour range to complement your other garden choices or simply sow a mixture and enjoy the floriferous result. Hollyhocks may be double- or single-flowered and colours range from the purest of whites, softest of pinks and most delicate of peaches right through to flamboyant burgundies, deep reds and purples. Seeds germinate readily and should be sown about half an inch deep, four to six inches apart, in well-draining compost. They can be started off in seed trays/pots or sown directly where they are to bloom. Happy in full sun or light shade, these annual, bi-annual or perennial plants, especially when grown in blocks, are — in more ways than one — impossible to overlook. The ever-popular Queen Anne’s lace, with its delicate heads of creamy white blossom, is a first class hollyhock companion, as are very tall forms of Scabiosa in shades of blue, purple, pink and crimson. These can be sown this month as can Delphiniums, foxgloves, Gypsophila and giant Antirrhinums — the butterfly-flowered ones are superb — in a magnificent span of colours and tones.
Not-so-tall flowers to start off now include Scabiosa, Godetia, Ageratum, Antirrhinums, Clarkia, Linum, stocks, Sweet Williams, Sweet Sultan, dahlias, pinks, larkspur, cornflowers, Bidens, Phlox, Cinerraria, Pelargoniums, geraniums, many kinds of Salvia, medium-height Nemophila and every kind and colour of poppy you can lay your hands on.