As soon as I go out into the garden he turns up fully preened and ready for close-ups. He loves appearing in the videos but does expect a treat afterwards lol. Glad you like the videos Veronica.
Continue to enjoy your videos and look forward eagerly to the next one(s). I’ve only got a tiny garden but seem to cram a lot in - much to the delight of my neighbours, I also have a growing collection of plants in pots which I dot around garden too. I get almost all of my plants from the reduced stand at my local garden centre which enables me to have a lot more than if they were full price!
@Jill Sugar That’s fabulous you are making the most of every square inch you have - pots are great - so versatile. I also love checking out those reduced stands.
Oh your hydrangea cuttings did so well their first season. They are in good hands! That is so cute how you have that little robin following you around! He clearly senses calm and peace in your nature. It was fun hanging in the garden with you Paul!
Hi Paul, the robin is so cute! They never miss a trick & know that when a gardener is around they've a chance of some morsels if you move things or disturb the soil. He's certainly used to you & they make such great little companions when you're pottering about. Your Garden looks stunning as ever thanks for another great video 🍁🍂
Hi Stephen, Yes, they are always there for the opportunity! It’s nice that just about every British garden has a robin. I feel obliged now to ‘move’ or ‘dig’ something so he gets his morsels. Glad you enjoyed the video - cheers!
THANKS PAUL 🤗 MUCH APPRECIATED AND THE LITTLE ROBIN IS A SWEET BONUS 😎💚💚💚 ENJOYING IT WITH MY MORNING COFFEE ☕️, AND I HOPE YOU ARE DOING WELL YOURSELF 🤗
Hello dear Paul! As always it is a pleasure to take a tour of your garden in every season and even this one! Nature always communicates something to us, at any time of the year! Very interesting to know what your work has been to keep it so beautiful and to take care of it and enrich it more and more in view of spring. And that beautiful, very sweet robin...Oh, such a cutie! I love them! My biggest like and embrace, dear friend. Have a great new week! Renata
Hello Renata, so glad you enjoy seeing my little robin. He’s a constant companion now every time I’m in the garden. He adds so much - and a great singer as well once Spring comes. Hope you’re enjoying a lovely Italian Autumn. Best wishes, Paul
Дякую,Пол за екскурсію в ваш прекрасний сад і за корисні поради.Так приємно милуватись осінніми барвами вашого саду.А мої рослини накриті ковдрою з мокрого,холодного снігу.Bbbrrr,cold🌨️
Hi Paul what abeautiful bird and the hydrangea it is amazing .also the othef plants I love how become the colors of the leaves in the fall.Have anice day. 🎄
Thanks to you (and your robin) for this lovely tour in your garden ! Comme vous, j'adore me promener dans mon jardin et observer ce qui pousse, se plait, a besoin d'être déplacé et surtout mes boutures de toutes sortes ...
Glad you liked the robin and his antics! Je suis si heureux que vous ayez apprécié la visite du jardin - je suis d'accord avec vous - c'est charmant et un plaisir de regarder et d'apprécier tout ce qui pousse dans nos jardins.
@@paultsworld hard for me to do good cuttings in Colorado. Very dry and I don't have a greenhouse, plus I am so busy with working at the garden centre and for my gardening clients, that I don't have the time. I do better with divisions and transplanting. Your cuttings are inspiring!
That’s correct. Our robins are members of the ‘chat’ and ‘flycatcher’ family - the American robin is a member of the thrush family, also a beautiful looking bird but not quite as ‘flighty’ as ours.
Hiya, Paul, Your garden is looking great and the weather looks not bad either. You have your work cut out for you next year planting out all those cuttings. That cute robin got into just about all your shots he was just following you around. Thanks for sharing your video with us
Seeing the Robin reminds me that I was watching one of your older videos the other day. It was one about feeding the birds. I followed your link and ordered some sunflower seed hearts and fat balls. So thanks for that. As for mock orange plants, I have never had any luck with them. They never seem to flower. I really don't know what I am doing wrong. I notice that you have quite a few, as well as your cuttings.
Hi Pauline, thank you for using one of my links - it’s appreciated - I’m sure your birds will love both the hearts and fat balls. I wonder why your mock orange plants don’t do well. I do have 4 I think - they seem to do OK and flower well. I must add organic matter in the Spring as I missed doing it last year. Do yours get enough sun and food?
I so much enjoy your lovely garden tours Paul and receive much inspiration and helpful tips from them. Any plant that is brave enough to flower in the north west winter deserves pride of place in any garden. I live in south east Lancashire twenty miles from the coast and winter flowering plants to me are the most rewarding of all and are a reminder that spring isn't too far away.
Am loving your sweet little friend 😁 another lovely video Paul. I was blessed with a long autumn here in Iowa but am now ready for a winters rest along with my garden. Regards to your pond. 😉
Hello Paul!! I am so impressed with all your free plants. I am going to have to do some cuttings, I’ve never tried - look forward to your upcoming “how to” video. Great tip about prune in the direction you want it to grow. You always have the best tips and tricks. No frost yet here either. Your garden looks so abundant and still very colourful. Lovely video ❤
The Sykes plant in my home garden was planted 13 years ago. It used to send leaves twice in the same year. It sent leaves twice, but the leaves did not complete growth, knowing that I fertilize it with organic fertilizer in the fall season.
Hi Paul, the gardens still looking good, think our first frost is December 2 can't believe it specially up here in Scotia latest frost iv ever known here. Take care 🙂 👍
What a lovely tour of your garden, Paul. It was as if we were there and you are showing it to us! Very good cinematography and editing once again. The mopheads are looking great still. What an amazing specimen your banana leafed canna is, you must be so happy with that. I was very glad to hear you are doing a video on hardwood cuttings, I will look forward to it. I almost paused the video to run out and take cuttings of my persicaria red dragon. I was going to dig it up and divide it next winter, but I have forgotten to do it the last two seasons, so I will take cuttings now. It looks like you are having a stunning November and are enjoying your garden as you prepare for Winter, it looked so lovely and you have regenerated so many areas, so it is new and exciting. Oh my goodness, the little red robin is SO adorable. He is SO small and is a foot away from your boots, absolutely fearless, I assume he eats the earthworms?
Thank you Margaret - I’m pleased you like the style of the video. It is amazing how all that canna came from one growing shoot from a piece of rhizome I bought in the Spring - it did get lots of water and tomorite! Take cuttings of the ‘red dragon’ they take so quickly - I put them in water till roots appear and then in a free draining pot and they’re ready to plant out in no time. This has been a record breaking Autumn - makes the Winter even shorter. The robin is pretty much ‘there’ all the time now. He does eat small worms - our earthworms are too big for him - but mostly it’s the larvae of small grubs he’s after. He certainly know I’ll be moving something, digging, lifting a pot and there’ll be a tasty morsel underneath. He is a highlight of the garden.
I think it incredible sometimes that you can buy a wizened scrap of vegetation and it grows into a huge, beautiful, lush and green plant in one season. I remember feeling so ripped off when my cafe au lait dahlia tubers arrived in the mail, I was so cross, it was so shrivelled and small. I thought there is no way this is a viable plant, but the two ended up looking magnificent. My standard sized canna is still only an inch high as the soil is still far too cold ( still can't believe I am speaking to an Englishman from Australia, I feel there has been a flip in the earth's axis. Insert sulk emoji here _ All the English weather jokes and smugness have left me! Not fair) Joking aside, it must be lovely to have a warm November.
I have been wondering when your temperatures are going to rise and be higher than mine lol. If it doesn’t happen soon we will really have to rewrite all the ‘British weather’ jokes. Maybe Crocodile Dundee was wrong - Britain is the lucky country 😆
You've made me soooo jealous! You really have a green thumb! All! the cuttings are growing so beautifully. Your little feathered friend can spot a beautiful garden and a great gardener!
I did have good cutting's success with the easy plants such as the clematis and hydrangea - but some of the others not so successful! It's a joy when they do 'take'. The robin is settling in for a good year - he enjoys the garden as much as me and certainly spends more time in it.
Good morning Paul! Such a friendly robin! This year I had 2 mama robins nest in our deck..what a wonderful surprise! Your little robin knows you well! I love to propagate, what a good stash you have for future planting! Always, enjoy your videos and your garden!
How I love your channel. Here in upstate NY in the US, zone 4B, we had our first hard frost in early October this year, rather late for us as those things go. Everything is quite bare. I started planting for deep winter color this year, planting things with red or interesting shaped stems, and roses with lots of hips. I also planted things that will offer some green color the year round. It's lovely to look out at what pops up through the snow and see the beauty winter offers. Your channel gives me hope and inspiration for next spring, and I always learn something. Thank you for your channel and for taking the time to share it with us.
That’s lovely of you to say so and gives me a lot of encouragement to share my garden. Thank you for recounting what you are adding to your garden - and it’s quite a lot! It’s very interesting to hear your well thought plans to make the most of your beautiful snowy Winter.
Thanks for sharing! We've had some freezing and a bit of snow here so nothing is left flowering. It's great to see different plants at different stages across the seasons.
Lovely, what a haul you'll have to plant come spring. I use pecan tree branches to hold up my drooping plants. I have a 100 yr old tree that loses branches in the wind, I'll cut off the smaller ones that have great structure.
I liked, as ever! What a lot you've got; everything so bounteous/ful, so many spares. (Not the only one to publicise a spare!) Now I need to be careful where I plant 'Eve Price' (Viburnum tinus); an Osmanthus has grown like that in the wrong place and the brute Sweet Bay. Lovely video Paul, thank you.
We keep them outside in Britain but if you have a colder Winter then I suppose in a garage would be OK - they don’t need light till they start sprouting.
Lovely to see your garden, my english lavender is still somewhat flowering. And so far we had two days and nights of light frost. Lovely to see your Robin friend again, I had one visiting by back garden for a short bit and once in the front garden to. Cannot wait for my hawthorn seedling to grow big next year, so that birds like to stay in my garden much longer. This fall I discovered a crabapple tree nearby and I plan to take a hard cutting for in the front garden. You have quite a lot of Clematis Montana cuttings. If you don't mind I like to buy one or two from you, that would be one or two less cuttings you have to take care of😉 One could go on my rose arch next year and one on the front garden house wall, giving some shade and cooling the house next summer.
That’s fabulous that your lavender is doing so well. Your hawthorn is going to be great in the garden - the birds like the berries as well. Crabapples are great too - good idea to have a go with hardwood cuttings. Thank you for your offer of buying a couple of cuttings - at present I’m not selling the cuttings… however, even better Titia, I’m going to do a video on how I take clematis cuttings so you can produce a lot of your own whenever you see a clematis you want to reproduce. Luckily clematis take really well so you’ll have lots!
@@paultsworld Yesterday I bought rooting powder. I tried doing a hawthorn cutting before without this powder and I didn't had any luck. Tomorrow I will look for a crabapple and blackthorn nearby for a cutting. I'm hoping to grow a small tree and bush out of them in the future🤞🏻Do you do anything particular with cuttings? Putting them in a shed while rooting for instance?
Sorry for the late reply - RUclips didn't notify me. I think you could try hardwood cuttings with these plants. I'll do a video on this at the end of Winter.
Hi Paul I’m new to gardening and I love your channel. Would you consider doing a beginners guide on ‘How to…’ prepare, plant, care for and the after care of (when to cut back/prune/move) the top 5 or 10 most popular shrubs/plants/trees/flowers in the UK (for both in the ground and container gardening)? I know I’d appreciate this as a new gardener as I find your videos clear, concise and to the point. Would you also consider a video about when the first frosts usually hit in the different zones of the UK & why that matters? Do you use an app to check this or a website etc? Do you overwinter if so/if not what’s the process? I just think this would be useful to newbies. There’s so much to learn & you’re a great teacher! Thanks for all your time and effort with creating and editing your content. I know it can be hard work 😊 🌸
Good afternoon, welcome to the wonderful world of gardening - I am sure you’re going to really enjoy being out in the garden and helping nature bring us all this beauty. You make some very good suggestions- thank you. I try and give variety to my videos and I’m so pleased you find them useful. That’s a good question re first and last frosts. Checkout Www.plantmaps.com Then select the map you want - it makes for really interesting viewing!
Another great video. I love your “plant nursery”! Looking forward to your hardwood cutting video. I enjoy creating new plants but don’t have a great deal of success so I hope I can learn some of your tips for success. I’d also like to see how you split heuchera, start clematis cuttings, etc.
Nevertheless, you have a very interesting climate, where I live, it has already snowed in winter and the temperature is -15 Celsius. Only coniferous spruce, spruce, and juniper trees remained green.
Afternoon paul from a sunny windy but dry Ireland. You will have wonderful colour come next year. You could have a sales table. Wish i lived near. . I think hydrangea s are great fillers.and iv a vibernum tinus which i have limbed up and thank you for vibernum tip. Have a good day. 🇮🇪
Isn’t it wonderful to still enjoy so much colour in your garden at the end of Nov. Enjoyed your garden advice and seeing your little Robin. Here in coastal BC Canada we have had beautiful reds and oranges on trees and shrubs till this weekend when we had a big windstorm that blasted down the last of the colour.
I love your garden and videos, Paul. But, the robin steals the spotlight. Thank you for the tour.
As soon as I go out into the garden he turns up fully preened and ready for close-ups. He loves appearing in the videos but does expect a treat afterwards lol. Glad you like the videos Veronica.
@@paultsworld Thank you for brightening my day!
So nice - thank you.
Continue to enjoy your videos and look forward eagerly to the next one(s). I’ve only got a tiny garden but seem to cram a lot in - much to the delight of my neighbours, I also have a growing collection of plants in pots which I dot around garden too. I get almost all of my plants from the reduced stand at my local garden centre which enables me to have a lot more than if they were full price!
@Jill Sugar That’s fabulous you are making the most of every square inch you have - pots are great - so versatile.
I also love checking out those reduced stands.
Oh your hydrangea cuttings did so well their first season. They are in good hands! That is so cute how you have that little robin following you around! He clearly senses calm and peace in your nature. It was fun hanging in the garden with you Paul!
AJ - I am delighted with those hydrangeas - so many were successful. So glad you joined me in the garden, cheers.
The robin let's us know that you have a good heart.
That’s a lovely sentiment - thank you.
Hi Paul, the robin is so cute! They never miss a trick & know that when a gardener is around they've a chance of some morsels if you move things or disturb the soil. He's certainly used to you & they make such great little companions when you're pottering about. Your Garden looks stunning as ever thanks for another great video 🍁🍂
Hi Stephen,
Yes, they are always there for the opportunity! It’s nice that just about every British garden has a robin. I feel obliged now to ‘move’ or ‘dig’ something so he gets his morsels. Glad you enjoyed the video - cheers!
There is beauty in your English garden in all seasons. That little Robin is so sweet.
I do like to have this companion in the garden.
I love how you spread your own plants troughout your garden. and this cute little robin. what a lovely friend.
I started to make cuttings last year - great to get free plants as well as being very satisfying when they succeed.
THANKS PAUL 🤗 MUCH APPRECIATED AND THE LITTLE ROBIN IS A SWEET BONUS 😎💚💚💚
ENJOYING IT WITH MY MORNING COFFEE ☕️, AND I HOPE YOU ARE DOING WELL YOURSELF 🤗
So nice to watch my video over morning coffee - thank you! I am fine - hope you are too.
@@paultsworld YES PAUL ,WE ARE AS WELL
👍🌻
Hello dear Paul! As always it is a pleasure to take a tour of your garden in every season and even this one! Nature always communicates something to us, at any time of the year!
Very interesting to know what your work has been to keep it so beautiful and to take care of it and enrich it more and more in view of spring.
And that beautiful, very sweet robin...Oh, such a cutie! I love them!
My biggest like and embrace, dear friend. Have a great new week! Renata
Hello Renata, so glad you enjoy seeing my little robin. He’s a constant companion now every time I’m in the garden. He adds so much - and a great singer as well once Spring comes.
Hope you’re enjoying a lovely Italian Autumn. Best wishes, Paul
@@paultsworld Oh, That's so sweet, dear Paul! What a cute creature! Big hug and take care, my friend!!
Дякую,Пол за екскурсію в ваш прекрасний сад і за корисні поради.Так приємно милуватись осінніми барвами вашого саду.А мої рослини накриті ковдрою з мокрого,холодного снігу.Bbbrrr,cold🌨️
Good afternoon Lyudmila, glad you enjoyed my Autumn garden. Wonder if I’ll get much snow this year?
@@paultsworld I hope the weather is good for everyone.
Hi Paul what abeautiful bird and the hydrangea it is amazing .also the othef plants I love how become the colors of the leaves in the fall.Have anice day. 🎄
Hi Lina, the red of the hydrangea leaf was the best I’ve ever seen. Glad you like the robin - have a lovely afternoon.
That robin is a real media hound!
I know! He wants to be on tik tok and have an Instagram account 😀
Wow birds so beautiful your way of planting is very nice
Thank you Vaani.
Your robin really loves your garden. Isn't it great when your cuttings take off. Enjoyed your video.
I am delighted with the cuttings - hydrangeas are quite easy but it’s very satisfying.
It's always so good seeing you and the garden.
So nice of you - thank you Christine.
Thanks to you (and your robin) for this lovely tour in your garden ! Comme vous, j'adore me promener dans mon jardin et observer ce qui pousse, se plait, a besoin d'être déplacé et surtout mes boutures de toutes sortes ...
Glad you liked the robin and his antics!
Je suis si heureux que vous ayez apprécié la visite du jardin - je suis d'accord avec vous - c'est charmant et un plaisir de regarder et d'apprécier tout ce qui pousse dans nos jardins.
Always enjoy the walk around Paul! That Robin is a sweet little thing. Acts like a pet! You do a great job with your cuttings Paul!
Thank you - very kind.
I’ll bet you’re super good at all sorts of cuttings - I’m relatively new to it and really enjoying the process.
@@paultsworld hard for me to do good cuttings in Colorado. Very dry and I don't have a greenhouse, plus I am so busy with working at the garden centre and for my gardening clients, that I don't have the time. I do better with divisions and transplanting. Your cuttings are inspiring!
You do the best way - divisions are the quickest and surest way. 👍
Wow your Robin looks different than American Robin. He’s so cute!!
That’s correct. Our robins are members of the ‘chat’ and ‘flycatcher’ family - the American robin is a member of the thrush family, also a beautiful looking bird but not quite as ‘flighty’ as ours.
Always enjoy your tours Paul. Your little friend the robin is lovely. Great success with your cuttings, well done. Have a nice week 😊
Hello Lil, glad you enjoyed the video and Mr. Robin. 🌻 have a nice day.
Hiya, Paul, Your garden is looking great and the weather looks not bad either. You have your work cut out for you next year planting out all those cuttings. That cute robin got into just about all your shots he was just following you around. Thanks for sharing your video with us
Hey Joanna, I’m really looking forward to deciding where all the new plants are going. I do love to see the robin flitting round the garden.
Seeing the Robin reminds me that I was watching one of your older videos the other day. It was one about feeding the birds. I followed your link and ordered some sunflower seed hearts and fat balls. So thanks for that. As for mock orange plants, I have never had any luck with them. They never seem to flower. I really don't know what I am doing wrong. I notice that you have quite a few, as well as your cuttings.
Hi Pauline, thank you for using one of my links - it’s appreciated - I’m sure your birds will love both the hearts and fat balls.
I wonder why your mock orange plants don’t do well. I do have 4 I think - they seem to do OK and flower well. I must add organic matter in the Spring as I missed doing it last year. Do yours get enough sun and food?
I think you have cracked the problem. I have never feed them!!!
If you feed them they’ll feel obliged to flower for you 😀
I so much enjoy your lovely garden tours Paul and receive much inspiration and helpful tips from them. Any plant that is brave enough to flower in the north west winter deserves pride of place in any garden. I live in south east Lancashire twenty miles from the coast and winter flowering plants to me are the most rewarding of all and are a reminder that spring isn't too far away.
Cheers Martin, glad you enjoy the garden tours. I agree - so nice to have flowering shrubs over the Winter and enjoying the mild Winters.
Your garden is more beautiful . So beautiful to watch)))
Aw, thank you!
Am loving your sweet little friend 😁 another lovely video Paul. I was blessed with a long autumn here in Iowa but am now ready for a winters rest along with my garden. Regards to your pond. 😉
Thank you Vicki, that’s a good point, having a rest with the garden over Winter so you’re invigorated in the Spring.
Pond is also dormant 👍🌻
ton jardin est encore très beau Paul et avec toutes ces boutures l'avenir est assuré !
Merci Roger, Je suis si content de La resultat des boutures!
Hello Paul!! I am so impressed with all your free plants. I am going to have to do some cuttings, I’ve never tried - look forward to your upcoming “how to” video. Great tip about prune in the direction you want it to grow. You always have the best tips and tricks. No frost yet here either. Your garden looks so abundant and still very colourful. Lovely video ❤
Thank you Janette, next year let’s do loads of cuttings- it’s a lot of fun! 👍
@@paultsworld definitely!!!
The Sykes plant in my home garden was planted 13 years ago. It used to send leaves twice in the same year. It sent leaves twice, but the leaves did not complete growth, knowing that I fertilize it with organic fertilizer in the fall season.
Hello Abbas, that’s a good idea to add fertiliser just before Winter - hopefully your plant will grow well next Summer.
Hi Paul, the gardens still looking good, think our first frost is December 2 can't believe it specially up here in Scotia latest frost iv ever known here. Take care 🙂 👍
Hi Helen, hope you're getting in the garden to take advantage of this warm Autumn - been a bit wet though hasn't it!
@@paultsworld yep it's been the same here terribly wet, can't go in the garden without the wellies on. Enjoy your garden Paul 😊
Ha, ha - I’ve actually got into the habit of gardening in wellies even when it’s dry!
That robin is amazing!
He has me fully trained up to dig worms on command. 😀
What a lovely tour of your garden, Paul. It was as if we were there and you are showing it to us! Very good cinematography and editing once again. The mopheads are looking great still. What an amazing specimen your banana leafed canna is, you must be so happy with that. I was very glad to hear you are doing a video on hardwood cuttings, I will look forward to it. I almost paused the video to run out and take cuttings of my persicaria red dragon. I was going to dig it up and divide it next winter, but I have forgotten to do it the last two seasons, so I will take cuttings now. It looks like you are having a stunning November and are enjoying your garden as you prepare for Winter, it looked so lovely and you have regenerated so many areas, so it is new and exciting. Oh my goodness, the little red robin is SO adorable. He is SO small and is a foot away from your boots, absolutely fearless, I assume he eats the earthworms?
Thank you Margaret - I’m pleased you like the style of the video. It is amazing how all that canna came from one growing shoot from a piece of rhizome I bought in the Spring - it did get lots of water and tomorite!
Take cuttings of the ‘red dragon’ they take so quickly - I put them in water till roots appear and then in a free draining pot and they’re ready to plant out in no time.
This has been a record breaking Autumn - makes the Winter even shorter.
The robin is pretty much ‘there’ all the time now. He does eat small worms - our earthworms are too big for him - but mostly it’s the larvae of small grubs he’s after. He certainly know I’ll be moving something, digging, lifting a pot and there’ll be a tasty morsel underneath.
He is a highlight of the garden.
I think it incredible sometimes that you can buy a wizened scrap of vegetation and it grows into a huge, beautiful, lush and green plant in one season. I remember feeling so ripped off when my cafe au lait dahlia tubers arrived in the mail, I was so cross, it was so shrivelled and small. I thought there is no way this is a viable plant, but the two ended up looking magnificent. My standard sized canna is still only an inch high as the soil is still far too cold ( still can't believe I am speaking to an Englishman from Australia, I feel there has been a flip in the earth's axis. Insert sulk emoji here _ All the English weather jokes and smugness have left me! Not fair) Joking aside, it must be lovely to have a warm November.
I have been wondering when your temperatures are going to rise and be higher than mine lol. If it doesn’t happen soon we will really have to rewrite all the ‘British weather’ jokes. Maybe Crocodile Dundee was wrong - Britain is the lucky country 😆
🤣 Yes, you are the Old New Lucky Country. As an aside, you have to tell me all you know of Hampton Court RHS one day! Cos I'm a coming! ...one day 😄
That’s great you’re going to visit RHS there - unfortunately I’ve never been there while the show is on - been to Kew a few times!
You've made me soooo jealous! You really have a green thumb! All! the cuttings are growing so beautifully. Your little feathered friend can spot a beautiful garden and a great gardener!
I did have good cutting's success with the easy plants such as the clematis and hydrangea - but some of the others not so successful!
It's a joy when they do 'take'.
The robin is settling in for a good year - he enjoys the garden as much as me and certainly spends more time in it.
Congratulations on the success with the cuttings! You certainly have very green fingers :-)
I do my best! I started with hydrangeas because they ‘take’ so well.
me gustan mucho sus vídeos, de su lindo jardín 🪴 🌷🌼🌱💚
Gracias por ver mis videos Tomasa. Lo aprecio. 🌻
Good morning Paul!
Such a friendly robin! This year I had 2 mama robins nest in our deck..what a wonderful surprise! Your little robin knows you well! I love to propagate, what a good stash you have for future planting! Always, enjoy your videos and your garden!
Hello Maria, how lovely you had two robins choosing to nest in your deck. There must have been a lot of toings and froings as they fed the youngsters!
How I love your channel. Here in upstate NY in the US, zone 4B, we had our first hard frost in early October this year, rather late for us as those things go. Everything is quite bare. I started planting for deep winter color this year, planting things with red or interesting shaped stems, and roses with lots of hips. I also planted things that will offer some green color the year round. It's lovely to look out at what pops up through the snow and see the beauty winter offers. Your channel gives me hope and inspiration for next spring, and I always learn something. Thank you for your channel and for taking the time to share it with us.
That’s lovely of you to say so and gives me a lot of encouragement to share my garden. Thank you for recounting what you are adding to your garden - and it’s quite a lot! It’s very interesting to hear your well thought plans to make the most of your beautiful snowy Winter.
I would recommend Jim Putnam Hortube.
I think he’s great and has lots of knowledge - but personally I’d probably recommend Paul T’s World 😀
Thanks for sharing! We've had some freezing and a bit of snow here so nothing is left flowering. It's great to see different plants at different stages across the seasons.
I also love to see different gardens during the year. Enjoy your Winter.
Lovely, what a haul you'll have to plant come spring. I use pecan tree branches to hold up my drooping plants. I have a 100 yr old tree that loses branches in the wind, I'll cut off the smaller ones that have great structure.
I love that - when you can get what you need from your own garden.
I liked, as ever! What a lot you've got; everything so bounteous/ful, so many spares. (Not the only one to publicise a spare!) Now I need to be careful where I plant 'Eve Price' (Viburnum tinus); an Osmanthus has grown like that in the wrong place and the brute Sweet Bay. Lovely video Paul, thank you.
Hi Wendy, I have just counted and I have 6 big viburnum - wow, I need to watch them or they’ll take over.
Hi Paul. So lovely to see your beautiful garden. We have colds here in Maryland but no hard frost yet, clean up continues ha. Cheers
Hi Laura, enjoy your Winter preparation!
@@paultsworld thanks Paul. You too. Getting ready to plant bulbs in pots and wonder if I could keep them in the garage lol. Cheerd
We keep them outside in Britain but if you have a colder Winter then I suppose in a garage would be OK - they don’t need light till they start sprouting.
@@paultsworld thanks Paul. Cheers
Thanks! I am from Vietnam
You're welcome - greetings to Vietnam.
Lovely to see your garden, my english lavender is still somewhat flowering. And so far we had two days and nights of light frost. Lovely to see your Robin friend again, I had one visiting by back garden for a short bit and once in the front garden to. Cannot wait for my hawthorn seedling to grow big next year, so that birds like to stay in my garden much longer. This fall I discovered a crabapple tree nearby and I plan to take a hard cutting for in the front garden. You have quite a lot of Clematis Montana cuttings. If you don't mind I like to buy one or two from you, that would be one or two less cuttings you have to take care of😉 One could go on my rose arch next year and one on the front garden house wall, giving some shade and cooling the house next summer.
That’s fabulous that your lavender is doing so well. Your hawthorn is going to be great in the garden - the birds like the berries as well. Crabapples are great too - good idea to have a go with hardwood cuttings.
Thank you for your offer of buying a couple of cuttings - at present I’m not selling the cuttings… however, even better Titia, I’m going to do a video on how I take clematis cuttings so you can produce a lot of your own whenever you see a clematis you want to reproduce. Luckily clematis take really well so you’ll have lots!
@@paultsworld oke, I will be looking forward to the video, it was worth a shot since you had quite a lot of them🤞🏻
You’ll love doing the cuttings and it’s so satisfying.
@@paultsworld Yesterday I bought rooting powder. I tried doing a hawthorn cutting before without this powder and I didn't had any luck. Tomorrow I will look for a crabapple and blackthorn nearby for a cutting. I'm hoping to grow a small tree and bush out of them in the future🤞🏻Do you do anything particular with cuttings? Putting them in a shed while rooting for instance?
Sorry for the late reply - RUclips didn't notify me. I think you could try hardwood cuttings with these plants. I'll do a video on this at the end of Winter.
Great video as usual.
Thank you Alice.
Hi Paul I’m new to gardening and I love your channel. Would you consider doing a beginners guide on ‘How to…’ prepare, plant, care for and the after care of (when to cut back/prune/move) the top 5 or 10 most popular shrubs/plants/trees/flowers in the UK (for both in the ground and container gardening)? I know I’d appreciate this as a new gardener as I find your videos clear, concise and to the point. Would you also consider a video about when the first frosts usually hit in the different zones of the UK & why that matters? Do you use an app to check this or a website etc? Do you overwinter if so/if not what’s the process? I just think this would be useful to newbies. There’s so much to learn & you’re a great teacher! Thanks for all your time and effort with creating and editing your content. I know it can be hard work 😊 🌸
Good afternoon, welcome to the wonderful world of gardening - I am sure you’re going to really enjoy being out in the garden and helping nature bring us all this beauty.
You make some very good suggestions- thank you. I try and give variety to my videos and I’m so pleased you find them useful.
That’s a good question re first and last frosts. Checkout
Www.plantmaps.com
Then select the map you want - it makes for really interesting viewing!
Thanks for taking the time to reply. I appreciate it 😊
You're welcome.
Another great video. I love your “plant nursery”! Looking forward to your hardwood cutting video. I enjoy creating new plants but don’t have a great deal of success so I hope I can learn some of your tips for success. I’d also like to see how you split heuchera, start clematis cuttings, etc.
Creating plants from cuttings is so rewarding - I will do a clematis cuttings video in the early Summer - we can all do them at the same time.
@@paultsworld Yeah!
Nevertheless, you have a very interesting climate, where I live, it has already snowed in winter and the temperature is -15 Celsius. Only coniferous spruce, spruce, and juniper trees remained green.
You have a 'proper' Winter. No playing in the snow here for us this last few years - although there was more snow when I was a boy.
Beautiful tour Paul 🥰 but Mr Robin definitely steels the show 💕
You are totally correct Jasmine - he wants his own channel 😀
Afternoon paul from a sunny windy but dry Ireland. You will have wonderful colour come next year. You could have a sales table. Wish i lived near. . I think hydrangea s are great fillers.and iv a vibernum tinus which i have limbed up and thank you for vibernum tip. Have a good day. 🇮🇪
Glad it's dry for you Catherine - after all this rain. Just about all my viburnums have clematis growing through them now - the perfect shrub for it.
That's good to know Paul .will use that tip .thank you
You’re most welcome Catherine.
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Isn’t it wonderful to still enjoy so much colour in your garden at the end of Nov. Enjoyed your garden advice and seeing your little Robin. Here in coastal BC Canada we have had beautiful reds and oranges on trees and shrubs till this weekend when we had a big windstorm that blasted down the last of the colour.
I do like Autumn and planted the sweet gum especially for its colour. Great that you’ve had such a good Autumn as well!
By November my garden is under a foot of snow. Sigh.😭
Hopefully your Spring is not too far away. I do appreciate the very mild Winters we have here - of course the Summers are not so hot 😀
@@paultsworld Only 4 more months to go.
Gosh, it is a long Winter you have - but I’ll bet your Summers are fabulous!
@@paultsworld Yes they are. Warm and sunny and not too much rain. It is amazing how lush my garden gets in no time at all when it warms up.
Good to hear!
Messi Paul
Bravo chisinau Moldova
Hi Nina - greetings to Chișinău 🇲🇩