How I Created My Own Beatrix Potter-Inspired Cottage Garden

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @dennispatrick4999
    @dennispatrick4999 Год назад +274

    How cool to have your father teaching Ernest things. He will never forget it.

    • @amysbees6686
      @amysbees6686 Год назад +20

      Imho Pop Petherick is the lynchpin in the entire operation, whether at the chateau or convent. His expertise is incredible! And always willing to pitch in on any project.
      What he's teaching Billy's boys will stay with them the rest of their lives!

    • @janicebrowningaquino792
      @janicebrowningaquino792 Год назад +7

      I can second this as I have done just that when my step father included me in everything he did around our home 😊

    • @J33-k3s
      @J33-k3s Год назад +7

      Beautiful garden. And you have the perfect home to do that type of stuff.

    • @dorothyafonso6115
      @dorothyafonso6115 Год назад +4

      All the feels

    • @christyd2921
      @christyd2921 Год назад +3

      The ability for all the cousins to grow up together with one set of grandparents, aunt and uncles is a rare experience they all have.

  • @karenmancini5817
    @karenmancini5817 Год назад +225

    Hi there, I sent that book to you back in July 2020. So glad you are using it. Love the book!!!! :)

    • @DoingItOurselvesOfficial
      @DoingItOurselvesOfficial  Год назад +52

      Oh Thank you so much!!!!!! It’s been so helpful. 😍😍😍

    • @karenmancini5817
      @karenmancini5817 Год назад +21

      @@DoingItOurselvesOfficial you're so welcome! Love the garden!

    • @DoingItOurselvesOfficial
      @DoingItOurselvesOfficial  Год назад +38

      Yes, infact the book has been in a box for ages, I’m still doing work in the cottage and I didn’t want it to get ruined with dust and dirt. but I remembered I had it and dug it out the other day when researching what flowers to use.

    • @karenmancini5817
      @karenmancini5817 Год назад +21

      @@DoingItOurselvesOfficial it came with "At Home With Beatrix Potter: The Creator Of Peter Rabbit" - thanks again, Michael! Can't wait to see cottage tour when ready!

    • @lqqkitslory
      @lqqkitslory Год назад +11

      Slugs absolutely love hostas and hostas prefer light shade

  • @frankdonofrio6531
    @frankdonofrio6531 Год назад +131

    Hi Michael, I enjoyed watching your video, but I feel the need to offer you some advice on the cottage garden. You should not use landscape fabric/weed barrier in a perennial bed. Plants need to establish a deep root system and be able to develop and multiple. You will have constant problems in the future and won't be able to remove the landscape fabric in the future after you finish planning. 1)Remove the fabric. 2) Keep the good top soil from the forest. 3) Plant the bed. 4) Add a layer of biodegradable mulch on top and around all the plants to keep out the weeds. You can take my advice or not. Best wishes with whatever you decide.
    Frank

    • @terrigray6044
      @terrigray6044 11 месяцев назад +17

      Landscaping fabric can be the devil with plants that have vigorous roots!

    • @mexicas6637
      @mexicas6637 10 месяцев назад +9

      I came here to say this. I'm in the process of removing the fabric from all the beds around the house I just moved to a year ago. It's painful to see how it kills perennials because they have a hard time getting nutrients. Not to mention where it comes up on its on, wild animals attempt to use it as bedding for their nests. 😢

    • @rhiannoncollins3042
      @rhiannoncollins3042 10 месяцев назад +5

      I hate landscaping fabric too. It’s like gluing a puzzle together. I spent a long time ripping the out here as well, I wasn’t able to get it all out. Every once in a while I’ll see a chunk sticking out of the ground I have to pull out.

    • @LegumesEtFleurs
      @LegumesEtFleurs 9 месяцев назад +5

      I agree with you. I know the soild they removed was gritty and pebbly(?) But putting the top soil they dug from the forest is really enough for the plants to grow. Even better if every year, they would add soil on top.

    • @jodibraun6383
      @jodibraun6383 9 месяцев назад +4

      If weeds are the reason for the landscape fabric, laying cardboard first will both enrich the soil and block weeds from getting sunlight.
      I made the mistake of using landscape fabric over my small front yard in order to kill the weeds and cover it with cedar mulch. Now I have a weedy front yard with all the weeds enmeshed in the fabric under a layer of decomposing mulch. Very irritating as the fabric both holds the weeds in place, and makes it difficult to pull them. Not to mention that it shows in high traffic areas. Worst gardening decision I've ever made.

  • @deborahwebster3391
    @deborahwebster3391 Год назад +124

    Those plants are all lovely, you’ve made a wonderful combination. You will want to do some research on how large these plants grow in width. The little pink flowers are actually called pinks. They’re in the carnation family. Pinks can triple or quadruple in diameter. Peonies and hydrangeas will become shrub size eventually. Dahlias are tubers you dig before the ground freezes, can either grow to chrysanthemum size or get very tall, depending on the type. Give your roses space for good air circulation so they don’t get black spot. Iris tubers will increase gradually. Your lupine are at the baby stage and will be much bigger. Both hosta and Japanese anemone reproduce exponentially. Make sure to give the clematis a sturdy structure to climb. The azaleas are rhododendrons, and can grow over six feet tall and wide. You have so many pretty plants! You have plenty to create another equal sized garden space and still have the lush garden cottage scheme. I love that you and your mom are working at this together, Michael. Thanks for sharing. I do love Beatrix Potter as well, and you’re an inspiration. You make me want to shop for flowers this year, though I’m concentrating currently on growing food.

    • @juliacobb4355
      @juliacobb4355 Год назад +10

      Some very good advice. Seeing peonies and hydrangeas together they will take over the spaces around them. Probably one peony and one hydrangea are all that are needed. My hydrangea is 3 feet across and my peonies are nearly that big. I don’t know about box hedge. I think you have plenty of plants. Give it a year or two to see .You might want some dahlias they bloom beautifully in late summer.
      Do you have chrysanthemums in France? They add a lot of fall color.

    • @LynnaeaEmber
      @LynnaeaEmber Год назад +6

      Yes, I was going to write the same thing. I dread seeing all these beautiful plants sicken and die because they are too crowded and don't get enough air circulation or crowd each other out.

    • @kindlydude
      @kindlydude Год назад +6

      Yes! Pinks are called 'pinks' ...because the petals look like they're edged & trimmed with Pinking Shears (zig zag cut). I think I remember reading the Cicely Mary Barker "Flower Fairy Books" to my daughter when she was a child and I distinctly remember a fairy who was a pink 'pink'. 💐But they come in several colors and seemingly infinite varieties. I like the ones that have a pink center and white edges. It seems like you can see the zig zag pattern better.
      I pieced this short bio from the internet: "Cicely Mary Barker (28 June 1895 - 16 February 1973) was the illustrator who created the famous Flower Fairies, in the shape of ethereal smiling children with butterfly wings. As a child, she was greatly influenced by the works of the illustrator Kate Greenaway, whom she assiduously copied in her formative years. Unable to go to school as a child because of her epilepsy, she was home-schooled and spent much of her time drawing and painting. Even more than Kate Greenaway, her artwork was influenced by by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Since their first publication in 1923, Cicely Mary Barker's Flower Fairies have enchanted both adults and children alike around the world. The keenly accurate drawings in the 170 original illustrations, coupled with the enchanting fairy images were based on real children from Cicely's sister's Nurse Home. Her plants and flowers were observed with complete botanical accuracy and the Fairies themselves capture the unselfconscious grace of these young children."
      p.s. If Michael happens to read this ... I think that lone Calla Lily looks lonely and should have a companion (btw they also are lovely in pink!) ...and between the Calla Lilies plant some pretty purple lavender which is so useful for many purposes.
      ~Tara (wife of Kindlydude)
      p.p.s. The Debussy music in an English Garden in France was JUST BEAUTIFUL!!

    • @kindlydude
      @kindlydude Год назад +3

      My father used to get me Yardley English Lavender Soap EVERY Christmas until I convinced him when I was a teenager that my favorite scent was actually Rose! But lavender sachets in drawers & linen closets and hanging among clothes is lovely. Also you can make essential oils ...and even flavor salad oils with lavender, etc. ~Tara (Kindlydude's wife)

    • @ehayes7849
      @ehayes7849 Год назад +1

      Thank you. So very helpful.

  • @annapoole132
    @annapoole132 Год назад +2

    Glad to see you again Michael!!!!! ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @deebowker768
    @deebowker768 Год назад +170

    The first plant you queried is a Delphinium and the second ones you weren’t sure of look like Alstroemerias (Peruvian Lilies). A charming piece of filming Michael.

    • @DoingItOurselvesOfficial
      @DoingItOurselvesOfficial  Год назад +20

      That’s it! Thank you xxxxx

    • @lorispencer2046
      @lorispencer2046 Год назад +16

      The pink ones you had next to the yellow flowers are dianthus- sweet Williams.

    • @pattiefulton4111
      @pattiefulton4111 Год назад +12

      Dianthus are in the carnation family and they are edible

    • @reneknaap1745
      @reneknaap1745 Год назад +12

      Yes. Alstroemerias were the mysterious plants

    • @teepeeX
      @teepeeX Год назад +9

      Plant some Salvia sage comes in different colours

  • @robertastanger9983
    @robertastanger9983 Год назад +133

    It is so pleasant to see Ernest with his grandfather and their interaction, is just beautiful. Glad to see you back.

    • @myhillslife27
      @myhillslife27 Год назад +2

      I believe children should be left out of it and have privacy until they chose to be on a public forum. I am a children's educator/youth worker. Its not necessary and only voyeuristic of others to want to intrude on the family

    • @robertastanger9983
      @robertastanger9983 Год назад +6

      @@myhillslife27 Get a life.

    • @carolinegooder7091
      @carolinegooder7091 Год назад +3

      ​@roberta stanger Read Brooke Shield's new book about her childhood. A lot of parents with vlogs are removing their kids from their vlogs or limiting time or closeups of the kids. It's the comments on parenting or other issues that are giving parents pause about having children on vlogs. We are protective of the family but others aren't.❤❤

  • @Grandmotherof3
    @Grandmotherof3 Год назад +44

    That smile on Ernest’s face as he drove by with his grandfather, beautiful!

  • @stitchychris6065
    @stitchychris6065 Год назад +60

    As a gardener, I'm so jealous of your beautiful soil. So rich and healthy and full of local fungi. Your plants will love it.

    • @DaFooling
      @DaFooling Год назад +5

      An absolute dream for a gardener, the moment it appeared onscreen I had visions of the gardens I would grow!

    • @amysbees6686
      @amysbees6686 Год назад +6

      The miracle known as leaf mold. Try dumping your leaves in an out of the way spot, or in its own compost area, then wait. Add oak leaves to speed up the process

  • @maryyoung5190
    @maryyoung5190 Год назад +38

    So precious to see a small child with his grandparent learning useful things

    • @sharonmonson1510
      @sharonmonson1510 Год назад +3

      Hollyhocks and Cosmos are gorgeous in a cottage garden.

    • @EstudosUnB
      @EstudosUnB 10 месяцев назад

      i literally cried when i saw it, life is so gorgeous

  • @oliverpavic275
    @oliverpavic275 Год назад +136

    This is where you can distinguish yourself from your brother in terms of videos. Showing you and your family in the family chateau where it all started, First for you, then Steph, then Billy, than Dan etc. etc. We love that! Welcome back Michael ❤️

    • @luciaroslingshaw2112
      @luciaroslingshaw2112 Год назад +11

      So true, the others don't have the doggies, grandparents, and the calming country life vibe.

    • @sarahfraser1012
      @sarahfraser1012 Год назад +10

      just thinking the same thing. You have a beautiful artist's eye, family, animals, and the natural beauty you have designed to surround your dream cottage. You are very talented.

    • @Cuernavacachica02
      @Cuernavacachica02 Год назад +5

      It’s not all the time, but sometimes you speak and it sounds like Billy and vice versa!! You’re both very talented!!

    • @jessicaboyajian3542
      @jessicaboyajian3542 Год назад +3

      It’s looking wonderful!

    • @lonnieslick9313
      @lonnieslick9313 Год назад +3

      And Sean

  • @anitasujiivana4553
    @anitasujiivana4553 Год назад +93

    The plants in the hot pink pots are lillies-very fragrant! Hydrangeas can grow several feet tall and wide and they’ll quickly out grow the space in this area. Perhaps move them to near the picnic table. They’ll provide winter interest if you don’t cut them back in fall.
    Overall, your plant spacing is for now(today)-and doesn’t allow for normal growth (height and width) of the plants.
    Ignoring optimum spacing means you’ll spend more time later on moving crowded plants to other areas that haven’t grown optimally because they’re too crowded.
    Peonies can grow several feet talks and wide, so the spacing here is not at all ideal. Also, separate them if you plan to keep them in this bed.
    The hostas may not be best for this area, assuming the slanted roof of the greenhouse is south facing. Hostas do best in shade or part shade-not sun. Move them to another area.
    For those with tags, check the spacing requirements. For those without tags, I suggest you take pictures of them and search for them online, via an app or take to the nursery and identify them that way. (Write the names down and then research online for spacing. Then check spacing requirements.
    For adding globe boxwoods, be sure you get tiny ones or be prepared to constantly trim them back. They will add more structure and winter interest, but place them FIRST, then fill in with some of the rest of the plants. (Again, you bought too much for that small area.) Boxwoods near the corners (allowing for normal growth) may be best with one or more on that long stretch would look good.
    Creating thyme would be a nice ground cover in this bed which will keep weeds down. Makes a super healing drink and wonderful for cooking.

    • @cynthiabroockman1752
      @cynthiabroockman1752 Год назад +17

      Yes, spacing and light requirements. The christmas rose or hellibores generally do not like full sun I would move them to a semi shady spit. Also, be aware that Lupines are poisonouse for horses in case they ever graze around there or if seed spreads. Glad you are doing projects again and the garden space already looks inviting.

    • @fancydancer2016
      @fancydancer2016 Год назад +12

      Also on the hostas, they can grow very large, unless of course deer or rabbits eat them.

    • @jesschee5891
      @jesschee5891 Год назад +4

      Excellent advice Anita 👍

    • @missysatke2046
      @missysatke2046 Год назад +9

      You said pretty much everything I was thinking. Thanks for that. I'm a landscaper in St. Louis, MO in the states and totally agree with you. The only thing I would have done differently is incorporate the new soil with the old then put the weed barrier down to prevent weeds, with mulch on top.

    • @BarbaraatQueensAvenueTarot
      @BarbaraatQueensAvenueTarot Год назад +5

      Also, hydrangeas bloom on their old wood so do not cut them back.

  • @bonniethompson9773
    @bonniethompson9773 Год назад +94

    So beautiful, Michael. Now maybe a bird bath, a gazing ball, a hummingbird feeder, and other garden art would be wonderful. I can’t wait to watch it grow this year. I can no longer do gardening so I will enjoy yours.

    • @KarenHowatt
      @KarenHowatt Год назад +4

      we dont have hummingbirds over here in the UK and France but good ideas x

    • @Kathy-eo2eo
      @Kathy-eo2eo Год назад

      I just logged on to say what you said. 😎✌️

    • @vickiefowler1429
      @vickiefowler1429 Год назад +8

      And you need a little Peter Rabbit figure!

    • @jamiemorgan4146
      @jamiemorgan4146 Год назад

      Garden art!!! 😫😫😫😫
      Maybe in a Trailer park.
      Nothing say’s, poor white trash , as Garden Art...

  • @martaaberg3330
    @martaaberg3330 Год назад +87

    How big Ernest has gotten! What a lovely life for children, living with extended family and learning so much from everyone.

  • @francesbolen257
    @francesbolen257 Год назад +59

    The tears were just flowing watching Ernest enjoying his Grandfather time! So sweet! What amazing childhood!

  • @jennienguyen6749
    @jennienguyen6749 Год назад +73

    Steven is a gardener too? That man is talented.

    • @chrisdouglass7962
      @chrisdouglass7962 Год назад +8

      He's a powerhouse!! 😄

    • @ruthblack3676
      @ruthblack3676 Год назад +5

      I just ❤️ LOVE you and your family. Thanks for sharing your lives with me.

    • @decorall6935
      @decorall6935 Год назад +2

      The Clematis will do good in trellis. Nice oselection of plants. Good work. Your Mom works hard. Nice lady.

  • @fancydancer2016
    @fancydancer2016 Год назад +80

    You might want to let each of the plants have a little room around it so they can fill in on their own and not get over crowded. Have you considered adding a bed on the other side of the walkway? So excited to see this project!

    • @whynotbekind1957
      @whynotbekind1957 Год назад +4

      yes…they have plenty of plants to spread them out and make a whole new bed on the other side of the path…would be so pretty

    • @Joy-zp5lv
      @Joy-zp5lv Год назад +1

      Especially the peonies need more room. Mine take one m² per plant. As well as the hydreangeas and the roses.And the lavender needs about 60 cm for themselfes. I suggest you take the time to google your plants and what they need. It will be so nice.

    • @andreamanocchio9069
      @andreamanocchio9069 Год назад +4

      Your plants need more room. Roses need lots of air circulation. Pull up the forget me nots because they are invasive

    • @sk2591
      @sk2591 Год назад

      If you add to the other side of the path, I would add a trellis on the path to grow a rose on either side, but the will need to be dug deeper. There are some landscaping varieties that are easy to maintain.

    • @sk2591
      @sk2591 Год назад +1

      Dont feel obligated to group similar species. You can spread them out so you have them dotted across the garden. In a year or so you can divide many of the plants and add them to another space if you choose. It invigorates the plants as well. What a magical space that will be.

  • @leslieogd
    @leslieogd Год назад +55

    It’s so wonderful to see three generations of Pethericks and friends creating memories through work. The garden is going to be lovely but the memories will last forever. How fortunate for all of you to have a video record for later! Ernest is so fortunate to have such a wonderful family!

  • @rosemarythyme6351
    @rosemarythyme6351 Год назад +58

    I've been gardening for 50 yrs so I can name a few of the plants you couldn't identify. Also there's many plant identifying apps for your mobile phone that names a plant by simply taking a pic of it.
    15:43 Delphinium/Larkspur
    16:51 Peruvian Lily
    17:40 Dianthus (Also called Pinks)
    18:32 Grape Leaf Anemone
    23:00 Blue Lobelia
    The cottage garden looks wonderful. What a transformation! Your Eden climber and Wisteria will be absolutely gorgeous in bloom! One tip on the Mint - keep it potted or plant by itself with room to grow because Mint is known to spread like crazy! If left unchecked, it becomes a garden thug!

    • @BrittanyS143
      @BrittanyS143 Год назад +3

      Omy wisteria and lobelia and foxglove are amazing Beatrice way!! And he's gonna need to read all these comments very good trustworthy advice!!! I'd wait to plant and get a plan before he plants!!❤ I always wanted to buy an old castle or an small island!! I belong in England lol. My fav about the the big picture is walking through the garden right after it rains!! The smells are just wonderful!! I love taking pictures of the rain droplets on the flowers to, than developing the pic and framing it in my house!!

  • @Mlinzon
    @Mlinzon Год назад +33

    I hope your dad lives a very long life. He is absolutely precious and Ernest has a best friend for sure. ❤

  • @ludmilabevan3283
    @ludmilabevan3283 Год назад +63

    Mike, the flowers you don't remember are Delphiniums and Peruvian lilies (Alstroemeria) . Delphiniums are rather rather tall, lilies too. Make sure they do not obstruct the shorter flowers. Plant the tallest ones at the back of the border for the best colour display. You can dig up the wild fox gloves if you recognise the leaf. They only live for 2 years. First year they grow, next year they flower, then they seed themselves and die. If you transplant them in flower they might not like it and you will not achieve anything. Sometimes it is easier to get their seeds as you can chose the colour. After that just let them take care of themselves as they do seed a lot. Shrubs like Hydrangeas and Azalais in general are not the part of a cottage garden. Plant them on a opposite side of a path to frame it. Make sure that all your plants are perennials. If any of them are annuals you might find few bold patches next year. But again some plants do seed themselves. You can also plant some fennel among the flowers and thyme at the front of the border. Cottage garden is not easy, you have chosen the most difficult path. Good luck!

  • @islandgal7159
    @islandgal7159 Год назад +14

    Earnest driving with his Grand dad is the sweetest thing ever! What memories you are all making for the children. Lovely.

  • @sueannmestemacher524
    @sueannmestemacher524 11 месяцев назад +6

    That is adorable seeing grandfather & grandson digging together ❤️ ❤

  • @zenaslarosa5930
    @zenaslarosa5930 Год назад +5

    Such a lovely Dad and a wonderful grandpa.

  • @futuretech2.0
    @futuretech2.0 Год назад +24

    Ernest with your Dad is so precious, well done to you all.

  • @Hellyers
    @Hellyers Год назад +9

    Mick must love being able to work with his grandkids around like that... lovely scenes.

  • @ScaseFacetime
    @ScaseFacetime Год назад +48

    It warms my heart that you are back on youtube! Sometimes the smallest dreams are the most heartfelt. Much love ❤️ keep going x

  • @TheasChristmasVillages
    @TheasChristmasVillages Год назад +66

    15:43 looks like white delphinium, 17:44 are carnations (dianthus), little blue flowers are lobelia, they spread into mounds. The white flowers are awesome, they will make the other colours pop. The only thing I might mention is everything is very close together. You might find you have a very crowded garden, but it will be lovely!

    • @DoingItOurselvesOfficial
      @DoingItOurselvesOfficial  Год назад +9

      Thank you.

    • @DawnYockey
      @DawnYockey Год назад +10

      I thought so too, but perennials have to be thinned often in some cases anyhow.
      Columbines would be a nice addition. Their seeds spread themselves, but usually don’t invade other plants. Coreopsis is a yellow gold plant that does the same, but doesn’t get big and loves sun.
      Daisies would be nice too or astors.

    • @victoriajackson5159
      @victoriajackson5159 Год назад +9

      Beautiful plants. It will be lovely. I do think that the roses and irises are all too close together as they will get bigger. And they will all be fighting for the same space and nutrients and so won't look as good as you originally planned.

    • @creative227
      @creative227 Год назад +6

      I have a plant identification app on my phone. I use it all the time!

    • @iu.5146
      @iu.5146 Год назад +7

      Iris gets very big. You will be able to divided it in 2 years from now.
      Dianthus will triple in size after one season.
      To make plants pop, you could add some dusty Miller (grey color) in between. They are easy to grow from seed. It’s interesting to see the grow green first and slowly change to grey and a velvety texture.
      Plants have gotten very expensive in the US. I grew zinnias, sage, dusty miller , marigolds and coleus from seed in my Living Room.
      All of them took. You can fill in the gaps next year with your own seedlings.

  • @moonshayde
    @moonshayde Год назад +9

    Michael - you need to leave some space for many of your plants as they will get wider once they're established. The clematis will need some sort of structure or frame for them to climb up...my clematis are against a wall with a trellis to climb on & are over 6 feet tall and spread is approx 3 feet along the trellis. You have enough plants for 2 times the space you're planting. Would also be good to plant tulips, crocus, daffodils & bluebells so you have spring colours

  • @lynlijalysbalderdottir4563
    @lynlijalysbalderdottir4563 Год назад +25

    Michael, you and your Mum have chosen some very pretty plants. There’s a gardeners rule of thumb, you put the tallest in the back, the bushes stuff in the middle and the little ground covers upfront. You will also like to have four seasons of interest. Remember, bark or stem colors will have winter interest and blooming plants in early spring, mid spring and late spring. Then follow up with blooming plants for early, mid and late plants for each season. Have fun growing your beautiful space. It’s looking fantastic. Enjoy!

  • @melissataylor5494
    @melissataylor5494 Год назад +30

    So glad you are back. Everything you do turns into a creative addition with a touch of Michael.❤

  • @aliceprofitt8506
    @aliceprofitt8506 Год назад +21

    Loved this!! "The tall blue ones" are delphiniums. Loved your placement of everything. Something you might want to add are hollyhocks. Tall, colorful and dramatic maybe at the pointy end of the garden and then maybe near the cottage door and gate to tie everything in. Holly hocks are easy to grow and are iconic cottage plants. Such a gorgeous video, Michael!!

    • @judithburke1539
      @judithburke1539 Год назад

      Beware of hollyhocks as they are almost impossible to get rid of because they self-seed abundantly and will take over the whole garden.

  • @coffeetv1
    @coffeetv1 Год назад +26

    Absolutely beautiful choices of music in this video, Michael. Lakme’s ‘Flower Duet’ is one of my favourites-and ofcourse Clair de Lune.

  • @jackiestewart5062
    @jackiestewart5062 Год назад +2

    Michael, you are such an old soul, your mum and dad must be so very proud of you, along with Billie and Sadie.

  • @clarelower1
    @clarelower1 Год назад +10

    So sweet seeing Ernest and his grandpa - that soil is gardener’s gold!!!

  • @bonniebeingbonnie001
    @bonniebeingbonnie001 Год назад +4

    Beautiful mother, Hard working father, hard working sons. Lovely family.

  • @KirstinLDavidson
    @KirstinLDavidson Год назад +41

    What a fun project! Like many others here, I think you’ll find a year of growth will show you how these plants do in that location and whether you need to move them or give them more space. The clematis will need a trellis this year or you’ll have a tangled mess on those bamboo canes. Beautiful wood tuteurs or obelisks would be lovely in that garden. Structures are an important part of the design as well as for the health and vigour of your new plants. Enjoy your garden! 🌸

    • @barbarashapiro7499
      @barbarashapiro7499 Год назад +3

      The California lilacs (ceanothus) can grow quite tall and wide, too, depending on the species. With his enthusiasm for this cottage garden, Michael may keep us updated on how he changes plants around to suit their sun and space needs and his artistic eye. :)

    • @srobs1216
      @srobs1216 9 месяцев назад

      Ive just seen your video, and it is lovely. However, since you asked for suggestions, I would give your plants more space. Many of them will grow wider and taller in time. Perhaps you've already noticed that. I think your selection of plants is beautiful! I hope they will thrive😊

  • @lindascott2008
    @lindascott2008 Год назад +27

    What a wonderful video Michael....the birds singing, going in the forest for the good soil, the beautiful music, and to see your dad with his grandson in his lap on the tractor brought a tear to my eye. You are a very special person Michael, you are a light in this world, please don't ever think otherwise. You radiate something very special from your heart, your smile, your eyes, may all your hopes and dreams be realized dear one. I hope you will carry on, true to yourself and your style. We love your natural talents and interests. Love seeing your life and how it unfolds. So happy to see you on a regular basis.

  • @qbm1498
    @qbm1498 Год назад +23

    Avid cottage gardener here 😊. The rhododendrons , azaleas will be big plants they will grow loads. You may need to transplant them later.
    Also the clematis plants are climbers. You may want to train them up a wall or get it a trellis to climb on. :)
    The best advice I ever got when I started was to have fun and see what happens.
    I look forward to seeing what happens.
    💚

    • @hepzib928
      @hepzib928 Год назад +2

      I think what Michael called an Azalea is a rhododendron. Most peonies are tallish.

    • @sheilaackers3854
      @sheilaackers3854 10 месяцев назад

      The azaleas may not allow anything to grow too close to them.

  • @juliehinkel608
    @juliehinkel608 Год назад +3

    Same way I learned to drive a tractor- on my father’s lap. Lovely memory. Children don’t even realize they are learning a skill. Generational knowledge is invaluable.

  • @lisaakinlabi
    @lisaakinlabi Год назад +29

    Earnest and grandad together is priceless! That made me smile so much - thanks for sharing that! One day when Earnest is a Dad he will tell his own kids about riding on grandads knee and helping out at the chateau. 🥰 Seeing your Mom and Dad is always lovely! This garden will be amazing with colours and scents. How wonderful to have plants from your great grandmother's garden, which will make it even more enchanting. Great video Michael!

  • @BeckyWatson01
    @BeckyWatson01 Год назад +21

    The scenes of Mick and wee Ernest on the tractor were so lovely, wonderful forever memories for them, such a wonderful family you have, cherish them ❤️

  • @kokoerper
    @kokoerper Год назад +37

    If you haven't already, I would suggest getting a plant identifier app so you can easily identify plants with your phone. You've made beautiful choices.

    • @tinamobley9408
      @tinamobley9408 Год назад +6

      I use Picture this, it’s amazing for identifying but also will let you know if the plant gets sick or needs a different lighting location to have healthy plants.

    • @MsSherryjh
      @MsSherryjh Год назад

      There is also "Seek". I big help, even when you are just on a walk.

    • @MsSherryjh
      @MsSherryjh Год назад

      Peonies will eventually Bush out and you can pant them as separate bushes. My father-in-law used to raise them. Just gorgeous. I really couldn't get a good look at the "California Lilacs" but most lilacs are shrubs and they can remain that way or be trained a bit. Either way, they will get tall and you will want to move them. Good luck. Your cottage garden will make you smile every time you look out on it or walk out your door. 😊

  • @kemfelix5505
    @kemfelix5505 Год назад +2

    The older gentleman who drove the equipment worked circles around the rest. He reminds me of my grandfather and his generation. They worked hard. Good job Sir

  • @jangeston2644
    @jangeston2644 Год назад +3

    My greenhouse picture arrived today. No wrinkles. folds or blemishes. THANK YOU. You touched my heart with the bee

  • @kathymarxer6952
    @kathymarxer6952 Год назад +10

    The joy of watching Ernest with your Dad is so precious, making lovely memories for all!

  • @familydutton6568
    @familydutton6568 Год назад +47

    Michael you do an incredible job filming! Your videos always feel so special and are absolutely beautiful 🌹! I hope you take this as a compliment, but sometimes you make me think about how Christopher Robin would have been like all grownup 🤭... can't wait to see the garden in full bloom 🌷🌹💐🌼🌞🐝🐛🦋🤩

    • @lonnieslick9313
      @lonnieslick9313 Год назад +3

      I agree there is a warm artistic brilliance in Michael

    • @reladie
      @reladie Год назад +2

      Would love an update from your parents cottage, welcome back dear Michael

  • @hildafrey2815
    @hildafrey2815 Год назад +17

    So proud for you Michael! The garden will be lovely and Ernest is growing like a little weed! Grand dad is wonderful with him and your mom is as always such a help to you.

  • @maryb.7043
    @maryb.7043 Год назад +1

    I also love you working with your Mum with the cottage garden. Will be fun to watch the progress.

  • @Wendys-World
    @Wendys-World Год назад +10

    Michael, what a wonderful idea. The weed barrier should really go on top of the dirt and then use a small propane bottle torch to burn a hole in the weed barrier where you are going to plant your plants. You should of read the plant sticks on your plants so you know how big they will get and do they propagate themselves. I know the irises spread and the lavender will spread and I think you said you got a clematis that needs something to climb so I hope you purchased perennials of your plants otherwise if you bought some annuals you will have to replace them every year. But the colors are beautiful and it's a beautiful thing to have right outside your window I wish you the best of luck with it and I can't wait to see it grow.

  • @leonorahogarth3070
    @leonorahogarth3070 Год назад +7

    Plants and Debussy! Beautiful. Thank you Michael x

    • @piper6541
      @piper6541 Год назад +1

      Love classical music! Thank God, your choice of musuc
      🎶 is a touch of class. ❤

    • @jan-willemwijnbergen9586
      @jan-willemwijnbergen9586 Год назад +1

      It's from Delibes' Lakmé. (Flower Duet)

    • @andreacatzel8259
      @andreacatzel8259 Год назад

      @@jan-willemwijnbergen9586yip……right at the end. The Debussy was gorgeous too! Dag!

  • @cynthialuna5786
    @cynthialuna5786 Год назад +8

    That is the most beautiful sight to see. Grandpa is showing his grandson how to work the tractor. By the time he inherits the Chateau, he'll know all the ins and outs. And most of all, he'll remember his loving grandpa. Beautiful
    The view of your garden is beautiful. So peaceful. Well done.

  • @JLR1957
    @JLR1957 Год назад +14

    Lovely to see your Dad & Mum, Michael! Also, love the piano music. What a wonderful life for Ernest ❤

  • @TerryRivenbark
    @TerryRivenbark Год назад +1

    I adore your dad. What an absolute sweetheart. 🥹

  • @rebekahschroeder7949
    @rebekahschroeder7949 Год назад +1

    The music was fantastic in this video!

  • @icuinthelight
    @icuinthelight Год назад +9

    Such a enjoyable moment in time being shared with grandpa and Ernest, thank you Pethericks!

  • @brendaw53
    @brendaw53 10 месяцев назад +5

    I’m a new subscriber and binge watching joyfully! Beatrix Potter and Tasha Tudor’s way of life has always captured my heart. In the early 70’s I was hooked on the 2 beautiful and talented ladies…Immensely enjoy watching all the renovations of the Chateau and the Gardener’s Cottage! I’m in love with the Cottage! You’re so talented in every way and your visit to Beatrix’s Cottage was heartwarming, seeing the tea cups with lunch time was sniffle time for me. Beatrix I’m sure loved it too.
    You your family and workers are amazing. Thank you for the beautiful videos, very mesmerizing. ❤ 🪴 🥀 🌲

  • @terryjarvi2392
    @terryjarvi2392 Год назад +13

    Tall blue ones are delphiniums, what you called azaleas are rhododendrons. Your garden is going to be absolutely gorgeous. Great job Mom and Michael.

    • @jomeyer13
      @jomeyer13 Год назад

      will it be shady enough for the rohodendron? i dont know east from west or north or south there.

  • @karenmorrison8112
    @karenmorrison8112 Год назад +1

    What a georgous video. Three generations and lovely Gwen. I have watched it several times. Very inspiring to. NZ

  • @pb973
    @pb973 Год назад +2

    Oh you Englishmen, y'all have the best gardens. I've always admired your gardens. Good job, Michael. 😊

  • @BernardDauphinais
    @BernardDauphinais Год назад +13

    The first plant you couldn't identify looks like Delphinium, and the 2nd one looks like Asiatic Lilies. Just lovely to see your mum again, and your dad and Gwen and the boys. The garden is going to be so pretty! Absolutely love the Debussy pieces!!

  • @JeriLandersofHopalongHollow
    @JeriLandersofHopalongHollow Год назад +12

    I planted a Beatrix Potter patch 3 years ago using the same book to reference the plants she used. I suggest you start your foxglove from seed in your greenhouse. Add a few islands of Garden Phlox ( 3-4' structural plant with lovely colors from pinks to purples and blues) or Bee Balm. Toss in a packet of " Forget me not" seed throughout the entire patch. They will wind their way delicately up through the other plants in sprays of heavenly blue. You can get a pink effect throughout the patch tossing Pink Evening Primrose seed hither and thither. It will be charming!

    • @jomeyer13
      @jomeyer13 Год назад +1

      yes you may like drifts of the same color...

    • @LynnaeaEmber
      @LynnaeaEmber Год назад

      I am planning on this too. After seeing this video I bought the book immediately on Kindle.

  • @marybath49
    @marybath49 Год назад +7

    As an artist and now a gardener, you could keep a lovely gardening journal. All you need is a sketch book to include the garden layout, sketches of individual leaves or flowers, and notes about how the plants do in this soil or moisture… You are a beautiful artist and I can imagin your journal would be colorful, and whimsical. And a practical record of your gardening successes. Much love to you and your garden!

  • @kathyhembyhewett6109
    @kathyhembyhewett6109 Год назад +1

    I’m so glad Billy is taking care of you so you have your freedom to be creative whenever it hits you. You are blessed to have your family.

  • @itzlily8781
    @itzlily8781 Год назад +2

    It's so beautiful to see a grandpa teaching his grandson xx

  • @lorky24
    @lorky24 Год назад +16

    The scenes of your Dad and the boys are so sweet. I love the way you all seem to enjoy and help each other. We've just been doing the same thing you're doing - creating a cottage garden - and tho' we live in Canada and you in France, we've used mostly the same plant choices. One variety you might want to add is shasta daisy - they grow so well and brighten up empty spots. Also, you might want to consider perennial lavatera, which grows tall and lush in our climate on Vancouver island and could take the place of foxglove (our transplanter foxgloves never seem to do very well). My gardener friend came over and suggested we scatter seeds of poppy and cosmos all through the garden so they can grow up between the plantings.

    • @merrileeheard3889
      @merrileeheard3889 Год назад +1

      Great choice! We're in Vancouver and love our growing season. Have you planted California Lilac? It's lovely, but it gets quite large.

  • @foretb1162
    @foretb1162 Год назад +9

    The plant with the "maple-like-green" leaf @ 15:40 is a delphinium (larkspur). (usually pinks, mauve or bright blue). 16:57 - alstroemeria, 17:41 - dianthus "pinks"; 17:42 - yellow ones are calibrachoa - superbells - these trail and are suited for hanging baskets- on the ground, they'll spread about 1 m.
    Michael, the rule of hostas: the darker green the leaf, the more shade it demands, the more yellow/white, the more sun it demands. they are also used on slopes to help slow erosion.
    In regards to heights: not to worry. Apart from the foxglove (digitalis) that can grow to between 150 to 300 cm and the anemones that are almost the same height, you can move all the plants next spring. Just remember to plant the peony crown eyes (buds) no lower than 4 cm below soil level - if deeper, they won't bloom and once planted, don't add more soil aver the plant during the season or fall. Once the flowers are done, cut off the heads (they are prone to powdery mildew), and use the leaves in flower arrangements.
    The white rose needs good air circulation between its branches - and if you have ants (peonies need them to open their buds), they'll farm aphids on the rose stems.... you might want to move it.... perhaps closer to the edge, especially if it is fragrant.
    Hydrangeas grow to 175 cm x 100-125 cm wide. They need more space. The "little blue flowers" in front of the yellow dahlias are Lobelia - a "cascading" type for hanging baskets - possibly the Proven Winner's "Laguna Blue" which is 30 cm high x 60 cm wide or trailing. They tolerate ,ore sun than other annual lobelias.
    I hope you will set up an obelisk or trellis for the white clematis vine - check the label: it will grow between 2 and 4 m tall!
    Before I retired, I was a plant, herb and flowering shrub expert for a reputable garden center (18 years) and before that head gardener and arborist for a historical site (10 years). Gardening is very often trial and error - we learn from our mistakes and forge forward. So will you.
    Good luck! And happy gardening!

  • @cindyredmon7473
    @cindyredmon7473 Год назад +7

    I used to garden a lot, I lived on a big farm with a 200 year old house, and had beautiful perennial beds. The only suggestion I have is to separate your irises, you want to spread the kinds of leaves out a bit. You could use that blade leaf in a couple places.
    I just want to say how lovely it is that you have your family there to help you. How wonderful that your dad went and got that fabulous soil for you. And how precious is that with Ernest helping and riding with his grandfather. Making wonderful memories!
    I always thought you had the best view out of your cottage windows of that gorgeous greenhouse, now you’ve made it even better. ❤

    • @jomeyer13
      @jomeyer13 Год назад

      yes special way to plant those irises. they need the son on their knees.

  • @supermommaloha
    @supermommaloha 10 месяцев назад +2

    I miss you, Michael! Your style is unique and creative! Please continue to post! ❤

  • @debpate9405
    @debpate9405 Год назад +1

    Thats enough plants for two gardens! It will be beautiful but after they grow full size you may have to begin a second garden. Beautiful!

  • @ritaqualter9607
    @ritaqualter9607 Год назад +20

    Michael, your garden is beautiful and once everything is in full bloom, it will be gorgeous! Don’t forget to show it to us every couple of weeks. One thing I would suggest: get some screening, frame it in oak, then put it on the outside bottom of your beautiful new window. That way, you can open the window and not worry about bees flying into your kitchen. I’m allergic to bees so I can’t even put in a garden. So if it’s okay with you, I’ll enjoy yours surreptitiously.

  • @blakehahn-atlantaga8510
    @blakehahn-atlantaga8510 Год назад +9

    Oh Michael- the garden is gorgeous! Love your plant selection! Get a birdbath and an obelisk for the clematis to grow on! It is gorgeous! Well done! Love seeing Ernest with his granddad. Those will be his favorite memories. Thank you for this today. I needed it!

  • @helenstella2666
    @helenstella2666 Год назад +9

    Hello Michael .. 🙋‍♀️ this intro music makes me happy even before I’ve watched 🥰

  • @SandyFowler-kz7bg
    @SandyFowler-kz7bg Год назад +1

    A bed of giant blue bells.....nothing but a sea of blue.....your doing a fantastic job!!! I love what all of you are doing!!!!

  • @keving2190
    @keving2190 Год назад +1

    This is a great video, I love seeing your dad with his grandson using the machines!! Amazing memories are being made, absolutely love to see it

  • @barbaraflood6787
    @barbaraflood6787 Год назад +28

    Lovely ! You may regret the landscape fabric later I find layers of cardboard work great to start out it breaks down and your plants can get there roots through it eventually they will never get past the fabric so you may lose some things eventually. The larkspur will self seed so gather some and sprinkle it in the fall in a new spot. Think about putting some zinnia seeds in for fall color . It looks lovely 🥰

    • @jennymay4720
      @jennymay4720 Год назад +1

      I agree; this isnt a big space to weed occasionally, and anyway they help the bees and are often attractive in their own right. Herbs between the flowers are pretty for cover too. Love it Michael tastefully done!

  • @REDinitial
    @REDinitial Год назад +4

    This is the type of content I want to see you from you Michael. It doesn't have to be grand or overly-produced. This was beautifully shot and edited and you did it all on your own. Just keep up with the schedule, don't make promises you can't deliver on, focus on what you like most and you'll be fine.

  • @thecatsmeow50
    @thecatsmeow50 Год назад +8

    I actually watch your intro every time! It's beautiful.

  • @antonellaarcadolan6004
    @antonellaarcadolan6004 Год назад +9

    It’s so beautiful and natural. A close Family , lots of love , that takes care of everything.
    Thank you Michael, the music was so magical❤

  • @karlanorvell9573
    @karlanorvell9573 Год назад +6

    Lovely episode. The garden is going to be beautiful. It was so special seeing your Dad and Ernest together.

  • @dooleyhood6248
    @dooleyhood6248 Год назад +9

    Even though I live on a mountaintop in Tennessee I was honored to meet and learn from the lengendary British Garden designer and lecturer Rosemary Verey when she visited the Univesity of Tennessee Horticulture dept. Upon discussing the English garden plants she uses, she reckoned that no English garden was complete without a Lady's Mantle plant allowed to spill out onto the garden pathway. The way the leaves catch dew and raindrops is magical. Wishing you all good things now and in future. Always know that the world is a better place with you in it. You've made my life better as well.

  • @victoriatracey5919
    @victoriatracey5919 Год назад +4

    You are extremely blessed Michael to have such a beautiful family

  • @heathermacrobert5685
    @heathermacrobert5685 Год назад +9

    Read the labels for hight and width, and what conditions they prefer, dry or wet conditions, give each plant room to grow. Half those plants should go on the opposite side of Plath, we all cram plants in when we start off because it looks good, each plant needs different conditions and room to grow.

  • @jeffjohnson4015
    @jeffjohnson4015 Год назад +1

    Hi Michael, we are so glad you are back, sad it been two more weeks but looking forward to your next one. Creating your our Beatrix Potter garden is so cool. We know how much you enjoy her and her cottage. It's so cool seeing your Dad and Ernest working together. Ernest is so lucky to have all of you teaching him how to use his hands to make things and fix things, it a great thing for a young boy. So glad to have you back have a wonderful day.

  • @pinkelephants1421
    @pinkelephants1421 Год назад +1

    Michael: as a keen triffidologist myself, I love having loads of variety but don't feel like forking out a millionaire's budget on them. In the UK, you can buy a fairly decent range of plants in packets and cellophane wrapped small cardboard boxes. Shrubs, climbers, trees, herbaceous perennials etc, etc, can all be found in discount stores and supermarkets such as Aldi, Lidl, Tesco, etc for relatively little money. You may have to grow on the smaller specimens for about a year before planting out into the garden but it's a small sacrifice on the instant gratification front to save a lot of money.
    You're in rural France so I'm not sure what local shops are in or close to your area, but if some of the aforementioned outlet types are nearby, I heartily recommend checking these out.
    My garden's stocked with many a discount shop or supermarket sourced plant. A shrub I bought about 15yrs ago, in a cellophane wrapped cardboard box for £1•49 is now at 5 metres tall, enormous, despite regular yearly pruning, flowering its head off each & every year; anyone looking at it would have no clue as to its humble beginning. Gardening doesn't (have) to be expensive.
    Garden centres are mistresses of temptation, but resist, I say, resist! They're the pathway to damnation - or at least bankruptcy....😜🤪😅 BUT if you do fall for the charms of your mistress of temptation, here's a couple of tricks to save a lot of money.
    1) When needing multiples of something, especially shrubs or herbaceous perennials, watch out for a trick of the horticultural trade. They will often use 3 -6/7 small specimens in one pot to make it look as though it's larger than it really is & charge 2-5× the price. [SO], look for a pot that has the most cuttings & which is the most vigorous, always tipping it carefully out of the pot to determine strong healthy root growth. Buy it - just the ONE! Take it home, divide into individual plants, potting them up & growing them on, at least for a season & preferably 1yr to recover from root disturbance & grow sufficiently large enough to survive life out in the wild.
    Did this myself last year. ONE pot of Azaleas for £5 with SIX cuttings saved me £25. I divided them a few weeks ago & they're just coming into flower; will plant out next Spring.
    In simple terms, anything that looks as though it will have a root system of its own is a candidate for tightwads like me.
    2) Unsold shrubs such last years lavender, Heather, or anything that's gotten a bit leggy is often potted up into a deeper pot to make it look both bigger & healthier than it really is, again, charging 2-5× the price they should be. Customers end up paying for extra compost, NOT extra plant! So when looking at the more expensive individual specimens, ALWAYS carefully tip them out of the pot to look for root development that's reasonably mature. Little to no roots visible on the outside of the compost means that this is a complete have - RUN!! Save your cash & buy a smaller specimen; it will soon grow. Bought 3 (small) Acer trees for £4 each 3yrs ago & they're developing nicely, having tripled in size; larger sizes would have cost me about £36 for the lot.
    If you buy smaller specimens & they fail, that's gardening for you sometimes, it's nowhere near as painful as if you'd shelled a small fortune.
    P.S. I've got greenhouse envy on steroids! 😮😢

  • @ChateauTeapot
    @ChateauTeapot Год назад +7

    Best part of my Monday! Keep up the good work Michael. ❤

  • @saundrasmith9040
    @saundrasmith9040 Год назад +5

    There's something magical about watching grandpa and his grandson motoring along so lovingly and the family dog happily trotting behind them! Love this!

  • @floriangerard7736
    @floriangerard7736 Год назад +10

    Let’s have a look from far, I come back soon Michael 👌

    • @Jayrose59
      @Jayrose59 Год назад +6

      All the best with your exams Florian ❤❤❤❤

    • @JaxonsDd007
      @JaxonsDd007 Год назад +2

      He did well right Florian..be smart stay in school😘 love you Darci I didn't get to say goodbye see you soon

    • @helenstella2666
      @helenstella2666 Год назад +3

      Good luck with your exams Florian 🤞😊

    • @meganhall1306
      @meganhall1306 Год назад +2

      Good luck Florian 👍😘

    • @dianalewis8548
      @dianalewis8548 Год назад +2

      Good luck with exams. Michael did film very well. Bon chance.

  • @amandahiggins3672
    @amandahiggins3672 Год назад +1

    You're dad is an absolute gem Michael xo

  • @carlaaijtink2586
    @carlaaijtink2586 Год назад +4

    Awsome writer, artist BEATRIX POTTER, LOVE HER STORIES!

  • @brittawrolson5936
    @brittawrolson5936 Год назад +22

    Seeing Ernest helping grandpa is just so precious! And of course seeing the doggies following the tractor back and forth to the woods! Steven was a great help! Who knew he was skilled at so many things? Seems to be a trend amongst all the friends of the Pethericks🥰🥰

  • @nancyshogren3457
    @nancyshogren3457 Год назад +6

    The garden looks beautiful now. I can't wait to see it when you have the wild flowers and the foxglove and the box hedges. It will be truly magical. ❤

  • @aliceprofitt8506
    @aliceprofitt8506 Год назад +4

    I have watched this so many times! The images are stunning and heart warming. So incredible that you are able to recreate Beatrix Potter's Garden in the most perfect setting possible. Just Wonderful!!!

  • @kathytiffin6518
    @kathytiffin6518 Год назад +3

    Michael and Mom are working together, how beautiful. Not many sons and moms work together and garden together. You two make the birds sing. Yes, mom is right. Put some bulbs in the fall.

  • @VisionaryGardener
    @VisionaryGardener Год назад +6

    Micheal, you're killing me with the plant misidentification. 😂
    Not your fault since there aren't any labels. What you called "camomile" was indeed a Camelia (tea). Camelia is a woody shrub, camomile is a perennial herbaceous plant with feathery leaves and small white and yellow flowers.
    The roses should go at the back of the bed, as should the Camelia (which you still called camomile) because those will be taller. The first plant you picked up that you couldn't ID looked like a Larkspur (Delphinium).
    Be very wary of "mixed wildflower" seeds. They very often include invasive species.
    One bulb that i love which is quite underrated is species tulips. They are smaller and more wild type than cultivated tulips, they naturalize, the squirrels won't dig them up like they will regular tulips, and they are very pretty.

  • @helenahandebasquet
    @helenahandebasquet Год назад +10

    It looks lovely, i enjoyed myself shouting names at the screen. The 'chamomile' is a Camelia (tea is a type of camelia), blue one are Delphiniums, the coral one i think are Penstemon. The clematis needs to go nearer the back as it will climb. You probably only need one hydrangea as they get big. I wouldnt buy any more this year, what you've put in will spread and fill by next year. But throw in some annual seeds to fill up this years gaps, love in the mist, california poppies, pot marigolds.
    It's going to be gorgeous!

    • @DoingItOurselvesOfficial
      @DoingItOurselvesOfficial  Год назад +3

      Yes I read the name wrong, but it is an unusual camelia as it looks like a chamomile flower. I don’t know the exact variety

    • @pattiefulton4111
      @pattiefulton4111 Год назад +1

      By the way, azaleas and hydrangea like a more acid soil, so you might need to add something to the soil around those.

  • @nadine1818
    @nadine1818 Год назад +15

    Cannot wait for each of your videos. They are fantastic. So nice to see the whole family helping. I’ve recently bought a home in France with existing flowers and I use Google’s camera tool by putting the flower or leaf in front of that camera icon and it identifies the name and possible options. It’s fabulous. The garden flowers are just stunning.I also have some peonies at home and the bushes get pretty wide for a thought on spacing!

  • @normamurray4450
    @normamurray4450 Год назад +3

    Wow, what a great life for Ernest and Archie being a part of a great family who teaches and loves life. Well done! Love your new Cottage Garden idea Michael and as always, love your videos! Good to see your Mum, Dad and Gwen in the mix! Thank you!

  • @cubessopranista8772
    @cubessopranista8772 Год назад +1

    Oh I love that Barcarolle sounding Leo Delibes piano piece.
    Oh!, and that instrumental version of the "Flower Duet from Lakme". I have performed that a number of times a decade ago. I know both parts and I have performed those parts with a soprano and a mezzo-soprano.

  • @300books
    @300books Год назад +4

    Michael, when you plan your garden, make sure you know ahead of time how TALL they'll grow and how WIDE, to avoid short plants from being hidden by bigger ones. Also know whether they are annuals or perrenials. You have a fine selection of flowers. Keep us posted with the progress. 🙂