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Six on Saturday banner for 02/05/2026

#SixOnSaturday 02/05/2026

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2–3 minutes

Another glorious week weather wise has seen me walking up and down the garden with the watering can. This week I’m going to share a few pictures of my front garden, which, while less interesting than the back, still has something to offer.

I was also fortunate enough to visit Sarah Raven’s garden at Perch Hill this week. I recommend a visit, and also the ginger cake!

SixOnSaturday is curated by Jim at Garden Ruminations, and you can find the participation guidelines here.

  • Front garden featuring alkanet weigelia and yellow poppies
  • Picture of an overgrown front garden featuring alkanet weigelia, with a yellow green cornus in the background

1. The front garden. A couple of shots from more or less the same positions. Some green alkanet ( I think ) has sprung up at the very front of the bed. Technically a weed, it’s rather nice, so I’ve allowed it the space at the front, but am keeping it from moving too far backwards.

There are a few yellow poppy-type flowers in there, too. To the right in both shots is the giant weigelia that dominates the front corner of the plot, just coming into bloom. Further back, you can see the greenish-yellow of cornus leaves. Later in the year, some rudbeckia and helenium will come through.

A front door step with a rampant campanula underneath it.

2. I love a campaula, particularly when they’re cascading down a wall. I have several walls they could cascade down, but instead the garden gods have served them up under my front door. Despite the scathing “weed” criticism from my postman, I’m keeping them there. They wave cheerily when anybody crosses the threshold.

  • close up of weigelia flowers which are soft pink trumpets
  • variegated weigelia

3. Returning to the back garden, where there’s a lovely varigated weigelia. It’s not fully out yet, but it is always the shining star of the garden, this time of year.

purple gernanium nesteld inside a feathered maple tree

4. Next to that weigelia is this maple, and growing through it, a lovely purple geranium. It was nestled inside, with a shaft of morning light penetrating through.

wild section of garden featuring teasel, honesty, geranium and erysimum

5. Honesty, another geranium, some erysimum and a couple of teasels, this is the most wild bit of the garden. The purples all look lovely together. The erysimum is grown from a cutting given to me by the owner of our favourite local National Garden Scheme garden. We’ve had several generations of it now. And I’ll be taking more cuttings this year too.

purple aquilegiea

6. Finally, aquiliegia. Arguably, I have allowed too many to sow through the garden, but the purple colours and the fact that they are bee magnets, make it very hard not to let them spread to wherever they want to go. As the weeks pass, different colour ones, elsewhere in the garden will come through, but at the moment, the purples have it.

And Finally.

A few of the many photos I took at Perch Hill this week.

5 responses to “#SixOnSaturday 02/05/2026”

  1. offtheedgegardening Avatar
    offtheedgegardening

    Your postman obviously has no taste, the campanula looks lovely there. Perch Hill looks beautiful, one for for the list. I’m very fond of aquilegia, despite their energetic self-seeding.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Robin Avatar
      Robin

      Each year the aquilegia spreads, I think I should dig up the seedlings, but somehow never do.

      Like

  2. KathrinS Avatar
    KathrinS

    How funny that you’ve had comments by the postman about your campanula. I delivered leaflets for a local cause to 500+ homes this Friday and haven’t seen a single door with such a lovely, flowery welcome. I would have thought it great.

    So much to love in both your front and back garden. The wild geraniums are lovely, of course. And I’ll need to look into getting some aquilegia!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Robin Avatar
      Robin

      Pretty sure aquilegia must be readily growable from seed. It gets absolutely everywhere!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. One Man And His Garden Trowel Avatar
    One Man And His Garden Trowel

    I’ve seen a lot of those blue flowered plants of late and wondered what they were. Green alkanet looks lovely en masse. I think I may have held a hand up and said “Stop! Oh yes, wait a minute Mr Postman…” and put him straight regarding the campanula.

    Liked by 1 person

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