A friend once commented with surprise that she didn’t expect to see me buying flowers. Surely I had enough in the garden, she wondered. Yes, I did but not for indoors. Like many others, I hate cutting flowers from my borders and would rather buy them than reduce the garden display.
Yet the idea of having a cutting garden has been niggling for months. I’m starting to see many more beds devoted to flowers for the house in the gardens I visit and not just those with rolling acres.
Then the British flowers movement has been a vibrant force at the recent Malvern shows with local growers and florists showing how stunning arrangements of seasonal blooms can be.
So, I’ve decided to give it a try prompted partly by a surplus of home-grown sweet William plants and the realisation that I no longer need to produce quite as much veg now the two eldest are both away.
One of the British growers at the recent Malvern Autumn Show was Karen Hughes of The Somerset Cut Flower Garden and I turned to her for advice on how to start.
Karen has been growing cutting flowers as a business for the past three years on half-an-acre of her garden in the Quantock Hills near Taunton. It may not sound much space but provides enough blooms for weddings, parties and bouquets.
“People imagine they need five to 10 acres of plants,” she says. “It’s a myth. It’s really all about what you grow.”
And if you’re not planning to earn a living from it, you can afford to be choosy.
“Grow what you like and know you are going to look after it,” advises Karen. “Everyone has their own personal preference.”
That may be for certain colours – pastels or bright jewel shades – or types of flowers be it tulips rather than iris.
Karen’s top picks are cornflowers for their range of colour and because they can be used for everything from buttonholes to posies.
Tulips are another must-grow with ‘Angelique’ a particular favourite and she would not be without dahlias, which have a multitude of shapes and colours.
“There is an amazing range.”
One she has grown a lot this year is ‘Labyrinth’, which starts off as a coral-pink, turning more yellow in the autumn.
Planning is essential, if you want to get the most out of your plot. Karen starts the year with camellia, followed by narcissi, choosing varieties that offer something extra, such as scent or different colours, because they don’t mix well with other flowers in a vase.
“They poison the water for anything else,” she explains.
The year moves on with hellebores, anemones, ranunculus, then into tulips of all shades before the summer stars, including sweet peas, cornflowers, achillea and roses, and then the autumn display of dahlias. In the winter, she may use the dried seed heads of nigella or hydrangea flowers.
Plants, particularly annuals, are grown through a wire grid to keep their stems straight and, where possible, Karen chooses taller varieties. Many of the seed catalogues now indicate if particular plants are suitable as cutting flowers.
She is also careful to get a mix of flower shapes and will ‘mock up’ bouquets using catalogue photographs to make sure nothing is missing.
Regardless of what you grow there are some general points to consider.
Get the right spot
If you’re growing cutting flowers, the first consideration must be the site. Most flowers prefer an open, sunny position but Karen advises growing some in a more shaded spot, if you have the space.
“You can plant the same things in two different parts of the garden and they will flower at different times,” she says.
Pick for longer
Another way of extending the season is to stagger your seed sowing. Karen sows some hardy annuals in September-October, again in spring and another batch in June or early July to give her some autumn blooms.
She also makes good use of a polytunnel: “It really makes the difference in terms of extending the season at each end.”
Plants grown in there also act as a back-up, if bad weather spoils flowers grown outside.
Do make room for some perennial plants, which will help to cut down on the amount of seed-sowing needed. Peonies are one of Karen’s favourites and make wonderful cut flowers.
Look beyond the stars
Don’t forget the understudies in your floral arrangement. The best combine big stand-out blooms with smaller, contrasting flowers, such as Ammi majus.
Foliage is also important and a good bank of shrubs elsewhere in the garden will provide the necessary ‘backdrop’ to your floral stars. Among those Karen suggests are pittosporum, physocarpus – including the lime and variegated varieties – euonymus and choisya, although not everyone likes the smell of it.
In the vase
If Karen is cutting flowers for a client, she will do it either early in the morning or in the evening and she stands the blooms up to their necks in cold water overnight.
For flowers in her own home, she cuts and arranges them immediately, as making them last is not so important.
“Who wants flowers to last three or four weeks? The joy of flowers is they are so ephemeral. You have to enjoy them while they’re here.”
And she adds: “Look hard at what is already in your garden. Give anything a try in the vase as it’s surprising what will work.”
Now all that remains is for me to be brave with the secateurs and not turn my cutting flowers into just another border.
• For more information on The Somerset Cut Flower Garden see here
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Unwins are bringing out a new cut flower collection of seeds called the ‘Beautiful Bouquets’ collection in the New Year. Will include long stemmed flower like Cosmos, Sweet William, Cornflowers, Love in the Mist and Stocks.
That sounds interesting.
Thank you, I have never grown flowers for cutting,before but now feel inspired to give it a go! What do you recommend for very light, sandy soil in a south facing border?
Echinops, pinks or carnations and marigolds all cope with my sandy soil. Adding plenty of compost before planting would help improve the soil.