It’s raining; again or still or both. The weather seems to have been in the same rut since July and looks set to stay in it. I’m slightly surprised that more things haven’t collapsed in a mushy heap on the ground. It hasn’t been really cold, a frost would reduce a lot of the soft late growth to mush overnight.
It does mean there isn’t a lot happening and what is happening isn’t in the main new. A bit of a funny mix then, this week. You know the score, six things in your garden on a Saturday; take pictures, put those pictures somewhere we can all see them, put a link in the comments below so we can find them. Should you need it, check out the participants guide.
One.
A couple of weeks ago our garden club had a Zoom talk from a hedgehog rescue centre based at Newquay. We’ve had hedgehogs in the garden for as long as I can remember, very occasionally we see them, sometimes we hear them, some years one has hibernated in the garden, regularly there are droppings. The speaker said that they had release sites across Cornwall and into Devon, including one in our village, and liked to release into a similar environment to where the rescued hedgehog had come in from. I enquired further about what they required of a release site; they referred me to their website. Having hedgehogs already and not having badgers were big plusses. I applied, was told that subject to getting a nest box set up, we could go on their release site list. The nest box is set up, I dried a bag of leaves in a mesh bag in the greenhouse and put them in the box. We are good to go. It can surely only be a good thing to encourage and support a hedgehog population, they don’t do damage, they don’t eat plants, they do eat some plant pests.

Two.
Turning to indoor plants for a change, I snapped a picture of the cactus on one of our north facing window ledges. Schlumbergera truncata I believe, the Thanksgiving cactus, though since we don’t really do Thanksgiving, I’m not sure what to call them. The picture was rubbish, so I took them outside and took another.


Three.
To Sue’s annoyance, at this time of year there are nearly always a couple of vases, or jugs, or jam jars, stuffed with bits of camellias that I have brought back from Mount Edgcumbe to scrutinise further. Sometimes if I want a good photograph of a variety I will bring open a shoot with a bud set to open and let it open indoors out of the weather. This is an unknown sasanqua variety which I am compiling a detailed photographic record of in the hope that one day I will be able to put a name to it. It may of course be a seedling that has never been named, which would be impossible to prove.

Four.
When I do such pictures I will often focus stack them, in order to get all parts in sharp focus. This morning (Friday) the air was absolutely still, a rare occurrence here, and I was able to take the pictures I wanted outdoors. While I was set up, I put the camera and tripod in the garden proper and took a stacked image of the garden. I thought the image where it is sharp front to back strengthened the feeling of plants crowding in on you. There’s no sense of depth, it’s all in your face.


Five.
I have one or two late blooms on at least three of my hydrangeas. Low light levels seem to mess up their pigment production leading to pale and sometimes pleasingly subtle colour variations. This is ‘You and Me Together’, a double flowered mophead, the new flower and a dark rich red old one.


Six.
Hedychium densiflorum ‘Assam Orange’. I’m trying to keep my monthly video post of the garden going and posted one for November earlier today in the post preceding this one. Knowing that there are some scarily knowledgeable people who just might check in on it, I quite often check my facts before going public with them. So it was with this ginger lily. I have all these books and rarely look at them, I should be ashamed of myself. Turns out Frank Kingdon-Ward collected H. densiflorum at 2000m in Arunachal Pradesh, northeast India, in 1938. It ended up back at Edinburgh Botanics where, in spite of the collection location and climate, it was treated as a tender, tropical subject. In the early 1970’s it was trialled at Wakehurst Place in Sussex, where it proved fully hardy and thrived. It essentially kick started the growing of ginger lilies as garden plants in the UK. My history with it doesn’t go back that far but the plant here is at least thirty years old and has performed well every year, faltering only if it is very dry in its June-July peak growth period. Mid November, it’s starting to collapse and it’s still putting on a show.

Still raining. There’s not going to be a lot of gardening done today. It’ll keep. Have a good week.
Ooh, I’ve been looking into getting a hedgehog house! Do you have any recommendations? We have a big brush pile behind the barn already, but might get it chipped in the spring after everything’s moved out. We used to have a resident hedgie, but it got run over several years back (grrr) and I haven’t seen signs of a new one yet, which makes me sad. Anything to entice a new one.
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I looked at the design on Prickles and Paws Hedgehog rescue then went looking for something similar to buy. Ended up with a Green Feathers Eco Friendly model, but there are quite a few similar things about.
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Hi Jim…. Páraig here after a long long absence…
Hydrangea is magnificent. Am I right both are same plant? I read it that way….
Here’s my first Six-on-Saturday for many a month…. New blog also because following my self-SOS Ted blog was a pain in the… (I never got time to figure it out…)
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You’re right about the Hydrangea, same plant. Welcome back.
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Having a hedgehog would be fun but afraid it wouldn’t last around here. I love hydrangeas when they start to fade. They dry so pretty.
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I am about to look up hedgehogs! They sound wonderful. I like the container in your stacked garden photo, what is it? Thanks for hosting. taking Saturday off this week.
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That would be Herman the Head. Way way back in nursery days we got to choose the range of pots we had for sale, mostly fairly ordinary glazed things from Vietnam or somewhere else in that area. Occasionally they had ornaments like our Easter Island head, which is hollow. We’ve seen very many since but none we’d swap for ours. Echeveria in the top, he’s had that for a couple of years now, had a shaggy mane of Carex before that.
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Well, I don’t blame you I was admiring Herman while looking at your video. Thought it Easter Island. Fabulous.
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That ginger lily does amazingly well for you, although from its heritage it is clearly much hardier than what we might expect of ginger lilies in the UK. And the cacti are glorious! I have no idea how you would create a stacked photograph but that first one of your garden looks amazing – such a great effect! Will try and make time to look at some of your videos – I have barely touched my laptop this week so presumably I am busy with lots of stuff other than blogging 😉 Thanks for hosting. https://ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com/2023/11/18/six-on-saturday-when-is-an-empty-pot-not-an-empty-pot/
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The late Tony Schilling, of Wakehurst Place, was a great champion of hardy Hedychiums. ‘Tara’ and ‘Stephen’ were both selections of his and both thrived at Wakehurst, along with ‘Assam Orange’. Wakehurst is hardly a climatically favoured garden.
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Yes, I can imagine they would be hardier in some parts of than others – is it prolonged wet that gets to them, do you think? Monty Don used to bring his inside, but he is biting the bullet and overwintering many things outside where they will either sink or swim as our climate gradually changes
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I don’t think prolonged wet troubles them, Cornwall does a lot of prolonged wet. The rhizomes lie on the surface so will get very directly impacted by low temperatures, I imagine there is a minimum below which they just die.
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Ah, not having grown them, I hadn’t realised the rhizomes are exposed…
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Lovely flowering cacti this week, especially your photo in the light. We just brought ours in last week and are enjoying their buds and blooms. You have some interesting photos this week, particularly the Hydrangeas. We are still enjoying the sasanquas in bloom and the changing leaves. Here are our six for the week: https://woodlandgnome.wordpress.com/2023/11/18/six-on-saturday-change-in-the-wind/
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Your flowering cacti are stunning. Love the photo out in the light, especially. I just brought ours in about a week ago and they are full of buds and blooms. Great fun. But I’m still fixated on Camellias and the turning foliage, here. Would love to have some of your rain. Thank you for your very logical explanation of why Hydrangeas bloom in such odd colors late in the season. They are fascinating, aren’t they? And they dry so well. It has been a busy month and I’ve not kept up with the photography or posting, but here are mine for the week, if a bit late: https://woodlandgnome.wordpress.com/2023/11/18/six-on-saturday-change-in-the-wind/
Have a terrific week! I hope you get a break from your rain.
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Ah, I didn’t know that badgers would predate hedgehogs and we certainly have very active badgers here, so it might go some way to explain not seeing hedgehogs. I love H. Assam Orange and have several pieces in pots, but having seen what an amazing show your mass of ginger is putting on I am going to definitely see if I can bulk up some in the ground now. Also, what a contrast in hydrangea heads. Hard to believe they are just new and old flowers!
Here are my six: https://wp.me/pM8Y1-8Xr
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That camellia is a pretty one! As for hedgehogs I have never seen one here, though surrounded by pasture land I suspect there is no need to raid gardens. My son however had several visiting his garden in Doncaster and I think that’s probably the last time I saw one – in my previous garden back in the 1990s!
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There’s no obvious reason for hedgehogs being in the gardens on our estate, there’s plenty of farmland, railway embankments, hedgerows and so on around. It may be the absence of predators – badgers? I should probably try to find out more about them.
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That’s a good-looking hedgehog house. I don’t have hedgehogs and none of my neighbours have seen any either, but I’d be happy to have one or two come to visit. I hope yours arrive soon.
The old flower on the hydrangea really appeals to me – I love the dark, rich tones – especially at this time of year.
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About the only good thing about everything in the garden being wet is that it brings out the colours. It’s more an overall effect this time of year, rather than individual blobs of colour.
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Well done on the hedgehog house. We have badgers close by and I just couldn’t bear it if anything happened. I’ll stick to bird boxes! Here are my Six and I would appreciate your opinion on my mystery plant. I must get to the bottom of this one! https://davidsgardendiary.com/2023/11/18/six-on-saturday-106/
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Whether Thanksgiving or Christmas, that flowering cactus (Schlumbergera) is magnificent. I have two in the house which have not yet begun to show evidence of buds, so they must be of the Christmas designation. When they do, they will be worthy of a photo.
Thank you for the Hedychium history. They do well outdoors here in the American South.
Here are my six for the week.
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What a great variety of Christmas Cactus. I have a white and pink one in flower, although I have managed to split the write one into 3 successful plants.
Here is my contribution to the meme.
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Okay, you win with the Christmas/Thanksgiving cactus – I only showed one. I also have a colour changing Hydrangea in my six. When you’ve mentioned H. ‘Assam Orange’ before I made a note to acquire it but have done nothing about it. Seeing the lovely autumn colours in your picture makes it even more desirable.
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I’m pretty sure Treseder’s had ‘Assam Orange’, if you go the mail order route, though when I was at their nursery the other day he said he’d not had time to put much on his website beyond ferns. He has a great range of Hedychiums, just wish I had more room for them.
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I like all your photos this week, lovely selection. I’m sure your hedgehog will be very happy in it’s new house, I haven’t seen mine for a while now, I hoped it was already hibernating. One hibernated in my woodland a couple of years ago and I was working there when it decided to wake up, it sounded just like the wild boar that I had seen on TV! My six are here…….https://www.leadupthegardenpath.com/
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They are unexpectedly noisy aren’t they. I must check my nest box, see if there are any signs of interest.
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Stacked photos are always nice, but unfortunately I didn’t have much time to take them… It’s a little bit of work and time spent with computer. I should try again.
Very pretty hydrangeas and nothing else to say: the second photo of the Thanksgiving cactus is much better! https://fredgardenerblog2.wordpress.com/2023/11/18/six-on-saturday-18-11-23/
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You have put into words exactly what I feel about the weather Jim. The two different flowers on the same hydrangea plant are striking. I want to comment on each of your six, this week, but except for saying I hope you get your hedgehog soon, I shall leave others to cheer on the other posts. Here are my six: https://noellemace.blogspot.com/2023/11/six-on-saturday.html
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How wonderful, being a release site for a hedgehog. I didn’t think to feature my recently-installed hedgehog house in today’s six – oh well maybe next week! The camellia is simply stunning.
As ever, thanks for hosting Jim, here’s my six this week: https://mysanctuarygarden.wordpress.com/2023/11/18/six-on-saturday-18-11-2023/
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I feel very pleased to be taken on as a release site but it also feels like a considerable responsibility. I’m going to worry terribly whether they’re going to be alright.
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That’s a rather smart hedgehog house – is that a granite-like kitchen worktop roof it has? We bought a hedgehog house but alas haven’t seen our hedgehog for a month or so now – hopefully it’s okay. Those late Hydrangea blooms are lovely https://onemanandhisgardentrowel.wordpress.com/2023/11/18/six-on-saturday-18-november-2023/
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The roof is some plastic composite material, looks like recycled stuff. I bought it because it was similar to the DIY plan on the hedgehog rescue website and I was feeling too lazy to make my own.
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I’m sure the hedgehogs will be happy with their house. We don’t seem to get them in our garden, but I expect there are one or two in the field behind us.
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Hedgehogs still look scary, even if they are dinky. I suppose that they are not as bad as opossums. Some consider opossums to be beneficial, since they eat mollusks, grubs and baby rats. However, they also eat fruits and some vegetables! I suppose that hedgehogs would be better.
None of my gingers bloomed this year! The summer weather was so mild. Two bloomed before I brought them here, but not since they arrived. You know, I actually looked for ‘Assam Orange’ while in the Los Angeles region, but did not see it. I certainly do not need any more gingers. I just wanted to see if it is available here.
Here are my six:
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I have a suspicion that if I succeed in getting many more hedgehogs in the garden that a downside will turn up but I’m not sure what it would be beyond trying not to disturb them.
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Have you ever seen the ‘the Trouble with Tribbles’ episode of Star Trek?
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I have; I’d forgotten it and would rather you hadn’t reminded me!
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oops!
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Hydrangeas seem to be the thing of the week – finally found out the colour of the one in our back yard.
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Assam Orange is one of my favourites, perhaps not so showy but so reliable and strong. Really like the mystery camellia. The rain must stop one day, surely! Here are mine https://offtheedgegardening.com/2023/11/18/six-on-saturday-blessings/
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