That great British conversation opener, grumbling about the weather, has been denied to me this week. Nothing to complain about.
A good deal of the week has seen me in Sue’s glasshouse, trying to get firmly on top of mealy bug before winter. I’m just washing it off with a pump up sprayer set to produce a fine jet of water. When that’s done, which it nearly is, I’ll do a spray to mop up any new hatchlings.
The fine weather hasn’t produced a flush of new growth or flower but it has largely halted the decline of what is already there. The autumn light has been beautiful and my attempts to capture it as unsuccessful as ever. At least it’s good enough to encourage me to try.
If you’ve also been tempted out in your garden with a camera, you only need six to join in with the Six on Saturday meme. Post pictures of six things in your garden, add a few explanatory words and post it online somewhere, then put a link to it in my comments below and Bob’s your uncle. Should you need it, there’s a participants guide here.
One.
Sue’s glasshouse and some of the contents therein. Mostly sparkly clean.
Two.
This is ‘Vlad’. Vlad stands 80cm tall and has spines up to 10cm long. Vlad demands respect, and gets it. You don’t turn your back on Vlad and bend over, not if you know what’s good for you.
Three.
I bought Nerine ‘Zeal Giant’ from somewhere, sometime. It has flowered before but this is the first year it’s really shown its quality. I’m going to keep it as a pot plant though, our slugs are well enough fed as it is. I took pictures of it this morning both in shade and in sun; neither looks quite right now that I look at them on the computer screen. Magenta?
Four.
I need to pick my apple crop, they’re beginning to drop. I’m talking about my “family” tree, which started out as ‘Elstar’ on MM106 and onto which I’ve grafted several other varieties. The best of these is ‘Holstein’, thought to be a Cox seedling, raised in Germany and introduced in 1918. I had one of these two with my lunch today and will have the other tomorrow. Yummy.
Five.
I put my fairly recently acquired Zantedeschia ‘White Giant’ into a six in May when it was flowering. Once the flowers were done it pretty much just sat there, until a few weeks ago when it decided to put on a growth spurt. It’s producing new and massive leaves and I’m wondering what it is planning to do for winter. My expectation was for it to die to the ground but at the moment it looks like it has other ideas.
Six.
Our Salvias have not had a vintage year, which is somewhat surprising since I’d have thought this summer would have been right up their street. One ‘Amistad’, overwintered under cover in a 3L pot last year, has been outstanding, it’s absolutely enormous and has been flowering for many months. The plants in the ground over last winter survived but were very slow to get going in spring and the young plants we had started very small and then struggled to make growth in the dry weather. This lot are ‘Black and Bloom’ with a bit of ‘Amistad’ at the back. I may dig up one or two and overwinter them in pots, in addition to the cuttings we’ve done.

Another week down and I’m off to Rosemoor today for the AGM of the RHS RCM Group, South West. Rhododendron, Camellia and Magnolia Group that is, with me going along to fly the flag for Camellias primarily. It’s always a highlight of my horticultural year.









Wonderful pictures !! Love the cacti !
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You had so many amusing comments this week that I had a hard time picking a favorite. The cactus won.
“Vlad demands respect, and gets it. You don’t turn your back on Vlad and bend over, not if you know what’s good for you.”
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Like everyone else, I am in awe of Sue’s greenhouse! Please do tell us how big it is – it certainly looks enormous from the viewpoint you shared! I decided after seeing the aeoniums you shared a little while ago to add to mine, as they have all done well and have been completely trouble free – cacti don’t do it for me though, but I certainly respect Vlad! Thanks for hosting https://ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com/2025/09/27/six-on-saturday-marking-time-maybe/
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Sue’s glasshouse is 10 x 18ft. It was 10 x 12, then I added an extension 4 years ago. Sue’s Aeoniums are relatively trouble free but do get a bit of mealy bug and sometimes vine weevils. It’s a constant battle.
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Oh that extra width must make a big difference too – how wonderful. We extended our working greenhouse from a basic 8 x 6 to just about 13 x 6 (as much additional length as would fit the space) having bought another g/h from eBay for about £12 – it was so worth it 👍No mealy bug on my aeonium but as it has been on other things I suppose it is just a matter of time
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Wow, Sue. I am in awe of your greenhouse and all your cacti and succulents. Impressive. How big is it?
Jim, so you use no chemicals to see off the mealbugs?
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Sue’s glasshouse is 10 x 18ft. I used a mix of SB Invigorator, the active ingredient of which brings up nothing in a Google search!!! plus Monterey Insect spray which contains spinosad, an insect derived from bacteria, so broadly organic. It killed the adults but not the eggs, which hatched and were active within days of spraying. I very much doubt that any insecticide available to amateurs would kill the eggs. And of course all the dead adults and waxy stuff they coat themselves with were still there. I sprayed it all off with water and will follow up in a week or two with the spray mix to kill any young that hatch from eggs still left and any adults still hanging about, probably repeat 3 or 4 weeks later.
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The greenhouse is huge! MEaly bugs are a huge challenge here. thanks for sharing your process. I was going to try a solution of hydrogene pyroxide. Not sure if it will work but..
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The apple – I want it. Sue’s collection look amazing. I had a cactus growing beside our trash cans that I thought was wonderful, until I realized it dropped spines..thanks for hosting https://theshrubqueen.com/2025/09/27/six-on-saturday-future-fruit/
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The cacti I hate are the ones with flat pads and tufts of very fine, almost fluffy spines that you only have to brush against to get a bunch of almost invisibly thin, barbed spines in your hand or wherever.
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That’s the one. The fool I hired to remove it..climbed it. I managed to get in the house before I started to laugh as he claimed to be a local expert.
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Priceless!
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Probably had to throw his pants away. I had to use scotch tape to get the spines out of my feet.
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Your garden is looking great! And the greenhouse!!! I’m curious about the Cox apple – a local orchard grows Cox Orange Pippin – the same? Truly delicious!
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Cox’s Orange Pippin sets the standard against which all other apples are compared in the UK. It just has such a rich and complex flavour. Unfortunately it is also pretty fussy and doesn’t do at all well down here in the southwest. There are several hybrids with it that are easier to grow and approach its quality and I reckon Holstein is among the best of them. See https://www.orangepippin.com/varieties/apples/coxs-orange-pippin
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I’d stay well away from Vlad. I have the utmost respect for anything with thorns, especially ones that size! Cleaning Sue’s collection is a true testament of your love! My Amarine is a similar colour to your nerines – they are not a colour which fits in well with anything else. I hope to visit Rosemoor next weekend, hoping there will be a decent display for me.
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I didn’t see much of Rosemoor, just a quick whizz round at lunchtime, but it was looking pretty good. That’s very true about the Nerine colour, another reason for growing it in a pot so it can be positioned away from the worst clashers.
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I had a chuckle about Vlad! The apples look superb! For me it is eggplants and peppers.
Here are my six: https://wisconsingarden.wordpress.com/2025/09/27/september-27-2025-six-on-saturday/
Have a great week! We are having summer like weather, which I am enjoying very much.
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The apple tasted every bit as good as it looked. It’s blowing a gale here just now so by tomorrow I shall be picking them up off the ground and regretting not picking them before they fell.
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That apple looks perfect. Most of our fruit is done for the year, with just the persimmons left to harvest next month. There are only a few of those this year.
I would love to spend several hours looking at all the wonderful treasures in Sue’s glasshouse.
I’m still on a Nepenthes kick, so my six is all pitcher plants this week:
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I’m certain Sue would be happy to show you around her glasshouse, if you ever find yourself on this side of the pond with several hours to fill!
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OOPS, here’s my link.
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Thanks for introducing Vlad. He is indeed a fearsome guardian. The apple is impressive and inviting. Looks like the Apple logo in the photo.
Like you, I love the autumn light. After our recent rain, the decline has stopped temporarily and the autumn light gives the garden a peaceful glow.
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I love Vlad, and I fear Vlad. I’m always delighted to hear other gardeners have silly nicknames for their plants. The nerines and that salvia are spectacular! We could use a bit more late summer colour in our borders, but I’ve had a very happy and productive time gathering seeds and sorting the greenhouse, and taking a tour of Frome’s underground history.
https://doingtheplan.com/2025/09/27/magic-seeds-frome-tunnels-bellflower-pirouette-next-years-flowers-ladybug/
Have a good time at the show!
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Vlad is very impressive and I can only image the care needed to move his pot around.
Here’s my six
https://rosieamber.wordpress.com/2025/09/27/%f0%9f%8c%bbthe-week-i-provide-gourmet-squirrel-food-sixonsaturday-gardeningx-flowersofx/
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Just out of curiosity I will take scales up to the greenhouse and weigh Vlad; too much for something you’ve got to hold well away from yourself when lifting.
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just stopping by to say no post from me this week or next. I’ve been juggling a few things but I’m hoping October will be more settled. See you all soon.
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I’ve put something similar about Salvia ‘Amistad’ in my six. It comes to something when even Salvias don’t like the heat. That’s a beautiful Nerine, I like the narrow margin on each petal.
https://thequiltinggardener.wordpress.com/2025/09/27/six-on-saturday-27-09-2025/
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What an impressive collection of cacti and succulents. Well done you two on the maintenance too. Vlad is best viewed from my point of view on my screen. The Nerine is really charming. Here are my six this week: https://noellemace.blogspot.com/2025/09/six-more-things-from-my-garden-sos-27.html
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https://thistlesandkiwis.org/2025/09/27/six-on-saturday-27-09-25/
Lovely nerine and how nice to eat your own apples – apologies if my comment comes twice – having issues with WordPress!
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The Nerine ‘Zeal Giant’ is very pretty. How lovely to have fresh apples from the tree. My spring six…
https://thistlesandkiwis.org/2025/09/27/six-on-saturday-27-09-25/
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You’ve been a busy man. The plants in Sue’s greenhouse must have taken a fair amount of time, but I’m sure they will benefit from the deep clean! The Nerine is fabulous, whether photographed in warm sunlight or cool shade.
https://notesfrommygarden.co.uk/2025/09/27/calm-sunny-beautiful/
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Sue’s glasshouse is beginning to feel endless but it also feels like a worthwhile job to have done. Hopefully, once they’re under control I shall be able to keep on top of them comparatively easily.
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The nerines are superb. Still no flowers here. Perhaps it takes many years for the bulbs to get bigger… Gorgeous Sue’s collection and Vlad is really a very nice specimen. https://fredgardenerblog2.wordpress.com/2025/09/27/six-on-saturday-27-09-25/
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I really like the salvias but unfortunately the only one that gets through more than a couple of winters with me is ‘Hot Lips’. Enjoy your day at Rosemoor, I’m sure you will. I’ve manged to scrape together a six at. https://ricksplantworld.blog
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I’m not really sure why Salvias don’t survive winters better for us, probably a mixture of not liking winter wet, so rot sets in in the root system, and slugs taking off the new growth as fast as it emerges in spring. There were signs of life on almost all of them this spring but they just didn’t grow away very well at all.
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Nerine is splendid. I still can not distinguish them from Crinum, though. I worked with them as a cut flower crop while in school in 1986. I remember that they were very expensive, probably because they were such big bulbs that bloomed only once. ‘White Giant’ calla also looks splendid even without bloom.
https://tonytomeo.com/2025/09/27/six-on-saturday-a-few-more-surprises/
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I’m really looking forward to seeing what ‘White Giant’ does next year; it’s clearly settled in well.
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Sue’s glasshouse is always a wonder to behold and I love Vlad [the Impaler]. I remember being impressed by your apple tree grafting skills last year. Still impressed https://onemanandhisgardentrowel.wordpress.com/2025/09/27/six-on-saturday-27-september-2026/
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