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AP Gardening Club

March 13, 2024 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

I hold these free sessions each month on Zoom. They are held on the first Thursday of each month 1300-1400 on Zoom. The Gardening Club start time remains the same each month; the Zoom link remains the same; the only thing that changes is the headline topic, and this will always be something that is relevant to the garden that month Recently I have covered great winter plants, good choices for autumn's fireworks, planting spring bulbs, Christmas decorations from the garden, rogues … [Read more...]

Filed Under: garden calendar

ladybirds – friend or foe?

January 1, 2024 by Valerie Munro 2 Comments

In the war on plant pests, it’s infinitely better to allow Nature to give you a helping hand rather than reaching for the nearest insecticide to zap all and sundry. The ladybird is a great ally to have on your side, instantly recognisable from its bright red and black spotted wing case. The ladybird larva is just as useful in terms of hoovering up the dreaded aphid and its many different cousins. However, there is an imposter in town - the harlequin ladybird. This new intruder … [Read more...]

Filed Under: auntie planty's musings

plants need Xmas gifts too

December 17, 2023 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

You’re feeling a bit peaky So you reach for Grandma’s cure, But if a plant is feeling poorly The answer’s not so sure. You can call on Mr. Google, And wade through loads of stuff, But whatever is on offer May not be enough. What you need is an expert, Always ready on hand, The answer’s Auntie Planty’s Advice voucher, rescue planned. They are like an investment To save your ailing plants, A Christmas gift for your garden Or for green-fingered aunts. £10 will buy a … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

Christmas cracker of an idea!

December 12, 2023 by Valerie Munro

When you develop a headache, what do you do? You reach for whatever remedy works for you, whether it’s an aspirin, Grandma’s secret concoction, or you lie down in a darkened room for a while until the world looks and feels brighter.. Result - issue solved without too much of a drama. But what do you do when a plant looks poorly? Ignore it and hope that it will heal itself? Give it a bucket of water and fingers crossed that it was dehydration that was the cause? Or what? I’d like to … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

spreading plant happiness

December 14, 2022 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

Christmas vouchers to solve plant and garden issues When you develop a headache, what do you do? You reach for whatever remedy works for you, whether it’s an aspirin, Grandma’s secret concoction, or you lie down in a darkened room for a while until the world looks and feels brighter.. That’s an extremely useful bit of automatic knowledge to have within easy reach – issue solved without too much of a drama. But what do you do when a plant looks poorly? Ignore it and hope that it … [Read more...]

Filed Under: auntie planty's musings, plants

Christmas gift voucher

December 14, 2022 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

… [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

calling all gardeners!

May 4, 2021 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

The next Auntie Planty Garden Zoom session is on Monday 10 May at 13.00. It’s for half an hour, it’s free and everyone is welcome. Gardening is the one physical activity that we all dive into without doing any warming up for. And, when we’ve done a good day’s digging and clipping, the chances are we’ve just sunk into an armchair and done nothing to stretch put those overworked muscles This month, I’ve joined forces with Patricia Goka, Transformational Movement Coach. I’ve given … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

this year’s Christmas tree

November 24, 2020 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

The perennial question in our house is not merely ‘where will we put the tree this year?’ but more like ‘where will our fully lit tree complete with dangly tinsel balls of all sizes and colours be safe from the night-time marauding antics of a fully grown, but slightly delinquent moggie?’ While I am vexing over this, here are some handy hints on getting the best out your real tree. Most of the cut plants that are being sold locally will have made quite a journey already. Here’s a quick … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

purple4polio

October 26, 2020 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

Saturday 24 October was World Polio Day, and to celebrate I was honoured to be invited to support Richmond Rotary in the mass planting of 6000 purple crocus corms. This wasn't some random act of horti-madness; it was done in an act of hope. There's a very strong link between polio and COVID-19 - they are both virulent viruses which are transmitted by saliva and other body fluids. Polio affects more than 300,000 children every year, and those that survive could be paralysed … [Read more...]

Filed Under: auntie planty's musings, plants

the joy of bright colours

May 2, 2020 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

There's a lot of really bright pink in my garden at the moment;   a rhododendron (probably 'English Roseum') a Crataegus laevitgata 'Paul's Scarlet' and clumps of the amazing everlasting wallflower Erysimum 'Bowles Mauve'. All of them are giving great joy, but I need to talk to you about the everlasting wallflower.    If you leave it to do it's own thing, the plant will soon become leggy and will soon lose its charm.   However, if you're quick, you can keep it compact, and the flowers will … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

garden composting

April 9, 2020 by Valerie Munro 1 Comment

For the time being our garden waste collections are paused so we’re being encouraged to make our own compost.  Before you groan, why not give it a go?  Compost is easy to produce, but making good compost is an art.   It's a result of the careful mixing of vegetable and other plant waste.   Get it wrong, and you’ll end up with a slimey mess.. Get it right, and you can  create your own source of liquid gold…. There's no need for expensive equipment or specialist knowledge. Just find a dedicated … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

daffodils and moving plants

March 25, 2020 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

Q:  A lot of my daffodils this year just produced leaves and no flowers – is there something that I can do to improve things for next year?  A: Daffodil blindness is where the plant looks reasonably healthy with no flowers at all,  or the stem grows  an ‘empty’ bud at the end. The most likely cause is that the bulbs have been starved of water and nutrients over the previous year, making them shrivel up.     During droughts, we tend to forget to feed and water the plants that are out of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

Mothering Sunday gifts

March 22, 2020 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

It’s a lovely sunny Mothering Sunday.   I was reminded of a couple of plants that ‘found’ their way into my garden specifically to give colour in early spring. The first is a flowering currant – Ribes sanguineum which I bought completely out of season.  You know the way that garden centres tend to push those right-at-the-moment plants for sale, even knowing that when the flowers fade the magnificence will have passed! Anyway this amazing early spring flowering plant has now rewarded mewith … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

stopped in my tracks

March 21, 2020 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

As I spend more and more self-isolation time in the house, the view from my kitchen window is getting rather more close scrutiny than before.   I spotted a rather annoying clump of ivy that could do with a bit of a haircut. What I wanted to remove were the long strands of juvenile ivy.   It's this juvenile growth that causes most of the ‘I hate ivy’ emotions in the garden.  Juvenile ivy leaves have those distinct ‘points’, and adult ivy leaf shape is quite different -  gone are the three … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants

Doing the right thing

February 9, 2020 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

There is a very big word circulating at the moment, with a very wide and important meaning -   sustainability..  As it applies as much in the garden world as anywhere else, please allow me to sum it up in four words – doing the right thing. Let’s start from the ground up. We’ve been told repeatedly not to use peat, and yet garden centres are still selling peat based composts.   Why?    Probably because the purchase price only reflects the cost of extraction and transport.  If you also … [Read more...]

Filed Under: auntie planty's musings

ode to autumn

November 30, 2019 by Valerie Munro 2 Comments

In autumn when the trees are brown, the little leaves come tumbling down;  they do not make the slightest sound, but lie so quietly on the ground;  until the wind comes puffing by, and blows them off towards the sky (anon)   To some people, fallen leaves are a big nuisance, but I would like you to think of them as a wonderful garden resource.   If you gather them up, and without adding any other plant debris, place them into large plastic bin bags, poke a few air holes in the sides, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: auntie planty's musings

choosing the best real Christmas tree

November 7, 2018 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

The perennial question in our house is not merely ‘where will we put the tree this year?’ It's more likely to be ‘where will our fully lit tree complete with dangly tinsel balls of all sizes and colours be safe from the night-time marauding antics of a fully grown, but slightly delinquent moggy called Jack.. While I am vexing over this, here are some handy hints on getting the best out your real tree. Most of the cut plants that are being sold locally will have made quite a journey … [Read more...]

Filed Under: auntie planty's musings Tagged With: Christmas decoration, no needle drop, real Christmas tree

Box tree moth caterpillar

June 28, 2018 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

There is a pest around at the moment that needs to be shown who’s boss!   It’s the box tree moth caterpillar, and I was slightly annoyed that two presenters of the recent TV Chelsea coverage said that there’s no answer.   If you have any box plants in your garden, you may wish to read this before digging them all up. The box tree moth caterpillar is quite striking looking with green and yellow stripes from head to tail, with black dots on either side. It has a voracious appetite, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants Tagged With: box tree moth caterpillar, cobwebs on box, what's eating my box

skeletonised rose leaves

August 21, 2017 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

I always say that vigilance is the key to combatting plant pest and diseases, so keeping your eyes peeled for the very first signs of a problem will serve you well in your attempt to get rid/control the effects.   Imagine my horror the other day when deadheading some roses in my front garden that I found that a lot of the top leaves had just vanished, with only the mid-rib left behind, telling a sad sorry tale. What had happened was an attack of the rose sawfly larvae.   These little … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants Tagged With: green caterpillars, over night rose damage, rose leaf damage, rose leaves eaten, rose sawfly caterpillars

Air Pots – great news for plants

August 9, 2017 by Valerie Munro Leave a Comment

It’s been raining so much lately that I cannot get outside into the garden – mine or anybody else’s.   So I now have time to tell you about a minor miracle in the plant pot world. Picture this; you have had a plant in a pot for a long time, and when you try to remove it you find that as roots have poked through the bottom of the pot, it’s a great tussle to get anything moving.   When you eventually get the root ball out, you more than likely find that the roots have started a circular journey … [Read more...]

Filed Under: plants Tagged With: air pots, best plant practice, good root health, healthy plants

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Testimonials

"You can cut the grass and do the weeding but what you need is knowledge, advice and inspiration. Auntie Planty brings all of that."

Robert G

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JR

"Auntie Planty has a fabulous concept in which she works alongside you and leaves you with an understanding of your own garden. It feels great to have a little more ownership of my garden armed with just a little more knowledge that she kindly shared with me. "

WB

"I have recently discovered that Valerie, founder of 'Auntie Planty', offers a 'Garden MOT' gift voucher service. What a genius idea! I bought one for some friends... and they are thrilled to think an expert will come around to look at THEIR garden, and be given specific advice just for them in their own home!"

Clare M J

"Thank you so much for your amazing advice and assistance. We were very lucky to meet you, and look forward to your next visit."

P Deere

"I had no idea what a gold mine of information Auntie Planty is! She shared so many tips and ideas of her own, which made sense, were easy to understand and even easier to put into practice."

Penny W

"In only one two-hour session I learnt such a lot, and now feel empowered to better understand my plants' needs."

Rowan J

"Valerie's recommendations on specific nutrient deficiencies and plant pest control was very helpful. I look forward to her return visit in the spring."

Nancy M

"Auntie Planty has helped transform my neglected, struggling garden and more importantly given me the confidence and ability to maintain it. Full of knowledge and energy she was a joy to work with."

Amanda A

"No matter what level a gardener you are, Valerie will help you as well as your garden to grow and flourish. Great experience with great company and great value for money."

Jules H

Recent Posts

  • AP Gardening Club
  • ladybirds – friend or foe?
  • plants need Xmas gifts too
  • Christmas cracker of an idea!
  • spreading plant happiness

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