Amateur Gardening

Add colour, structure and scent with Midwinter stars

LEAVES have fallen; hats and gloves have been tugged on – winter is here, bringing with it the challenges of celebrating and enjoying the chilly landscape. Writers love words and the best for this season is ‘brumal’, from the Latin brumalis. Dating from the early 1500s, it means ‘belonging to winter’; and at this time of year brumal plants are what’s needed to deliver splashes of colour from flower, leaf and stem.

Wintry blooms can take non-gardening folk by surprise. I’m often asked to explain why a cherry is flowering three months early, only to find that it’s actually the winter cherry ‘Autumnalis’. Similarly, daffodils in December are viewed with suspicion, seen as symptoms of global

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Amateur Gardening

Amateur Gardening1 min read
Poetry Corner
Hi Kim! Please find my contribution for Poetry Corner. I think one of the best things about gardening is shared experiences. Monty Don shared his garden with Nigel but I much prefer a cat! Sadly, my cat, Fudge, passed away in January. My cat is… a ho
Amateur Gardening7 min read
Your GARDENING FORTNIGHT
Ruth gets to grips with the most important May tasks The first ever issue of Amateur Gardening was issued 140 years ago this month and I am sure that Victorian gardeners were kept as busy in their plots at this time of year as we are today. There is
Amateur Gardening5 min read
THE SELF-SUFFICIENT (ish) GARDENER
Nurture precious green spaces around and inside you I scramble over boxes that have been sitting in my office for 14 years and counting. I am looking for external hard drives with garden photos on them, the older the drive, the bigger it is, like I’m

Related