Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Herbs Amid the Heirloom Roses ... AT MY ROSE GARDEN



As the last of winter recedes, the rose beds tend to look a little bedraggled.  The garden’s saving grace is the carpet of herbs growing at the feet of the roses, softening the starkness of bare winter stems. 

Growing herbs amid the heirloom roses serves a number of practical purposes; first and foremost, acting as living mulch that protects root systems from frost and the drying effect of cold winds.  With their fragrance and variety of leaf and flower shapes, herbs also offer a plentiful food source and shelter for beneficial insects over the sparse winter months and into spring. 

A special treat is observing our Australian native bees foraging amongst the herbs.  As the weather warms and hints of spring begin to appear, we especially look forward to spying the solitary and rather shy blue-banded bee, (Amegilla cingulata) with its iridescent, furry blue stripes.  A native buzz-pollinating bee, it is a charming addition to the garden. 



One of the favourite bee foraging herbs in our garden is Borage.  We encourage Borage, (Borago officinalis) to self-seed at will among the rose beds.  Its broad, softly furred leaves give lushness to bare-legged roses after their winter prune.  



And the star shaped, blue flowers of Borage add a touch of colour and winter magic to secret corners of the garden.   It is a special delight to pick off the black seeds from under the spent flowers and scatter them in bare patches here and there, knowing they’ll pop up and fill another corner.   



As winter gives way to spring, a few of the heirloom roses are beginning to awake.  Here, the blue Borage flowers complement the porcelain pink of Souvenir de St Anne’s, daughter of the Bourbon rose, Souvenir de la Malmaison ... a match made in heaven!  



Another happy self-seeder is Tansy, (Tanacetum vulgare) with its yellow button flowers brightening up the garden.  The Hybrid Musk rose, Buff Beauty, in its sheltered corner flowers sporadically through winter, happily sharing the limelight with its neighbouring tansy flowers.  



Perennial herbs add a more permanent structure and greenery to the rose garden throughout winter.  There are a number of cultivars of rosemary, but the common Rosemary, (Rosemarinus officinalis) with strong upright growth and blue flowers is tough and copes with harsh conditions.  Rosemary also lends itself easily to being clipped into shape.  We clip ours into square pillars as accents on the corner of some of our rose beds.  Rosemary also propagates easily from cuttings and makes a low maintenance hedge to frame rose beds.   



Perfect for edging beds is the exquisite carpeting perennial herb, Lemon Thyme, (Thymus x citriodorus).  This comes in green or variegated leaf colours and both are sweetly, lemon fragrant.   We have laid ours alternately to edge the circular Moss roses bed.  A joy to brush past as it releases its lemony fragrance and now bees are already foraging amongst the first of its tiny pink flowers.  



Considered to be too invasive to let loose in garden beds, the common mint, (Mentha spp.) needs to be contained, even in a sprawling country garden.  We prefer to grow the less invasive spearmint, (Mentha x spicata) with its grey green foliage and sweeter fragrance.   It carpets the roses and offers up a delicious perfume each time it’s brushed or trodden upon.    

A decorative alternative is apple mint, (Mentha suaveolens) with its slightly woolly leaves and lovely apple-mint fragrance.    Apple mint is now on our 'must-have' list as it also comes in a variegated form, with cream splashed leaves; another fragrant addition to the herbal carpet at the feet of the heirloom roses.


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