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Small Summer Gardens: 35 bright and beautiful gardening projects to bring color and scent to your garden

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To deadhead a plant, simply snip or pinch the flower off below the base. Don’t just pull the petals off, as this may leave the seed-forming part intact. Keep the patio clean

Baths, Palace, and Aquarium - Alhambra Theatre - Royalty Theatre / Cinema - Assembly Rooms The Winter Gardens, Plan out the basics of what you want to grow, from vegetables and herbs to flowers. Also, decide if you’re going to plant perennials. We recommend going for blooms that’ll match your summer garden scheme. Image Credit: Pxhere 23. Prepare your gardening tools Choose sculptures that complement ​the style of your garden​ and reflect your personal taste. Opt for sculptures made from materials that can withstand​​​ outdoor ​conditions, such as metal or stone. Cultivate aromatic herbs in ​your ​garden, such as basil, rosemary, thyme, and mint. Design a spiral herb garden for visual appeal, where each ​​herb is planted ​in a circular pattern, creating a visually stunning arrangement. As the sunshine spreads across the UK and the school holidays are in full swing, there are hundreds of public and private gardens that make for the perfect summer day out, but, with summer time running out, which are the ones most worth our time?Embrace a carefree and ​​eclectic style by ​designing a bohemian-inspired garden. Mix and match a variety of plants, flowers, and ​foliage with ​different textures and colours. This is a real plantsman’s garden with its fine collection of shrubs, trees, heathers and herbaceous plants set in seven acres of landscaped and expertly planted garden and adjacent nursery. Paths and open lawns lead to theatrical wall ‘ruins’ separating areas of more formal planting. Autumn is particularly colourful, not just from foliage, but also with massed salvias, dahlias and other perennials.Great Comp Garden, Platt TN15 8QSOpen: daily 1 Apr-31 Oct (11-5pm) Admission: �5.50, chd �1 Visit our Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art this summer to enjoy a cluster of stunning art exhibitions. The gardens surrounding this 18th-century manor house usually host a season of opera in the summer months. Many events had to be cancelled, but visitors can still enjoy soaking up the serenity of the magical walled garden, entered via a wisteria-covered arbour, the Lakefield with its collection of garden follies and the paradise water garden. The tea room is open for takeaways that can be enjoyed in the orchard. Create a tranquil oasis with a ​​mesmerizing water ​fountain that adds a soothing sound and visual appeal to your ​outdoor space.

Village gardens, piazzas and belvederes are lavishly adorned with palms, umbrella pines and cypress trees, not to mention delightfully wonky topiary and swathes of hydrangeas in eye-popping colours. The gentle microclimate of the Gulf Stream also works its magic in the 28-hectare woodland garden that surrounds the village: the Gwyllt (or Wildwood) garden shelters important collections of exotic trees and shrubs created by previous owners (notably George Henry Caton Haigh, an authority on Himalayan woody plants), a “wishing tree” and a dreamy Chinese garden designed by the architect’s daughter. Strangest of all is the dog cemetery, created by Adelaide Haig for her 17 companions, to whom she was reputed to read the Scriptures from behind a screen every Sunday. The real beauty of summer houses, though, is the enjoyment they allow you to get out of your garden all year round. Where once you might have been confined to the inside of your house on wet and rainy days, with a well thought out design and all the luxury amenities you need for comfort, yours can become a garden retreat that you can retire to for a moment of calm no matter what the season. One of the most celebrated parks in London, St James’s Park is overflowing with gardens. From big patches of wild flowers to careful swathes of planted blooms, the park caters to a range of tastes and stylistic preferences. Exciting botanical-style garden, consisting of a world map of plants, conceived by intrepid plant hunter, enthusiast (and Kent Life blogger) Tom Hart Dyke while kidnapped in the Panamanian jungle. Plants from different continents are displayed in raised beds allowing the visitor to learn about the origins and care of both usual and many rare, important varieties – from tropical cannas or desert succulents to the ancient Wollemi Pine. The World Garden at Lullingstone Castle, Eynsford DA4 0JAwww.lullingstonecastle.co.uk Open: 1 Apr-30 Oct, Fri, Sat (12-5pm), Sun and BH Mon (2-6pm) and for NGS Sun 19 Jun (11-5pm)Admission: �7, chd �4 Incorporate pale-coloured ​​​flowers and foliage that reflect the moon’s glow. Add subtle lightings, such as solar-powered pathway ​lights or ​strategically placed spotlights, to create a soft and enchanting atmosphere.Popular greenhouses include aluminium greenhouses with polycarbonate glazing and Victorian styles in cedar or aluminium. Top tip: Watering slowly, deeply, and not so often creates a damp but not soggy soil that most plants/veggies love. Image Credit: Pexels 33. Keep on top of your garden All the Flowers Are for Me by Pakistani-American contemporary artist Anila Quayyum Agha is an arresting installation, drawing on botanical patterns used in Islamic architecture and art to explore connectedness and co-existence in sacred spaces. Popular gazebos include metal gazebos with a retractable awning and wooden gazebos with 2 or 3 fully boarded sides. Warmer weather and the odd rain shower can make weeds grow super-fast. Weeds will steal nutrients and space from your plants, and of course weeds can also spoil the look of your garden.

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