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Trying to tame a wisteria

I had my head inside a wisteria today, trying to help find the source of the whipping vines creeping into the neighbour’s space. It was quite a task, and took a large chunk of the morning to find the site of each fifth bud to make the summer prune as directed by the Royal Horticultural Society.

The wisteria was not mine, but it left me wondering about the origins of this overwhelming plant. Beautifully controlled ones look amazing when they’re in flower but getting them to that state takes the skill of extreme gardeners – the marathon runners of the gardening world.

So, here are a few points that might make you pause if you’re thinking of picking up a pot of this purple beauty in its tiny days.

  • Wisteria is poisonous (only if you eat it).
  • There are Japanese, Chinese and American varieties.
  • All of them have the ability to spread their vines out far and wide.
  • The vines will climb trees and strangle them, if left unpruned.
  • The flowers are fagrant and can be purple, pink, blue or white.
  • The plants have long, hanging seed pods which, when dry, pop open spreading their seeds away from the parent plant.
  • Wisteria should be pruned twice a year – once in late summer, and again in late winter.
  • The plants grow with such vigour you can almost see them spreading.
  • The flowers are fagrant and can be purple, pink, blue or white. They look dramatic, hanging down in long clusters.
  • Not all of them flower.
  • Wisteria can last for decades, the main vine becoming as a thick as a small tree trunk … with exhausted gardeners littered around its base

If you’re looking for a challenge – a ‘real plant’ to garden – this might be it.

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023

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A few facts about the Tour de France

I am not a regular Tour de France fan, but I am living with someone who is. They are currently watching the Netflix series Tour de France Unchained, and I have wandered in on a couple of episodes. I had no idea how dangerous riding at that level can be.

Anyway, I have been inspired to look into the race a little more, and here are a few things I discovered.

  • The race is over 2000 miles long.
  • It lasts for around 21 days.
  • The first race was in 1903;
  • The yellow jersey was introduced in 1919 – the colour yellow was chosen as it was the colour of the newspaper that set up the race.
  • The polka dot jersey was introduced in 1975 – the polka dots represent the wrapper of the chocolate bar that first sponsored that jersey.
  • Four riders have died taking part in the Tour de France, the first in 1910.
  • There is no official entry fee for teams in the Tour de France – they just have to be able to cover their own costs.
  • The Tour de France in 2024 is due to start in Florence, Italy.

Keep cycling!

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023

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Tomatoes and India and climate change

My new interest in tomatoes has taken me to reading about the situation for the crop in India this year. It’s left me embarrassed to think that I’ve been fretting over a few tiny plants here in England, while in India entire crops have been wiped out by either too much rain, or too much heat, or both.

I can’t imagine Indian cuisine without tomatoes but apparently the price of tomatoes in New Delhi is now up by as much as 500% which, while excellent for those farmers whose crops did not fail, must be shocking for shoppers, and almost impossible for the budget end of the restaurant trade.

And it must be difficult for the tomatoes themselves to cope with shifting weather patterns. I never realised that the plants don’t really like the heat, apparently growing best in temperatures between 18C(64F) and 25C(77F). Even English summers now have patches that are hotter than that, as my own plants can testify, having been through their own mild summer hiccup – too much wind, too much heat, and sudden dollops of rain.

If their growing efforts are proving ‘difficult’ here in England, what is the word to describe the conditions faced by plants in India, the country that recently became the most ‘populous’ in the world?

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023