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The Garden Bench Diary June

Cerceris rybyensis - ornate tailed digger wasp

Ornate Tailed Digger Wasp: Nature’s Stunning Marvels

Posted on June 30, 2025
The ornate tailed digger wasp is a striking insects with its vividly patterned black and yellow abdomen. This is something I found out when discovering a series of holes in a well trodden path that was hard packed sandy soil. What could they be, ants, miner bees?  Observe for a while and the occupants arrive to hover a moment then go head first into the hole just about wide enough for it to crawl down. It appears to be an ornate tailed digger wasp, now classified as the Cerceris rybyensis, of the family Philanthidae.  These wasps have exceptional burrowing skills,…
Veronica brachysiphon

Veronica brachysiphon – Hebe from New Zealand

Posted on June 25, 2025
Veronica brachysiphon is a shrub that is endemic in New Zealand but making its way across the planet to be found in gardens, like UK. It is part of the Plantaginaceae family that includes  Antirrhinums and Fox Gloves among many more species. Common name is Hookers Hebe after Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.  Loved by the Bees The Bees were very active on this flowering shrub. It thrives on well drained soil and can tolerate a wide range of situations. 
Ligustrum ovalifolium - Garden Privet

Garden Privet – Best for Garden Privacy

Posted on June 24, 2025
Garden privet continues to be the main choice for garden hedging when privacy is desired. It is an attractive option with its small oval shaped leaves and light structure that allows it to be shaped from the ground up. Very versatile, fast growing and resilient plant that can be trimmed and pruned when necessary to keep its shape and look attractive all year round. Semi-evergreen, depending on conditions, it provides a thick screen once established and well maintained. In early summer it will produce a display of small white fragrant flowers and small black berries in the autumn.  Wild Privet…
Catalpa bignonioides - Indian Bean Tree

Indian Bean Tree – Vivid Golden Yellow Foliage

Posted on June 23, 2025
The Indian Bean Tree, actually native of the Southeastern USA, is a popular tree to grow in temperate climates where it is reasonably hardy and requires little attention. Now grown across the UK and Europe due to its striking nature of vivid green heart-shaped leaves with a tinge of purple. It later on in the season produces clusters of white flowers and then long slender pods that are like beans. However, non of this is edible as is the case even in plants belonging to the Fabaceae family that contains both edible peas and beans and highly toxic plants. So…
Cape Fuchsia - Phygelius aequalis - Yellow Trumpet

Cape Fuchsia – Keeps Coming Back

Posted on June 22, 2025
Cape Fuchsia is a plant that thrives in my area where it is protected from the harsh elements. It not only keeps coming back but tries to spread out using suckers that spread along the surface producing their own roots it not trimmed back. Although it flowers well the flowers don’t last long in the heat we are seeing at the moment. Of course it is not a Fuchsia, nor closely related, but does have some resemblance.  It also sits well along side my perennial Fuchsias. Known scientifically as Phygelius, this particular variant is the Phygelius aequalis ‘Yellow Trumpet’. It…
Malva moschata pink - Musk Mallow

Musk Mallow – A stunner in the Flowering Meadow

Posted on June 21, 2025
The flowering meadows are in full swing and among the stand out plants I found was this Musk Mallow. The Mallow I normally see is the large shrub mallow often used in borders for height and width, the Malva arborea or Tree Marrow. This Mallow sits just above the grasses to produce a stunning flower head that stands out as a flower among flowers. The Musk Mallow is part of the mallow family (Malvaceae), and can be seen in meadows, hedgerows and by roadsides. Musk Mallow Alba The flowers emit a slight musky scent, hence the name. They are a…
Cordyline australis - Cabbage Tree

Cabbage Tree Palm – Effective Exotic Looking Plant

Posted on June 17, 2025
The Cabbage Tree is a plant I often see feature in many gardens around me where the climate is mild and you find a sheltered sunny spot. Cordyline australis, commonly known as the cabbage tree, is a striking evergreen plant native to New Zealand. It can grow up to 20m and live for several centuries, but I mainly see it around 2 to 5m high.  Some people may consider the Cabbage Tree as a palm tree but there is another tree that is native of southeastern US that is known as the Cabbage Palm. Looks somewhat similar but is the…
Rhaphiolepis indica - Indian Hawthorn

5 Key Reasons for Growing Indian Hawthorn

Posted on June 9, 2025
On a recent visit to St Julian’s in Malta, I came across a shrub that I was not familiar with. I am always looking around for plants, shrubs and trees that are attractive and unusual to me. This plant was used in the landscape gardening around our hotel and proved quite effective in that situation. 5 Reasons for Using Indian Hawthorn in Landscape Gardening. So, all in all, a good choice to fill a space with an attractive shrub that won’t take up much time and resources or need replacing every bad year.
Psephellus dealbatus - Persian Cornflower

Persian Cornflower – Vibrant Colour & Stunning Form

Posted on June 7, 2025
The Persian Cornflower in its cultivated form has a striking colour and a beautiful shape. Vivid pink and opens very similar to a thistle shape. Some have a white or cream centre, but in this particular cultivar the centre carries the main colour. Persian Cornflower not your average Daisy As part of the Asteraceae family, one of the largest, it resembles so many other members. However, this is likely best classified as a Psephellus dealbatus and not Centaurea. The plant is native from Turkey and up through the Caucasus but introduced to much of Northern Europe. This plant loves full…
Pink Peony Season - opening buds and blooms

Peony Season Is Upon Us

Posted on June 4, 2025
Peony season for me is June where I live. True, they can bloom earlier in warm sunny conditions but June is my favourite. Once the borders get lush with green foliage it gives the perfect backdrop to these beautiful blooms, especially when you want to photograph them as I do. They are stunning in form, like a rose but softer with soft featherlike foliage unlike the harsh prickly rose. Having said that they do need support to keep them looking their best, windy conditions can soon spoil their beauty. They do have a short blooming time, so you have to…
Poinsettia plant care

Poinsettia Plant Care – Outdoors

Posted on June 3, 2025
On a recent trip to St Julian’s, Malta, strolling down the road from my favourite Sicilian coffee shop, I came across a plant growing in a way I had to seen before. The plant itself was familiar, although there are lots of plants that have fresh new leaves of bright red. This was the first time I had seen a Poinsettia other than in a plant pot in Winter Holidays. Understanding proper poinsettia plant care can help ensure these vibrant plants flourish beyond the holiday season. This one was growing in a small patch of ground in an otherwise stone…
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  • Home – The Garden Bench
  • Plants
    • Plants Aa to Af
    • Plants Ag to Al
    • Plants Am to Ar
    • Plants Ca to Cf
    • Plants Cm to Cr
    • Plants Ga to Gf
    • Plants Ma to Mf
    • Plants Pg to Pl
    • Plants Sa to Sf
  • Plant Family
    • Amaryllidaceae – Amaryllis Family
    • Asparagaceae
    • Asteraceae
    • Calceolariaceae
    • Convolvulaceae – Bindweed or Morning Glory
    • Crassulaceae
    • Elaeocarpaceae
    • Ericaceae
    • Myrtaceae
    • Oleaceae – Olive Family
    • Paeoniaceae – Peony Family
    • Papaveraceae
    • Plantaginaceae
    • Ranunculaceae -Buttercup Family
    • Sapindaceae
    • Saxifragaceae
  • Gardens
    • Visit to Blickling Hall Great Wood Bluebells 2025
    • Hidden Gardens of Bury St Edmunds – England 2013
    • Holehird Gardens – Windermere – Lake District – UK
    • Jardin Majorelle – Marrakech Morocco 2019
    • Stody Lodge Gardens
  • Diary
    • The Garden Bench Diary March
    • The Garden Bench Diary April
    • The Garden Bench Diary May
    • The Garden Bench Diary June
    • The Garden Bench Diary July
    • The Garden Bench Diary August