First place was awarded to
the Toorak Hotel in the large garden category for hotels.
The competition is judged during July, and the judges can turn up on any day
during this month.
The garden grounds are maintained by, Ace Garden Services, it is also
our
job to design and plant up the gardens borders for the holiday makers, and
of course the Torbay in Bloom competition.

This year additional borders were put in, and new raised beds were created
in the inner garden.
The main emphasis was on the twenty metre long flower border running
parallel to the Chestnut avenue road, this narrow road is the main access to
the Hotel and also to the English Riviera Centre, which is Torbay’s,
International Conference and Leisure Centre.
The flower bed is five foot higher than the adjoining road and has a wide
retaining wall, this meant that the new outer border which was approx 1.5
metres wide would be on show to all passing cars and pedestrians, but
trailing plants were not an option due to the width of the wall and the
strong winds that blow along the road.
Short bedding plants would not be seen and would not blend into the already
established border. The middle of the bed was full of large Agapanthus
clumps and Golden Rod and Day lilies which were fine when viewed from the
garden but not from the roadside. The green foliage created a twenty metre
long green hedge, with the occasional flower leaning over.

So all plants in this stretch were dug up divided and transplanted during
the winter months, it meant that six very large agapanthus clumps had to be
dug up, some three feet across. These were chopped into 3 or 4 sections and
planted along the middle stretch to ensure that there will be Agapanthus
flowers along the whole length eventually, when they recover from the shock
of being moved.
The soil was compacted and probably had not had any compost for over ten
years. The stretch was dug over and 30 bags of compost were chopped into the
top six inches.
It was decided not to plant this bed up for the spring display as the other
beds close by next to the main entrance are full of spring bulbs.

These beds are also planted up after the bulbs have finished with summer
bedding plants and perennials and they have a few small evergreen shrubs for
the winter display. The decision was taken not to dig out all the bulbs each
year and replant in one go, but to add the plants whenever there was an
available gap.

This obviously creates problems and makes life difficult at times but it
does ensure that the bed is flowering every week for all the holiday makers.
It also prevents regimental planting schemes from occurring, and as there
are perennials and shrubs in the bed the planting schemes have a cottage
garden feel to them. I am not sure that this is exactly what the Torbay in
Bloom judges want to see, but the reason behind it is to create flower beds
that will be flowering for all twelve months. But I guess they liked it this
year.

So the new bed had been weeded dug over and prepared and a few ideas had
been thrown into the melting pot.
During the dig quite a few Cannas had been removed and placed at one end in
a dug out trench and covered. These were to be the full stops along the bed,
three clumps planted, each one about a metre long. It is normally ok to
leave Cannas planted during the winter months in Devon, but the winter of
2010 was not a normal winter.
Compost was quickly thrown on top of the soil above the plants and then the
snow added another layer.
During late spring they were carefully dug out and examined, some were
obviously dead and the rest were a bit battered, but they were planted
anyway and fingers were kept crossed.
The three groups of Cannas if they survived would create four smaller beds,
and a certain amount of symmetry would also be used when planting.
The very cold spring meant that bedding plants were late, but eventually the
weather warmed up enough to allow some planting in early June and a
selection of Marguerites and blue Lobelia to make a start. Plus Dahlia
tubers and an enormous amount of self grown Verbena bonariensis were planted
the whole length of the bed and in the middle area. It was these that were
to bind the new stretch and the old existing bed together.

The Cannas started to grow, so we now knew that we were on track, the
next plan of action was to plant some perennials, Guaras were always going
to be used to give the bed some movement on windy days and to add white to
the bed. They are so easy to keep flowering and they look good.

Other bedding plants were added as the bed took shape and by the
beginning of July it was still not ready, due to the cold weather. The
judging normally takes place towards the end of the month so we were not too
worried. They new that everyone was struggling this year so surely they
would not come early, fingers crossed again.
The bed was pretty much finished, all it had to do was grow, so we moved on
to the new raised planters in the inner garden. These had only just been
finished and were not really going to be planted with bedding plants, but
due to the summer drought it was decided not to plant too many expensive
architectural plants, and so the race to find the last of the bedding plants
that were suitable and not leggy, began.

Every last plant in Devon was grabbed and the plants were arranged as
best we could, a few ornamental grasses were used and one raised bed was
completely filled with Verbena bonariensis with an under planting of red
flowering Achilleas , Blue Salvias were planted on mass and Ganzias
dominated the first beds. Black leaved Dahlias Happy Juliet, were doted
around and on the other side of the lawn New Zealand busy lizzies were
planted. Other plants included Geraniums, Gerbaras and white flowed
marigolds.
Photo
Luckily the white lilies were in full bloom during most of July

A few tubs on the terrace were planted up, and the area outside the main
entrance had new planters built either side of the entrance which were
planted with trailing Surfinias to cascade down onto the steps and then
about twelve hanging baskets were placed around the Hotel.
After this all that was required was to make sure everything was watered and
deadheaded and fed.
And then came the weekend storm during the middle of July, it had not rained
for weeks so when the storm arrived it left everything looking totally
bedraggled, so more plant buying, more repairs to the tubs and then having
to find new hanging baskets.
During the middle of July all the Marguerites stopped flowering, perhaps
because we had not dead headed them quickly enough as we always had to
assume that the judges would be around in the next few days, so more black
leaved Dahlias ‘Happy Juliet’ were bought with Rudbekia and Gerbaras, and
then quickly planted beside them with.
Eventually by the end of the month all the Agapanthus were flowering and the
Verbena bonariensis had finally taken off throughout the bed, a few of the
Golden rods were starting to flower and all the other bedding plants were in
full flower in this bed and all the other beds around the hotel.

When the judges visit they usually leave a card afterwards to say they
have been.
No card was left, and after a telephone call it was learnt that they could
come in the first week in August.
More frantic dead heading and watering, and still no card in left in August.
Another phone call, - “ They do not always leave a card “
A few weeks later we had forgotten all about the competition and we were
sitting having our lunch at another job, when Nigel Beck the Toorak manager
telephoned with the good news.
“ I knew you were going to win this year” he said .
“Oh of course, it was nothing, - please do not enter next year “
For more details of other awards and photographs
http://www.acegardenservices.co.uk/Bay%20Blooms%20Torbay.htm#.

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© 2003-2010 Ace Garden Services. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2003 [Ace Garden Services]. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2003 [Ace Garden Services]. All rights reserved.