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Radipole Park & Gardens
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Radipole Park & Gardens > bio diversity  > Volunteers Worth Their Weight in Gold…or Should That be Seeds? November 2024
salvia in healing bed Radipole sensory garden 2024

Volunteers Worth Their Weight in Gold…or Should That be Seeds? November 2024

Volunteers Worth Their Weight in Gold

 

Unusually for us, last Monday’s volunteers session in the sensory garden was conducted in the warmth of sunshine, much appreciated after days of dour grey weather.

It was a case of many chores, including the planting of wallflowers ready for a spring show, though that really should have been done before we planted the bulbs.

Our sensory garden really is a learning curve on so many levels.

If you follow us you’ll know we are set in amongst Radipole park which sits on a flood plain, (reclaimed from the River Way estuary).

 

1930's men employed on creation of new Radipole park drive and gardens

        1930’s men employed on creation of new Radipole park drive and gardens

 

Our first lesson will be which plants survive in what is essentially claggy clay soil and silt dredged from the estuary during its construction.

Add to that what is fast becoming a real problem, what’s left of Radipole lake is silting up, raising the water levels, causing problems with drainage of our park, especially during the persistent  wet weather we’ve been having.

Something that hampered the project’s construction throughout.

 

Radipole park Heritage Lottery project 2023

 

With the water table being quite high, which plants will cope and which will sulk?

Hopefully with more trees planted in and around the area that will help.

But we’ve selected those plants and shrubs we thought would have a good chance, and this year has been great, it’s been much admires as the plants flourished.

Our second curve will be that of organising for next year a month by month calendar of chores, which of course will be part guided by mother nature’s sometimes warped sense of humour.

Someone tells me there is an app which can do this for you, all you have to do is input your plants and hey presto!

There seems to be one for everything imaginable, but maybe this is where technology might come in handy.

Third curve, wildlife.

 

Blackbird in Radipole gardens

                                       Blackbird in Radipole gardens

 

We’re very much encouraging wildlife into this area, very successfully as it happens.

But of course with some forms of wildlife comes a down side.

Squirrels are getting very fond of our garden, so much so they’ve dug up a few plants, bet they’ll think they’ve hit the jackpot when they discover the bulbs.

Plan B is to pot up a load too, to keep safe just in case.

Slow to the party were slugs and snails. Previously being a tarmac surface there’d been little to entice them, but now they’ve discovered our Dahlia’s…let’s just say they ended their year as doilies!

 

Salvia Black & Blue Radipole sensory garden October 2024

 

But there’s still colour in the garden, much of that down to Salvias and an abundance of the most enormous Cosmos I’ve ever seen!

 

Cosmos October 2024 Radipole sensory garden

 

As insurance we’ve taken loads of cuttings and this week volunteers gathered a ton of seeds, some to be sown now as they need chilling to germinate, others will wait for spring.

 

Seeds collected from Radipole sensory garden November 2024

 

(I know they’re in plastic zip bags but we’ve found that to be the easiest and safest way with cuttings and seeds until we can get them back and do what ever needs doing to them.)

So it’ll be very much a watch this space, as we will be eagerly over the winter months, awaiting spring for those survivors to peep through the soil.

Then it’ll be a hopefully much more cohesive and co-ordinated weekly schedule in place as we learn what works and doesn’t.

Thank goodness for volunteers who are worth their weight in gold, without them we couldn’t do what we do.

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Logo of friends of radipole park & gardens featuring a stylized green heart with a tree design and a figure holding a brass band instrument, alongside the organization's name in green and gray text.

are being supported by

Community & Heritage Lottery logo
Logo of Weymouth Town Council featuring three curved stripes in green, orange, and blue, forming an abstract circular design reminiscent of brass band music notes above the text "Weymouth Town Council.

 

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