Where gardens are small, one seems
to need window boxes more than where there is land
and to spare. They add to the number of one’s
flowers, and, if carefully looked after, decidedly
improve the appearance of a house. That is
a large “If” though, for unkempt boxes
only make it look untidy.
FLOWERS FIRST, BOX SECOND.Though
the tiled sort obtain a good deal of patronage, nothing
really looks much better than boxes covered with virgin
cork, if constantly renewed, for it acts as a foil
to the flowers, whereas patterned tiles are rather
apt to take one’s attention away from them.
In summer, certainly, they have the advantage of preserving
the earth in a moist condition, and in smoky towns
they help to give a bright, clean look to the houses
so decorated. Old-fashioned houses, however,
should always have their window boxes made in the virgin
cork style, as they accord better with their surroundings.
When strong wooden boxes have been
procured, it is quite easy to tack on the cork one’s
self, provided one has a sharp knife and a good supply
of long nails, and it is most fascinating work;
it is advisable to wear gloves during the process,
as the hands may become rough otherwise. Seven
pounds of the cork may be had for a shilling of any
seedsman, and three lots will do two boxes of the
average size. The soil should be fairly light, like
that used for potting, but before the boxes are filled,
several holes, bored with a red-hot poker, should be
made in the bottom, and a thin layer of “crocks”
spread over them; do not quite fill the box with soil,
but leave an inch or two free to allow of watering,
and even more if a layer of moss or cocoa-nut fibreis used to cover the surface of the soil; this is
certainly an improvement till the plants get large
enough to cover it themselves. Only artificial
manuresmust be used to fertilize the roots, and
even those must not be given too often, but only in
the hot weather, when growth is quick, as they are
stimulating to a great degree.
Constant renewals are necessary,
if the boxes are to look gay all the year round; even
the best gardeners acknowledge this. If continuous
bloomers are chosen, however, the cost is considerably
modified. Perhaps the winter shrubsare the
most expensive item; yet they are often chosen without
much regard to cheerfulness; indeed, the favourite
kinds present a most funereal appearance.
Aspecthas always a good deal to
do with the selection of plants, but in the case of
windows facing north and east, it is the cold winds
more than the absence of sun which restricts the choice.
Shelter is a great factor in their well-being.
SHOWY IN WINTER.In a cosy box with
a western exposure, and protected on the north, the
golden-tipped retinosporas make a pretty show
during the cold monthsof the year, and form a welcome
change from the prevailing dark green tones. Cotoneasters,
pernettyas, and the variegated euonymus
are also very suitable. The polypody ferns, being
evergreen, look very well too, and will thrive facing
all four points of the compass. In the spring,
dwarf wall-flowers, interspersed with different
kinds of bulbs, make the boxes look bright, and the
new pyrus maulei is also very pretty at this
season. The perennial candytuft, too, is a
splendid flower for late spring, particularly iberis
correafolia, which has a neat habit, and bears
quantities of snow-white flowers; it likes sun, and
not too much moisture. The yellow jasmine, which
is so pretty in winter, looks extremely well when
allowed to droop over the edges of a box, as it flowers
in quite a young state. The mossy saxifrages
are suitable for the edges of the box, and are always
ornamental; their charming white flowers, supported
on red stalks, appear about May.
Such bulbsas the Duc Van
Thol tulips are very bright, and mix well with the
shrubs; they should be put in some time in October.
Crocuseslook well, too, but should not be placed
in the same box as the tulips, or too gaudy an appearance
will result. A thick planting along the front
of the box of the Starch hyacinth muscari is
uncommon, and an exceedingly nice thing to have,
as the moment the window is open fragrant whiffs,
resembling new-mown hay, pour into the room, especially
on a sunny morning. When these bulbs have to
make way for the summer flowers, it is advisable to
plant them out in the garden and use another lot next
year, as the constant transplantation somewhat weakens
them. Of course, one could leave them in the
box during the summer, if it were not for the unsightly
decaying leaves, which must on no account be cut off.
About the middle of May for the South
of England, and a fortnight later for the North, is
the time to furnish the boxes for the summer.
If the window is small, low-growing plants and trailers
should prevail.
FOR COLD ASPECTS.Some good flowers
for north and east aspects are fuschias, calceolarias,
begonias, and the lovely white campanula
isophylla; the latter thrives best in such conditions,
bearing finer flowers for a much greater length of
time than where the sun scorches it. These plants
accord well with stucco, which serves to show up their
whiteness more than anything. Marguerites, yellow
and white, also thrive in the cooler windows of a
house, and are not so exigent in the matter of watering
when so placed. When selecting begoniasfor boxes it is well to choose the single varieties
with moderate-sized blossoms; the big flabby ones
soon become spoilt by rain, and are not produced so
freely, nor is their habit of growth so good.
For hot situationsthe double geraniums
are splendid, but they should not be mixed with lobelias,
as they look infinitely better when grouped by themselves,
the shades ranging from dark crimson to the palest
salmon-pink.
PRETTY TRAILERS.The quick-growing
tradescantia with its many-jointed stems and
glossy bright green leaves, softens the somewhat formal
appearance of the geraniums, and will cover all the
bare soil in a marvellously short space of time, and
droop over the edges in long streamers; it is quite
distinct from the tall tradescantias mentioned
in a former chapter, and is the easiest thing in the
world to propagate, as any little bits saved over
from a bouquet will make roots in a bowl of water,
or they can be “struck” in the ordinary
way in a pot under glass. The variegated tradescantia
is a very choice trailer, but a little more tender
than the other, and requires a sunny position, while
the plain green variety will do anywhere outside in
the summer, even growing well under trees.
For autumnthere are the hardy
chrysanthemums, and if dwarf varieties with fibrous
roots are chosen, a very good show can be made with
these till the middle or end of November. The
protection afforded them by the house keeps them in
good condition longer than when they are in the open,
especially when a thin veiling, such as tiffany, is
afforded them on cold nights. Even newspapers
will keep out several degrees of frost, and form a
very cheap method of protection.