cut flower season

A bright arrangement of colorful flowers in various vases placed near a window, with natural light illuminating the scene.

I had a fairly rubbish June, which was not improved by birthday migraines and a couple of painful falls. But! July is here, I’m walking again, and my garden is well and truly blooming.

A top-down view of a bouquet featuring sweet peas, lavender, and white dianthus arranged in a rustic setting with wooden surfaces.

My favourite flowers are sweet peas, which I love for many reasons: for the gorgeous, ungainly shapes they throw, for their sugary pastel shades, and for their scent, both utterly delicious and quite unlike any other flower. Sweet peas are immediately Proustian for me, recalling memories of childhood summers, my grandma and grandad’s garden, and the seasonal treats of the community flower and produce shows I later enjoyed as a allotmenteering student.

A close-up of a peach-colored sweet pea flower surrounded by lavender and other blooms in soft focus, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere.

I think that there’s something very special about sweet peas – you can’t buy them in a florist and are only ever likely to acquire a posy from your own garden or that of a generous neighbour. But in fact, that’s what makes them such simple, everyday, blooms as well: raised by countless British gardeners every year from seed, they are perhaps our definitive home-grown flower. Who doesn’t love a bunch of sweet peas in a little vase?

Close-up of delicate lavender sweet pea flowers alongside lavender stems, with soft natural lighting in the background.

Having got them in too late in 2024 my sweet peas were somewhat disappointing, but they are looking much better this year, with new blooms appearing every day.

A close-up of a bouquet featuring delicate sweet pea flowers in pastel shades, accompanied by sprigs of lavender and other garden blooms.

I pick them as they come, and arrange them inside, where their delicious scent wafts by every time I pass the kitchen window.

A bouquet of colorful flowers including sweet peas, lavender, and other blooms arranged in a simple vase on a wooden table, illuminated by natural light.

I’m enjoying arranging them with other garden flowers, both cultivated and self-seeded. In this wee jug, for example, there’s the sea campion (silene maritima) I planted in the gravel last year (to echo the flora of our nearby beaches) . . .

A beautifully arranged vase of colorful flowers including lavender and sweet peas, sitting on a windowsill with soft sunlight illuminating the scene.

. . . alongside some big white clover blossoms, which have appeared at the front of one border, and which I like, as well as being good for the soil.

A close-up of a vase made of textured material, filled with colorful flowers including sweet peas and lavender, on a sunlit wooden table near a window.

There are also a few sprigs of lavender (which is really thriving), and a few of the precious pinwheel-type white dianthus which the previous gardener planted here and which have the most extraordinary scent.

A bouquet of mixed flowers, including sweet peas, lavender, and white dianthus, arranged in a rustic ceramic jug on a wooden surface, with sunlight casting shadows across the scene.

Can I briefly sing the praises of the cottage garden dianthus?

A colorful arrangement of flowers in a ceramic jug, illuminated by sunlight streaming through a window, with shadows creating diagonal patterns on the surface.

I feel they are a somewhat unfashionable flower – rarely spotted in show gardens, discussed on tv programmes, or featured in gardening magazines. Perhaps they have suffered from their inescapable associations with late-night-garage floral offerings and 1980s buttonholes.

A bouquet of various flowers in a metallic jug, casting intricate shadows on a wooden surface, with sunlight streaming in from a nearby window.

But dianthus are reliable, hardy, easy to grow . . .

A colorful bouquet of flowers featuring pink and purple blooms, daisies, and delicate stems, arranged in a silver jug with sunlight illuminating the scene.

. . . their grey-green leaves and graceful branching stems look great in border, pot or vase . . .

A vase filled with a colorful arrangement of flowers, including pinks, white daisies, and purple blooms, placed on a wooden table near a window, casting soft shadows into the room.

they come in a range of fabulous shades (I’m a sucker for any dusty pink variety, of which I’ve planted several)

A vibrant bouquet of mixed flowers, including pink dianthus, white daisies, and lavender, placed in a decorative jug on a windowsill, illuminated by soft sunlight.

. . .and they smell amazing.

A vase filled with colorful flowers, including pink carnation, white daisies, and delicate blooms, set against a sunlit window.

This vase also includes some red campion (silene dioica) and a delicately peach-coloured variety of linaria, both of which I’ve allowed to self-seed in the gravel. There are also some ox eye daisies (leucanthemum vulgare), a ubiquitous feature of every Kintyre hedgerow and whose wish to define the outer edges of our gardens I and my neighbours all seem to enjoy.

A vase filled with a variety of colorful flowers including roses, daisies, and lavender, set against a softly lit background.

I’ll conclude my cut-flower encomium with the roses, which are having an extraordinary summer, and whose garden delights I’m feel that I’m discovering for the first time.

A bouquet of pink and red flowers arranged in a decorative vase, positioned next to a window with soft sunlight illuminating the scene.

Earlier in the year, I inexpertly pruned, tied in, and fed them and yet have been rewarded with so many flowers: some dense with ruffles, others loose and blousy.

A close-up of pink and red flowers, including a soft pink rose and a bright red carnation, illuminated by warm natural light.

The roses are completely glorious, but to this rose-novice somewhat confusing: they’ve all got different stem-types and different habits, some are lithe, some bushy, some just keep on growing upwards, some need lots of support, some less.

A vase filled with a variety of colorful flowers, including pink and red blooms, placed near a window with sunlight casting shadows on the surface.

What distinguishes a hybrid tea rose from a damask, a climber from a rambler? I have bought a weighty rose-related tome, and hope to be enlightened. In the meantime, I’m just really enjoying the gorgeous summer gift of them – whether cascading over a wall, illuminating a border, or sitting in a vase, filling the air with their light fragrance.

A vase filled with various colorful flowers including pink and red roses, lavender, and other blooms, casting shadows on a yellow wall.

Many thanks to Tom for complementing my current cut-flower obsession with fabulous floral photography! I’ll conclude with a heads-up for some actual knitting content: do keep your eyes peeled this weekend for news of our colour-filled KDD summer knitalong.


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