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Gardening

Do you get emotionally attached to the plants in your garden ?

(18 Posts)
nanna8 Sat 04-Jul-26 01:31:32

I know every single plant and tree in our quarter acre block and get quite upset when one dies or fails to thrive. Nuts really. I also detest the oxalis which appears overnight after rainfall and threatens to swamp my ‘babies’ ! I used to have a very tall tree fern at the front and I still mourn the wretched thing. So much so that I have left the 8 foot trunk and grown a climbing plant up there. Is it just me or are others the same ?

Erica23 Sat 04-Jul-26 06:34:26

I’m very attached to two of my plants. My friends bought them as a birthday present and came and planted them for me as I’m not known for my green fingers.
The honeysuckle is not doing well and I'm gutted. They’re coming to see me next week, so I’m hoping there’s something that can be done 🤞

nanna8 Sat 04-Jul-26 08:01:07

Funny about honeysuckle. We had one for years and years just growing pretty wild in the back next to our deck but last year it just disappeared. Perhaps there is a worldwide honeysuckle bug around ?

Grammaretto Sat 04-Jul-26 08:10:15

I have a dying honeysuckle too. I think it's the dry weather. Their common name is woodbine and they are happiest in semi shade winding around trees.

Yes nanna8 I get very attached to plants.
I've struggled to grow Daphne and at last I have a successful one with a strong scent.

M0nica Sat 04-Jul-26 08:25:14

Not so much plants, as trees. In our last house for 25 of the 30 years we lived there, the back garden was dominated by a huge hazel tree, the largest the tree surgeon had ever seen.

It was about 70 feet from the house, smack in the middle of the lawn. All our rooms looked out onto the back lawn and could see it in all its beauty. Then one day I noticed a crack in one of the trunks.

I called in the tree surgeon, who went round the six intertwined trunks. he said hazel was not a long lived trees and there was rot in all the trunks. The tree needed to come down. So it came down and I wept.

The tree surgeon was right, even though it had only started to show in one trunk, all trunks had the first signs of rot. I started to grow the tree up again from the stump and had got about 10 shoots about 10 feet high when we moved.

Georgesgran Sat 04-Jul-26 08:30:52

Not to the general garden plants, but in tubs I’ve 2 hydrangeas given to me by a good friend who died in ‘23 and 2 rhododendrons which I took as cuttings from my Dads garden after he died in ‘07. I’ve asked the DDs to take one of each (if they’d like to) when the time comes to sell my house. There’s also a variegated poplar given to DH by his best friend, when we first moved here in ‘93, but that can’t be moved. Several people have asked for cuttings, which seem to root and grow well.

merlotgran Sat 04-Jul-26 08:44:05

The plant that means the most to me is Amicia zygomeris which came from The Manor at Hemingford Grey in 2018.

DD1 asked it’s name and misheard me thinking I said
‘I miss ya’ and laughed saying she wasn’t going anywhere.
She died six months later.

I’m always relieved and happy when ‘I miss ya’ reappears every spring.

Greyduster Sat 04-Jul-26 08:48:28

This garden has had several incarnations since we moved here, when there was virtually nothing in it at all. The only thing I would miss, and which are getting priority watering in this current dry spell, would be my collection of hostas, and a large pot of Agapanthus, both of which we brought from the lovely mature garden of our last house. I miss everything about that garden.

dragonfly46 Sat 04-Jul-26 08:49:33

Grammaretto I love Daphne we had a bush when I was growing up. It reminds me of the whip and top season. I now have 2 in my garden.

VANECAM Sat 04-Jul-26 08:59:18

I do feel a very strong feeling of responsibility for the plants in my care and as a result I become extraordinarily upset when a plant is lost. Is this “emotional attachment?”

David49 Sat 04-Jul-26 09:02:09

I must be because I spend hours every day tending to their every need, I love bomb them while they are with me, then when they die I take seed where I can and grow them again next year

Astitchintime Sat 04-Jul-26 09:23:08

I have self set forget-e-nots which as you’ll know are the emblem for Dementia and Alzheimer’s UK. They pop up in all sorts of places now and I’m devastated if I ever have to remove them for being in the wrong place.

Ziplok Sat 04-Jul-26 09:28:25

Yes, I do. There are some in particular which have special meaning and I do my best to ensure that they do well. It is always a bit sad when a favourite plant dies, but I use that as an excuse to replace it with something new 😁.

25Avalon Sat 04-Jul-26 09:30:34

Also plants from friends and families either as gifts or as off shoots from those growing in their gardens. I have mint and violets from my grandmother’s garden for example. I also buy plants that with special names such as the rose Sweet Honey in memory of my dog. I look after them all but those are extra special.

Nell82 Sat 04-Jul-26 09:35:43

I had an unusual hawthorn (crataegus x lavalleei ""Carrieri").
It was a magnet for bees, cats and birds and I was bereft when it had to be taken down.
The tree surgeon left me a section of the trunk. I offered the wood to a turner for free and in return he made me two bowls which I have as a memento.

Samsara1 Sat 04-Jul-26 09:40:01

I'm very attached to the roses because they were all bought for a reason and with a specific name.

SpinDriftCoastal Sat 04-Jul-26 09:41:37

Definitely. I had some lovely Corn Marigold in a side border and was going to collect the seeds for next year. I looked out the window and they were gone. Hubby decided to do a clearance of 'dead' plants!

ClicketyClick Sat 04-Jul-26 09:46:01

Oh definitely attached to plants that have been given to me or have come from late loved ones gardens. All hold dear memories.