I'm a complete novice gardener. But I've got a huge garden and so I try my best, I'm sort of the slash and burn type and I also make a lot of mistakes, that can usually (but not always) be corrected by moving a plant somewhere else etc. So I don't feel I usually do badly. I might have made an expensive error now though.....
I'm in the, very much not, sunny South East that has had almost constant rain for what feels like forever. Clay soil as is the norm here. Our, south facing, back garden is - I thought - very soggy. I didn't realise quite how bad it was until today when I've gone out to plant. It's utterly water logged! Even a smallish, shallowish, hole is filling with water as soon as it's dug. I should have checked it before buying, but I didn't.
And now I have a lot, and I mean a lot, of plants I have just bought and I'm not sure what to do for the best.
I have a lot of Dahlia bulbs that I won't attempt to plant out, I'm assuming the best thing is to plant in to pots for now and move on later when the rain has dissipated a little (and frosts aren't likely). Or should I keep them, unplanted, in the shed for a while, and plant straight out when the conditions improve? How long can I leave them, if so?
But what about all of the plants in pots? Huge selection, including Brunnera, Clematis, Kniphofia, Geums, Lupins, early Lavender, Alliums, Delphiniums, Silene, Foxgloves, Pulmonaria...and others. I do have an enormous compost heap ready for use, that was liberated from a huge unmanageable pile that must have been cooking for at least ten years - nice and crumbly. So should I dig holes and fill with the crumbly compost and plant now. Or should I leave them in the pots and keep watering them and hope the rain and water logging subsides within the next week or so?
Hoping someone with more knowledge can help me out with some advice before I waste all the money I've spent on the plants making an error.