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My Garden Journal 2025 November

A month late publishing this visit to my garden journal, but I have only just realised that I have not published it. It is in fact almost time to share my December post about our garden.

We expect the garden to show many changes during November because it starts off feeling very autumnal but by the end it gets much more wintry. But of course the way in which our climate is changing it is impossible to predict anythingto do with our weather.

On my first page of November notes I began by saying, “It is now November and the days are getting shorter and overall darker. Nevertheless we find time to work in the garden.”

“We finished bubble wrapping the greenhouse, tidied the ‘Winter Garden’ and planted up a small rectangular border by the new shed.”

“The new shed is now finished apart from fitting out the potting shed end and glazing its window. The water butt also needs connecting to the guttering and down pipes. We added dozens of bulbs to some of our borders. A great way of looking forward!”

Over onto the next page I looked at the ‘Shade Garden’ and noted that, “I rarely feature the ‘Shade Garden’ in my journal but it really looks wonderful at this time of year and onwards into winter. Our ferns add so much to this space with so many different foliage shapes and textures. The climbers on the wooden fence, ivies, clematis, honeysuckle and Hydrangea petiolaris remain full of interest.’

The photos below show some of the many plants in the ‘Shade Garden’ and a few shrubs which grow just as the ‘Shade Garden’ melds into the ‘Rill Garden’.

The ‘Shade Garden’ plants continue onto the page opposite. I noted that, “Blue ceramic meconopsis contrast beautifully with the autumnal yellow foliage of the climbing hydrangea. These ceramic meconopsis poppies were made by artist Anna Whitehouse. Clematis look so good at the end of their season and honeysuckle give colour in their berries and flowers.”

We move on now to look at grasses that we grow. “Grasses are one of my favourite plant families and they are such an important element in our November garden. Their foliage take on gentle colours from bone white to oranges and golds. They provide so much colour, form and texture as well as being important to wildlife. They become shelter for insects and invertebrates. Larvae survive the winter by hiding in the base of grasses. Birds also feed off the seed heads in particular goldfinches.”

In the autumn every patch of colour becomes important, so on the next page I wrote, “Everywhere I look in the garden in mid-November I can appreciate little patches of colour mostly from foliage but an occasional flower adds to each scene. Earlier the whole garden featured bright autumn foliage colours, but a recent storm, Storm Claudia roared through our patch removing most leaves which had given us colour. So now we have tree silhouettes with a few scattered leaves.”

The photos on this page were mostly taken in the Rill Garden.

My final page for November considers our garden wildlife. I noted that, “Wildlife goes quiet at this time of year apart from the wintry, watery song of the robins. Now both males and females have their own territories so sing to let others know. We see wrens about a lot now as they move silently from plant to plant in search of insects. Buzzards and red kites are seen regularly, with a group of five kite seen low flying over the fields of the organic farmer as they feed their land. They are joined by gulls which regularly fly overhead now. Bumble Bees and wasps still feed on warmer days, attracted to various different mahonias which are flowering well at this time of year. We are surprised to see caterpillars out and about while we work in the borders. We regularly spot voles and shrews scurrying between cover.”

“As we clear fallen leaves off lawns and off plants in borders we make leaf piles up against our fences and in densely planted borders to provide safe winter hibernation spaces for our hedgehogs”

So that is it for my journal entries for November. But there are a few words to add, “At the end of the month we found a hedgehog’s hibernaculum beneath our log pile close to our front door.”

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Bridgemere Show Gardens in November

While planning our November visit to the show gardens at Bridgemere Garden Centre, we did not know what to expect as we were moving out of autumn and moving more into winter.

As usual we started off by looking at “The Cottage Garden” which had been subjected to a big tidy up! Bare soil has been forked over and any weeds removed.

I love gardens in winter and I even enjoy gardening in this season too! When people ask what my favourite season in the garden is or what my favourite season for being out in our garden or for gardening is,I always surprise them when my answer is ‘Winter’.

I love tree silhouettes against interesting looking skies, or when winter light hits their trunks or lower boughs.

Betulas are such potent elements in the winter garden. As well as giving us great sihouettes they are lit up by winter sunlight.

In complete contrast to silhouettes and bare stems evergreens, especially variegated ones add colour and again are very good at catching the light and when they do turning foliage glossy. This is especially true of hollies, and some will also show brightly coloured berries.

The Ilex called ‘Ferox’ catches a lot of light because the foliage is so curled and its prickles have prickles on them. Not a holly to get too close to! The right hand photo below shows how strong some holly variegation is with such extreme contrast of colours.

Grasses seem to be strong features here most months of the year and at this time of year the rays of the low winter sun light them up really brightly.

There were still enough flowers to give colour in November and these were mostly on shrubs but there was one surprising bulb in its full glory.

Fruits looked colourful now on trees and shrubs from the smallest berries to tasty looking apples still hanging on some trained trees. The first photo shows a heavy fruiting crab apple in a rich orange colour.

It seems a good time to finish this post about our November visit to Bridgemere Show Gardens after looking at some tasty looking apples. The next post will be the last for this year so we will be looking out for a garden to visit which opens all year.

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Winkworth Arboretum

We have never been to an arboretum quite like this before. There is no big carpark, no impressive welcoming signage, no fancy visitor centre with comfortable restaurant. Instead we parked roadside on a area of gravel, a sail flag as a sign and after a few yards found a clearing in the trees with a shed acting as ticket office and cafe. This was not like any National Trust property we had visited before. Picnic benches were scattered in the clearing – all very rustic really but the area had its own charm. It didn’t matter being outside with our coffees because our visit was much earlier this year as you will tell by which shrubs are in flower. So we enjoyed a very good coffee while listening to birdsong as we waited for my brother Graham to arrive as he lived close by and had enjoyed his several previous visits here.

Looking at the very good map supplied we soon realised Winkworth was going to be an excellent day out. We knew we could rely on Graham to be our local guide. It had a very atmospheric feel to it as we started off following a rough track trying to follow our chosen route. In places the track had been eroded by heavy rain and feet.

We love fastigiate trees and have several in our own garden so we were pleased to spot this specimen in a small clearing. With clear blue skies above we were walking over shadows created by dappled shade and here we could smell the strong aroma of our native Wild Garlic. Most flowers if they smell are best described as scented but not these alliums. They definitely had an odour! These were not flowers deserving of a close up look!

Whenever I walk beneath trees I try to take a photo looking straight up to the converging tree tops. The foliage was so bright when the sun caught it. In this clearing the main flower giving a blue haze is our native Bluebell which is worth a close look and then their unforgettable scent can be fully enjoyed.

In any woodland there are unexpected delights that attract our eyes, a burl on a tree trunk, or a carved tawny owl on another tree trunk or ferns decorating tree roots alongside the track.

An opening on our left afforded us a colouful view of the valley down below, the colours coming from azaleas in a multitude of bright colours. The narrow track took us slowly down to the colours, passing a few acers on the way, with deeply cut leaves creating a lace effect.

The brightest flowers were on this orange deciduous azalea. We like the deciduous varieties far more than the evergreens and grow a few in our own garden.

We walked along the flat of the valley bottom where the path felt much more level. We continued until we spotted a colourful patch of yellows and oranges partway up the valley side.

We slowly made our way up the slope until we realised that all the colour that we had spotted was another patch of deciduous azaleas. Their scent reached us before we had reached them.

We then made our way back to the car, after a wonderful day at this unique arboretum which felt more like a woodland garden. There were no identity labels on any of the shrubs and trees so it didn’t feel like an arboretum. Of course we also enjoyed spending time with my brother who loves trees as much as we do.

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