Categories
autumn autumn colours flowering bulbs garden design garden photography gardening grasses hardy perennials light light quality ornamental grasses ornamental trees and shrubs outdoor sculpture photography roses shrubs

Aiming for an all year round garden – our garden in October

We are now into autumn and the trees are looking very undecided about what to do with their leaves. Some trees are already showing their Autumn hues but some are still displaying their summer greens. The wind as usual blows hard in October and snatches coloured leaves off all too early but does make colourful “carpets” beneath.

Off into the garden with camera in hand in a break in the gloomy light I shot a series of photos to give you an idea of what is going on in our garden in October.

I have decided to single out one plant which has started flowering just the last few days whereas its cousins flowered months ago. It is a Toad Lily – Trycirtis hirta variegata. The flowers are much paler than our other varieties of Trycirtis but they do still have the lovely marking typical of the family. Flowering this late does mean though that the flowers are viewed against foliage that is not at its best, with the gold edged variegation looking very faded.

2014 10 21_6104 2014 10 21_61052014 10 21_6106

The best way for me to show you our October garden is probably via a gallery. So please just click on the first shot and navigate with the arrows. And enjoy!

Categories
allotments autumn community gardening fruit and veg garden photography gardening gardens ornamental trees and shrubs trees

Crab Apple Jelly

We have a beautiful and very productive crab apple tree at the bottom of our garden. It provides useful shade in the summer for the chickens but for us it provides a wonderful and very heavy harvest. Being a Malus “Butterball” it has pendular branches each giving us masses of small yellow fruits which are all blushed orange or red. It is a beautiful ornamental tree as well as being productive.

We never need to harvest many branches so the majority of the fruit is left for the local Blackbirds and Mistle Thrushes early in the autumn and the few they leave will be gorged by visiting thrushes, the Redwings and Fieldfares from the colder continent.

2014 10 07_5830 2014 10 07_5831 2014 10 07_5832

This year we have decided to make Crab Apple Jelly flavoured with cloves to use up some of the fruit.

2014 10 07_5828 2014 10 07_5829 2014 10 07_5836 2014 10 09_5904

We have another much younger Crab Apple, a purely ornamental variety close to the path that meanders between the Bog Garden and the Prairie Garden. It has masses of scented pink and white flowers in early spring followed in late summer by orange/red tiny fruits. It grows among cerise flowered Lychnis coronaria and various ornamental grasses.

2014 10 07_5835 2014 10 07_5834 2014 10 07_5833

In the communal gardens at our allotment site, Bowbrook Allotment Community, we grow several varieties of Crabs as ornamental trees and to act as reliable long flowering pollinators for our orchard apples. And they work. Since we added these Crab trees the yields from the orchards have noticeably increased.

2014 10 08_5854 2014 10 08_5855 2014 10 08_5858 2014 10 08_5860 2014 10 08_5862 2014 10 08_5864 2014 10 08_5865 2014 10 08_5866

Categories
autumn autumn colours colours fruit and veg garden design garden designers garden photography gardening gardens gardens open to the public grasses hardy perennials Italian style gardens light light quality meadows ornamental grasses ornamental trees and shrubs photography Piet Oudolf shrubs Staffordshire Tom Stuart-Smith trees

A garden in September – Trentham

So here we are back for the September visit to the wonderful gardens at Trentham. We arrived in bright sunshine which was a big change to the usual weather on our visits here. Usually we get wet but today looked set fair with blue sky with just a scattering of white clouds. As we walked over the bridge into the gardens we looked down into the River Trent below to see it swollen with floodwater and carrying much dirt in its wake. The water of the Trent flowed brown and the grasses of Piet Oudolf’s River of Grasses refleced this colour.

2014 09 30_5360 2014 09 30_5361

Moving into Oudolf’s Prairie there was much more variety in the colours although grasses remained powerful elements. The tall herbaceous perennials were showing deepening colours as autumn approaches. Rich rubies, purples and blues were, in places, lit up by the crisp white of the Seleniums and sunny yellows of Solidago.

2014 09 30_5364 2014 09 30_5365 2014 09 30_5366 2014 09 30_5367 2014 09 30_5368 2014 09 30_5369 2014 09 30_5370 2014 09 30_53712014 09 30_5372 2014 09 30_5373 2014 09 30_5374 2014 09 30_5375 2014 09 30_5377 2014 09 30_5376 2014 09 30_5378 2014 09 30_5379

Leaving the subtle but at the same time exciting Prairie we wandered off towards the Italian Garden with its traditional style of planting. We passed through a Hornbeam tunnel where the autumnal light played with shadows. Leaving its coolness our eyes were assaulted by Begonias and brightly leaved bananas.

2014 09 30_5380 2014 09 30_5382 2014 09 30_5381

We always look forward to our first glimpse of the delights that await us in Tom Stuart-Smith’s Italianate parterres. Looking from the balustrade the view spread out below in the geometric beds promised so much of interest, while a quick glance below showed bursts of red Dahlias and yellow Rudbeckias.

2014 09 30_5383 2014 09 30_5385

2014 09 30_5386 2014 09 30_5384

Once down among the many beds we soon discovered just what flowers were giving us the colourful sights.

2014 09 30_5392 2014 09 30_5390

These colours were enriched all the more by the russets and chocolates of the grasses and seed heads of perennials such as Phlomis and Verbascums.

2014 09 30_5387 2014 09 30_5388 2014 09 30_5389  2014 09 30_5391  2014 09 30_5393 2014 09 30_5394

We reluctantly left the Tom S-S plantings behind us and ambled off through the tall trees of the old parkland towards the display gardens. We glanced at the early autumn colours of Prunus trees between the silver bark of the trunks of Betula. Some Betula trunks were showing their great age and their textures contrasted strongly with their younger smoother neighbours.

2014 09 30_5395 2014 09 30_5396

 

Rhus trees were showing deep orange foliage which matched the petals of a lovely Dahlia.

2014 09 30_5397 2014 09 30_5398

Elsewhere another Rhus partnered a red leaved Cotinus. Coloured glass leaves atop silver stems added more colour close by.

2014 09 30_5402 2014 09 30_5403

White and purple spires of Actaea caught the light.

2014 09 30_5399 2014 09 30_5400

In the Allotment Garden orange globes of pumpkins were drying in the sun and heat of this Indian Summer.

2014 09 30_5401

After a light lunch we made our way towards the Rose Walk to see how things had changed since our visit last month. We passed back through some of the Tom S-S borders where we were drawn for a closer look towards the long thin seed pods of Amsonias.

2014 09 30_5405 2014 09 30_5404

Seedheads and dying flower heads of many different perennials and grasses were so enthralling that our walk back through these borders took rather longer than anticipated.

 

 

2014 09 30_5406 2014 09 30_5407 2014 09 30_5408 2014 09 30_5409 2014 09 30_5410 2014 09 30_5416

2014 09 30_5412 2014 09 30_5413 2014 09 30_5414 2014 09 30_5417

 

2014 09 30_5418 2014 09 30_5419

A long line of thin rectangular borders designed by Piet Oudolf act as a link between the Tom S-S garden and the Rose Walk. Here colour abounded.

 

 

2014 09 30_5420 2014 09 30_5421 2014 09 30_5422 2014 09 30_5423

In the Rose Walk itself most rose bushes were still in flower and tall flowers such as Cleome and Verbena bonariensis added even more colour.

 

2014 09 30_5424

We enjoyed the views from the Rose Walk back towards Oudolf’s Prairie and River of Grasses. We could also see the shrubs growing alongside it including a spectacular deciduous Euonymous with orange and red fruits.

 

2014 09 30_5425 2014 09 30_5426 2014 09 30_5427 2014 09 30_5428 2014 09 30_5363 2014 09 30_5363_edited-1

 

So this Indian Summer we are enjoying provided us with great light to view the gardens at Trentham but the strange seasons mean that many perennials and grasses were far more autumnal than we could have expected. Next month’s return to Trentham may well show Trentham to be well in the grip of Autumn.

 

 

Categories
autumn autumn colours colours fruit and veg garden design garden photography gardening gardens hardy perennials Shropshire

Aiming for an all year round garden – our garden in September 2

From the beginning to the end the month of September saw great changes as autumn began to show its glory. There may be fewer flowers out in this month but every one seems richer in colour and texture, and the greens of the foliage gets paler making way for yellows, oranges and reds to creep in.

Enjoy a journey around our garden in the final few days of September. Just click on any image to enter the slide show and click on the right arrow to move on through.

Categories
autumn countryside nature reserves photography reflections trees wildlife woodland

Our First Woodland Walk of the Autumn – Part Three

2013 10 06_4162_edited-1

We begin part three just as we draw close to the lake itself. The trees dripped with more moss and the fungi seemed to get more colourful.

2013 10 06_4154 2013 10 06_4155 2013 10 06_4156 2013 10 06_4157

2013 10 06_4173 2013 10 06_4174

2013 10 06_4111 2013 10 06_4114_edited-1

2013 10 06_4175

We reached the lakeside where we found the calm surface created the clearest of reflections.

2013 10 06_4159 2013 10 06_4160 2013 10 06_4162 2013 10 06_4163 2013 10 06_4164 2013 10 06_4165_edited-12013 10 06_4165

Our return journey along the woodland path afforded us glimpses of the hills that surround the lake and its wooded fringes.

2013 10 06_4166 2013 10 06_4167

2013 10 06_4170

2013 10 06_4169  2013 10 06_4171   2013 10 06_4168

So our memories of this lovely woodland walk have helped us escape the wild, wet and windy days of January. Now we can look forward to a warmer and brighter spring leading to an even warmer and even brighter summer!

Categories
autumn autumn colours countryside landscapes light light quality nature reserves photography Powis Powys reflections reservoirs trees wildlife woodland

Our First Woodland Walk of Autumn – Part Two

Back to Vyrnwy the woodland nature reserve of the RSPB based around a huge reservoir, where we continue our walk enjoying the sights, scents and sounds of an autumn wood.

We moved on to where the path turns a corner and we cross a tiny stream over a wooden bridge. Today the bridge looked very different. Each side was covered in a growth of ginger brown fungi. We were literally stopped in our tracks in amazement! We had never before seen such a sight and probably never will again.

2013 10 06_4128 2013 10 06_4127 2013 10 06_4129 2013 10 06_4130 2013 10 06_4131 2013 10 06_4132 2013 10 06_4133 2013 10 06_4136

In the close vicinity the atmosphere was so humid that you could feel the dampness in the air. Moss enjoyed the sauna-like conditions and grew on tree trunks. The trunks dripped with the moss, making them look like little green figures beneath the trees. We continued to find a variety of fungi some of which grew high off the ground. One in particular looked as if a frisbee had been thrown so fiercely that it had dug deep into the tree trunk.

2013 10 06_4134 2013 10 06_4135 2013 10 06_4143

2013 10 06_4146 2013 10 06_4145

2013 10 06_4137 2013 10 06_4138

The humidity here, partnered with the bright light creeping through the branches, made the shades of greens and brown glow richly.

2013 10 06_4139 2013 10 06_4140 2013 10 06_4141 2013 10 06_4142  2013 10 06_4144   2013 10 06_4147 2013 10 06_4148 2013 10 06_4149 2013 10 06_4150 2013 10 06_4152 2013 10 06_4153

The air got damper and the shafts of sunlight lower as we passed this old moss-covered stone wall and reached the lake. We shall find the lake in the third and final part of my First Woodland Walk of Autumn – Part Three.

Categories
autumn autumn colours colours countryside light light quality nature reserves photography wildlife woodland

Our First Woodland Walk for Autumn – Part One

When the winter weather gets a bit grim for too many days in a row it is good to look back and remember good days out.

We look forward to our woodland walks each autumn. This year we started early as we enjoyed a great day wandering the woodlands around Lake Vyrnwy in mid-Wales. We made this foray early because we had a specific reason for going. We were in search of cones and bits of bark to use on our “Homes for Wildlife” day up on our allotments later in October when we intended to make lots of extra insect shelters and a big insect hotel.

We chose to walk in a section of tall statuesque conifers all with tall straight trunks and dark green glossy needles clothing their stems.

2013 10 06_4113 2013 10 06_4120 2013 10 06_4170 2013 10 06_4169 2013 10 06_4168 2013 10 06_4171

It was a warm bright day so the woodland was pierced with sharp rays of sunshine, highlighting fungi amongst the ferns and brambles at the base of the trees and adding magic to the fresh new colours of autumn.

Fungi are the stars of the autumn woodland. We usually start looking out for them in September but with the seasons being a good four weeks behind this year we found our first here at Vyrnwy.

We stopped off in a clearing in the woods around the lake, a favourite place for our walks. A clear, fast-running mountain stream passes alongside and we always look to see what the floods from recent storms have brought down. A beautiful gnarled stump with delicate ferns on top sats close to our bank. A little further along a big branch pulled from a bankside tree was lodged in the middle of the stream caught in the overhanging branches of a tall tree.

2013 10 06_4092 2013 10 06_4093 2013 10 06_4095 2013 10 06_4096 2013 10 06_4097

2013 10 06_4098 2013 10 06_4099 2013 10 06_4100 2013 10 06_4101 2013 10 06_4102

We hadn’t been many yards wandering down the narrow path with its surface softened by pine needles, when we realised that fungi time was here! We looked forward to seeking out specimens along the way. They turned up mostly at the base of trees or growing on old rotting tree stumps.

2013 10 06_4103 2013 10 06_4104

2013 10 06_4105 2013 10 06_4106 2013 10 06_4107  2013 10 06_4109 2013 10 06_4110

With the fungi we found juicy Blackberries growing, their berries glowing in any shaft of light that found its way through the canopy.

2013 10 06_4108 2013 10 06_4112

As we moved further into the wood we found more and more fungi of varying oranges, yellows and browns.

2013 10 06_4114 2013 10 06_4115     2013 10 06_4121  2013 10 06_4123 2013 10 06_4124 2013 10 06_4125

Tree trunks themselves had areas of colour upon them, algae, mosses, lichen and seeping resins.

2013 10 06_4116 2013 10 06_4122

2013 10 06_4117 2013 10 06_4119

2013 10 06_4118

Little did we know that we had the biggest surprise of all awaiting for us as we walked around the next corner. But that story is in my next post, “Our First Woodland Walk for Autumn – Part Two”.

Categories
autumn autumn colours colours garden design garden photography gardening gardens gardens open to the public grasses ornamental grasses ornamental trees and shrubs outdoor sculpture Powis Powys trees Winter Gardening winter gardens woodland

Another visit to The Dingle

Just half an hour drive from our home is the Welsh town of Welshpool and close to it the wonderful gardens and family owned and run nursery at The Dingle. It is a garden on a slope with paths taking you on a gentle downhill journey to the bottom of the valley where a lake awaits with its colourful reflections. The Dingle is a woodland garden situated in a Welsh valley and boasts its own nursery which specialises in trees but stocks equally varied quality herbaceous plants, grasses and shrubs.

2013 11 16_5136

Whatever season you visit this gem of a garden there is so much to appreciate, especially shrubs and small trees. Around every corner the visiting gardener can find inspiration that stimulate fresh ideas to use.

2013 11 16_5112 2013 11 16_5113

Contrasts in foliage colour and texture are evident in the carefully chosen groupings of shrubs and small trees.

2013 11 16_5115 2013 11 16_5116

2013 11 16_5122 2013 11 16_5123

2013 11 16_5125

Of equal importance are the specimen trees and shrubs, the ones that need to be appreciated for their individual beauty. The beauty in autumn is in the leaf colour and in the colour, texture and patterns of the bark.

2013 11 16_5164 2013 11 16_5127

2013 11 16_5124 2013 11 16_5128

2013 11 16_5129

2013 11 16_5118 2013 11 16_5119 2013 11 16_5126

2013 11 16_5131 2013 11 16_5132

2013 11 16_5133 2013 11 16_5134

The trouble with gardens so full of special trees and shrubs is that you can forget to look down or to look at the detail right in front of your nose, flowers at ground level such as the Liriope, bright berries dangling at branches’ end and grasses that wave their flower heads at you in the gentlest breeze.

2013 11 16_5117 2013 11 16_5135

2013 11 16_5130

But there is so much to see around every corner, at your feet, just in front of you and way up high. Come with us now as we wander slowly down the gently sloping gravel paths through beautifully varied plantings of trees and shrubs with occasional flowering plants at our feet. Just click on the first photo and then use the right arrow to navigate. Enjoy the Dingle! Look out for my brother-in-law Tony lurking in the bushes with camera in hand! He is hard to spot even though he is in a brightly coloured yellow jacket.

Categories
autumn autumn colours birds climbing plants colours garden photography garden wildlife gardening gardens grasses hardy perennials migration ornamental trees and shrubs poppies roses trees wildlife Winter Gardening

A Garden Bouquet for December

Already we are almost at the end of the year so here is my December bouquet from our garden,the final chapter in 2013.

2013 12 12_5469_edited-1

It is only mid-December and while in the garden we are treated to the beautiful repetitive piping call of a Song Thrush, already making his territorial proclamation. He must have found a mighty fine territory which he is making sure no-one else can take possession of.

The skies seem full of passing flocks of Redwing and their larger noisier cousins the Fieldfare on migration, escaping their cold food-less summer homes in central Europe. Below them exploring the trees and shrubs of our garden mixed foraging flocks of finches seek out the last of the seeds and berries while amongst them groups of Titmice, Great, Blue, Long-tailed and Coal arrive in hurried flight to explore every nook and cranny of dried stems, tree bark and shrub branches for insects especially spiders.

A few delicate looking soft coloured flowers still hang on determined to be the final blooms of the year. It seems amazing but the odd big bumbling Queen Bumble Bee appears to feed on them.

2013 12 12_5438 2013 12 12_5440

2013 12 12_5444 2013 12 12_5452

2013 12 12_5462 2013 12 12_5463

2013 12 12_5468 2013 12 12_5471

Berries on shrubs and small trees add extra sparkles of colour but the resident Mistle Thrushes guard them from the migrant thrushes. They are the larder for the colder days to come. The red fruit of the Cotoneasters, Hollies and Rowans will be eaten first and most will have been devoured by the thrushes and Blackbirds before the month is out. The creamy-yellow berries of the Cotoneaster rothschildiana will stay longer being mere second choices. The last to go without fail will be the white berries of the Sorbus, so we can get to enjoy them against dark winter storm clouds before the birds eat them.

2013 12 12_5445 2013 12 12_5446

2013 12 12_5454 2013 12 12_5472

2013 12 12_5479 2013 12 12_5445_edited-1

At this time of year we can enjoy the dessicated seed heads and old flower heads that have managed to survive the wet times that autumn invariably brings. This year has been so wet that we seem to have fewer still standing than ever before. But a few are putting on a display for us and when covered in a frosty layer or when donning a hat made of snow will look even better. Within them are the remnant autumn leaves as yet to be blown from their branches by blasts of wind.

2013 12 12_5439   2013 12 12_5442    2013 12 12_5447 2013 12 12_5448 2013 12 12_5449 2013 12 12_5450 2013 12 12_5451

2013 12 12_5453 2013 12 12_5457 2013 12 12_5459 2013 12 12_5460  2013 12 12_5465 2013 12 12_5466 2013 12 12_5467

2013 12 12_5469 2013 12 12_5470 2013 12 12_5475 2013 12 12_5474 2013 12 12_5473   2013 12 12_5477 2013 12 12_5478   2013 12 12_5448_edited-1

Signs of next year’s growth are already in evidence like this adventurous bud found on a clematis snuggled between stem and petioles.

2013 12 12_5441

Patterns become important in winter as they emerge from seasons hidden away behind plants. So that is the end of my year of garden bouquets for 2013. Perhaps they will return for 2014.

2013 12 12_5460_edited-1 2013 12 12_5459_edited-1 2013 12 12_5464_edited-1

Categories
arboreta autumn memorials poppies remembrance trees woodland

The National Memorial Arboretum Part Two

We return in this second post about the National Memorial Arboretum where we left off.

2013 11 30_5345_edited-1

This was a quiet place, full of bird song and the quiet voices of the visitors deeply affected by the sense of the place.

2013 11 30_5380

Seats to sit upon

to sit and think

to sit and to remember

lost ones.

Share now a few images of the place to show its variety, its beauty and its sadness.

2013 11 30_5372  2013 11 30_5386 2013 11 30_5387 2013 11 30_5385

 2013 11 30_5434 2013 11 30_5433

2013 11 30_5435

We walked slowly up a gentle sloping path giving us a spiral route to the “Armed Services Memorial” with a solemn “wall of names”. The sculptural pieces here were astonishing, powerful and thought provoking.

2013 11 30_5376 2013 11 30_5356

 2013 11 30_5358 2013 11 30_5359 2013 11 30_5360 2013 11 30_5361 2013 11 30_5362

Below, the sculpted hand indicates the place where a shaft of sunlight pierces two slits in two walls. They line up on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month each year the time when the First World War ended. It is the time the nation remembers each year the members of the armed forces lost serving their country.

2013 11 30_5363 2013 11 30_5364

2013 11 30_5370 2013 11 30_5371

A massive curving wall has carved into it the names of all armed service personel who have died in service since the end of the Second Wall War. To see all these names together illustrates the futility of war so clearly. Worst of all was the huge area left blank as space for those yet to die. The United Nations should hold their meetings here and every Member of Parliament from every nation should spend some time here at the beginning of every session of their parliament. I wonder if it would make any difference?

2013 11 30_5365

2013 11 30_5367 2013 11 30_5368 2013 11 30_5369

We found smaller memorials which were more specific and sometimes outside the realms of armed conflicts.

 2013 11 30_5377  2013 11 30_53792013 11 30_5378

The essential work of the Bevin Boys, the miners who kept the mines open during WW2 was celebrated in these wonderful relief carvings. Powerful just like the Bevin boys themselves.

2013 11 30_5381 2013 11 30_5382 2013 11 30_5383 2013 11 30_5384

Men who lost their lives building the railways in the Far East as prisoners of war were commemorated by a garden of many varieties of Sorbus growing around reconstructed sections of railway lines.

2013 11 30_5392 2013 11 30_5395 2013 11 30_5397 2013 11 30_5398 2013 11 30_5399 2013 11 30_5400 2013 11 30_5401 2013 11 30_5402 2013 11 30_5403 2013 11 30_5404 2013 11 30_5405

A few of the gardens help us remember the loss of lives of those serving the nation but not in the armed services. Here we celebrate the bravery of the men of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. A sturdy figure carved from stone reflects the strength of character of these people as he looks over a seaside landscape.

2013 11 30_5422

2013 11 30_5432 2013 11 30_5431

One of the most incredible memorials was a tribute to the men of the railways.

2013 11 30_5430 2013 11 30_5429 2013 11 30_5428 2013 11 30_5427 2013 11 30_5426 2013 11 30_5425 2013 11 30_5424 2013 11 30_5423

We even found a memorial to the soldiers from our home county of Shropshire.

2013 11 30_5413

The Jewish Memorial was a truly beautiful piece of art as well as a moving memorial piece.

2013 11 30_5414 2013 11 30_5415 2013 11 30_5416

As the light faded over the memorial arboretum the trees tops began to fill with the sounds of starlings settling down to roost. To the birds this garden is a home giving them shelter, food and a place to nest.

2013 11 30_5417

I will leave you with a few deeply moving pictures.

2013 11 30_5409 2013 11 30_5364_edited-1

2013 11 30_5410 2013 11 30_5411

2013 11 30_5421 2013 11 30_5418

2013 11 30_5437 2013 11 30_5436

And finally a picture of the Bazra Wall to illustrate that we never learn. With all the waste of lives over the centuries it still goes on.

2013 11 30_5375

This Veggie Life

A Vegetarian | Nature Lifestyle Blog

Rambling in the Garden

.....and nurturing my soul

The Arch City Gardener

Journeys In St. Louis Gardening and Beyond

Garden Dreaming at Châtillon

Consult the genius of the place

Storyshucker

A blog full of humorous and poignant observations.

gardeninacity

Notes from a wildlife-friendly cottage garden

PlayGroundology

...an emerging social science

The Official Blog of British Wildlife

'The most important and informative publication on wildlife of our times' - The Independent. This blog is a member of The UK & Ireland Natural History Bloggers group: www.uknhb.blogspot.com

iGrowHort

Inspire - Cultivate - Grow Native Plants - Restore Landscapes

Bishops Meadow Trust

To create and protect a semi-natural wild space for the people of Farnham to enjoy and experience an array of British wildlife in our town

Gardening with Children

The www.gardeningwithchildren.co.uk Blog

UKbirdingtimeline

birding through the seasons, why birds matter and how to conserve them

NATURE WALKER

with a camera in hand

Jardin

Transform your outdoor space

Eva's space

My allotment, cooking and other interests

Old School Garden

my gardening life through the year

LEANNE COLE

Trying to live a creative life

fromacountrycottage

trying to live as lightly as possible on our beautiful planet

Good Life Gardening

Nature lovers from Leicester living the good life.

mybeautfulthings

Finding the beautiful in the everyday

mawsonmichelle

Michelle's Allotment

In and Out of My Garden

thoughts from and about my garden

Greenhousing

Big plans for a small garden

The Scottish Country Garden

A Walled Country Garden in South East Scotland

The Fruity Chicken

Life at the fruity chicken

willowarchway

Off grid living. Self sufficient. "PERMAGANICS RULE".

St Anns Allotments

Nottingham's Grade 2* Listed Allotments and Community Orchard

Manifest Joy Harvests

a journey in suburban vegetable gardening

Allotmental

The madness of growing your own

Penny's Garden: a harvest beyond my front door

A novel approach to vegetable gardening

arignagardener

Sustainable living in the Irish countryside.

NewEnglandGardenAndThread

Master Gardener, amateur photographer, quilter, NH native, and sometimes SC snowbird

dianajhale

Recent work and work in progress and anything else that interests me

planthoarder

a chaotic cottage gardener

Lens and Pens by Sally

a weekly blog that creates a personal philosophy through photographs and words

Dewdrops and Sunshine

Stories from a sassy and classy Southern farmbelle.

The Pyjama Gardener

Simple Organic Gardening & Seasonal Living

gettin' fresh!

turning dirt into dinner

JOY...

today the world is created anew

Garden Birds

Notes from a Devon garden

ShootAbout

Life Through The Lens

Adapting Pixels

A photography blog showcasing the best photography pictures and videos on the internet

Wildlifegardening's Blog

Just another WordPress.com site

naturestimeline

personal observations from the natural world as the search continues for a new approach to conservation.

LATEBLOOMERBUDS

The Wonders of Life through my Eyes, my Heart, my Soul