Categories
autumn autumn colours birds colours garden photography garden wildlife gardening gardens hardy perennials light light quality migration ornamental trees and shrubs Shropshire

My Garden Journal – October

So here we are with the tenth post in the “My Garden Journal” monthly series highlighting the changes that we see, hear and smell each month in our Shropshire garden at our home “Avocet”. Our garden open days have finished for the year and we have hosted our last visiting group for the year, so we have the garden to ourselves and our wildlife. From April to September we are open on set days and to visiting groups and although we love sharing our garden there is a feeling of letting go a bit once October arrives a sort of end of term feeling.

We will be busy taking hardwood cuttings and potting on those we struck last autumn. Our greenhouse becomes home to our more delicate plants, our Aeoniums, Salvias, and Echeverias. We put up bubble wrap as a cosy duvet for them and put the heating on gently.

My first page in my journal for October refers to the changing light the month brings.

2015 11 01_6961_edited-1

“Autumn is most definitely with us, its special low light with its own intensity and identity gives the garden its coat of many colours. Sedum give us flowers of pink to purple rising from its succulent leaves. 

2015 10 10_5931 2015 10 10_5924 2015 10 10_5936 2015 10 10_5927

“October began by continuing September’s Indian Summer. We are enjoying blue skies and warm temperatures. Luxuries for the gardeners, who can use these special moments to sit in the sun, drink tea and drink in the colourful richness in every border.”

2015 10 26_6842-2 2015 10 26_6800-2

2015 11 01_6962_edited-1

My journal moved on to consider the changing colours which is symbolic of this season. The quote I have selected for October from Jenny Joseph also looks at October’s colours.

“The fire that October first brings to me is what has started in September. It is the woods flaming; not terrifying summer fires in some afforested countries, but the fire with no heat, no destruction. The torch that sets fire to our woods, hedges, trees in roads and gardens, blazing through cool damp darkening days is the sap withdrawing. It is a dying that can make us gasp at the intensity and great range of colour.”

In my journal I wrote “All those myriad shades of green that had been acting as foils for the colours of flowers are now coming to the fore. It is their turn to be the stars! As we move into autumn more deeply the green recedes to reveal yellows, oranges and reds. Our Euphorbia griffithii “Fireglow” glows yellow with thin red lines drawn on.”

2015 10 26_6801-2 2015 10 26_6802-22015 10 26_6803-2

“We grow two different varieties of Hamamelis x intermedia, Jelena and Diana, mostly for their bright late winter/early spring flowers but in autumn they give us the same orange and red colours.”

2015 10 26_6807-2 2015 10 26_6812-22015 10 26_6806-2 2015 10 26_6808-22015 10 26_6805-2

On the following pages I discuss the birds that visited our garden during October, the Merlin and the Little Owl. I hope you enjoy looking at my coloured pencil crayon drawing as much as I enjoyed creating them.

2015 11 01_6963_edited-1

“Most of our Summer Migrant birds have left us. Firstly the Swifts and the Cuckoos left us in July and then the Warblers and the sky dancers, Swallows and House Martins.

We have been surprised to spot two birds which until recently would also have flown to warmer climes. Some of our summer visitors now stay with us. Early in October we spotted a male Merlin hunting along the lane from our house, moving and manoevring low to the ground in definite hunting mood.

Recently we heard the call of Little Owls, their piercing sounds were more those of a yapping Terrier than those of an owl.”

2015 11 01_6965_edited-1 2015 11 01_6966_edited-1

2015 11 01_6967_edited-1

“In our “Secret Garden” we grow a miniature Chestnut, Aesculus mutabilis “Induta”. We forgive it for its ugly name as we love it all year. It gives salmon-pink new foliage in the spring which is followed by upright panicles of pinky-salmon flowers loved by the bees. Flowers are followed by little “conkers”, then in autumn the foliage turns the brightest yellow. When the foliage falls beautiful silvery-grey bark shines through the winter.”

2015 10 26_6817-2 2015 10 26_6818-22015 10 26_6816-2

I featured the seed heads of Phlomis and Acer rufinerve in my journal pages for September. As we move through October more plants produce seed heads worthy of starring roles. Echinops, Eremurus, Eryngium and Crocosmia.”

2015 10 10_5923 2015 10 26_6831-22015 10 26_6841-2 2015 10 10_59182015 10 10_5917

November will take us deeper into the autumn which this year is proving to be an exceptionally colourful one.

Categories
garden buildings garden design garden designers garden photography gardening gardens hardy perennials Herefordshire meadows outdoor sculpture sculpture Yellow Book Gardens

Montpelier Cottage – another Yellow Book garden

A warm bright day in early September was a great day to visit another National Garden Scheme, Yellow Book garden. Thus we drove once again into our neighbouring county of Herefordshire in search of Montpelier Cottage. The main roads turned into minor roads and the minor roads turned into lanes. The lanes got narrower and narrower until at last we found the yellow NGS sign on a gate into a field which for the day became a temporary car park.

The cottage in its primrose yellow livery felt so welcoming.

2015 09 13_5375 2015 09 13_5377

A sense of humour, important in any garden, soon became apparent at Montpelier Cottage.

2015 09 13_5376 2015 09 13_54552015 09 13_53822015 09 13_5456 2015 09 13_5454

The gardeners here are the garden writer Noel Kingsbury and his wife Jo Eliot and they have been developing the garden for ten years. The garden style and plant combinations are experimental looking to find “the border between the wild and the cultivated” being inspired by American prairies and the wildflower meadows of Europe. As we knew Noel Kingsbury had been working closely for many years with garden designers and nurserymen Piet Oudolf  and Henk Gerritsen, we were interested to see how this ten year old garden had developed.

As we followed the narrow path towards the back of the cottage the gardens came into view and we knew we were in for a colourful wander. The terrace of stone slabs overlooked the garden and sitting here enjoying a refreshing tea and tasty cake we could get views over most of the garden. Brightly coloured annuals and tender perennials grew vigorously in pots.

2015 09 13_5378 2015 09 13_53802015 09 13_5381 2015 09 13_5379

When we had finished our refreshments we soon found a sign which invited us through a gap in a hedge. Alongside the gap a piece of sculpture created from beautiful blue glass caught our attention.

2015 09 13_5452 2015 09 13_5446

As in any garden there are certain individual plants that stand out and here at Montpelier Cottage they were this deciduous Euonymous sporting a cerise and orange colourway, the deep ruby flowered Sanguisorba “Red Buttons”, the monochrome bamboo, the Rosa rugosa with big hips and the incredibly tall growing Hollyhocks.

2015 09 13_5388 2015 09 13_5387 2015 09 13_5383 2015 09 13_5384 2015 09 13_5409 2015 09 13_5435 2015 09 13_5434

But as with any garden it is the big picture that gives it its own style and presence. At Montpelier Cottage the garden boasted large areas of perennial planting through which paths were cut.

2015 09 13_5410 2015 09 13_5411 2015 09 13_5412 2015 09 13_5414 2015 09 13_5415 2015 09 13_5416  2015 09 13_5419 2015 09 13_54202015 09 13_5421 2015 09 13_5422 2015 09 13_5424 2015 09 13_5425 2015 09 13_5426 2015 09 13_5427 2015 09 13_5428 2015 09 13_5429 2015 09 13_5445 2015 09 13_5442 2015 09 13_5441 2015 09 13_5440 2015 09 13_5439 2015 09 13_5438 2015 09 13_5437 2015 09 13_5436

It was too late in the year to see the wildflower meadows at their flowery best so we hope to visit earlier in the year in 2016, but the kitchen garden was looking very productive.

2015 09 13_53932015 09 13_5404  2015 09 13_54062015 09 13_5405

There are interesting rustic buildings which came into view as we wandered the paths through the garden.

2015 09 13_5430 2015 09 13_54022015 09 13_5417 2015 09 13_5448

2015 09 13_5450 2015 09 13_5449

I shall finish my post about this unusual garden with a photo of a lovely slate sculpture and another piece of creativity by Mother Nature herself, weaving with Ivy stems. The final picture shows a beautiful use of shaped box.

2015 09 13_5390 2015 09 13_54072015 09 13_5453

 

Categories
autumn autumn colours colours flowering bulbs garden photography gardens gardens open to the public hardy perennials light light quality National Trust ornamental trees and shrubs roses The National Trust walled gardens

Croft Castle Month by Month – September

So here we are with the ninth post in my series about Croft Castle gardens throughout the year, where I shall report on our September visit to this Herefordshire National Trust property.

The long border was sparkling with colour in the sunlight. The sun was beginning to sit lower in the sky so whites looked as wonderful as bright colours. Cyclamen shone jewel-like in the shadow of the ancient trees. Grasses glistened!

2015 09 24_5772 2015 09 24_5773 2015 09 24_5774 2015 09 24_5775 2015 09 24_5776 2015 09 24_57772015 09 24_5913

Once inside the walled garden we immediately noticed how large areas of colour were absent but plant partnerships in twos and threes gave brightness throughout.

2015 09 24_5779  2015 09 24_5781 2015 09 24_5782  2015 09 24_5784 2015 09 24_5785 2015 09 24_57902015 09 24_5780 2015 09 24_5789 2015 09 24_5791

Sweetpeas are always a delight but to see these beauties this late in the season really pleased the eye. And of course the nose!

2015 09 24_5793 2015 09 24_5794 2015 09 24_5795 2015 09 24_5796

This rich blue colour surprised us when we had a close and realised these gems were not flowers at all but berries. This grass like plant with the blue berries is a Dianella, a plant we have been trying to get established on our gravel garden for a few seasons now. Seeing how special they can be made us more determined to get it right.

2015 09 24_5792

Fuschias are not a favourite of our’s but within these walls we enjoyed the simple small flowers of the more natural varieties.

2015 09 24_5783 2015 09 24_5815 2015 09 24_5816

The diminuitive flowers of this Fuschia had blooms less than a centimetre long but its beauty was in the detail.

2015 09 24_5803

I love rich deep colours in the garden but they seem especially intense in the early autumn months, so I was attracted by these Dahlias and our favourite Verbena bonariensis.

2015 09 24_5797 2015 09 24_5798 2015 09 24_5799 2015 09 24_5800

In the entrance to the glasshouses the climbing Cobaea was in full bloom and the plant covered a huge area. Close-up we could appreciate its complexity and incredible beauty. The tomatoes growing in the glasshouse were looking as late to develop as our own, but their Chrysanths were already in flower whereas ours are just budding up.

2015 09 24_5801 2015 09 24_5802   2015 09 24_5805 2015 09 24_5806

The Secret Garden sparkled in the sunshine with every leaf and petal catching the light.

2015 09 24_5907

For bright cheerfulness in the autumn garden you can’t beat the Rudbeckias.

2015 09 24_5879 2015 09 24_5878  2015 09 24_5884 2015 09 24_58862015 09 24_5877

As we made our way back to the car after our most enjoyable garden wanderings two signs of autumn caught our eye, the deep pink of the Sedum flower heads and the colour appearing on the clump of mature trees close to the main gate out of the garden. Next visit will be sometime in October when we expect to see autumn taking over the borders and clumps of trees.

2015 09 24_5916 2015 09 24_5911

Categories
colours garden photography gardens gardens open to the public hardy perennials National Garden Scheme NGS photography sculpture Yellow Book Gardens

Aulden Farm Gardens – Part 2

As promised I am back with more photographs from our visit to the gardens at Aulden Farm in Herefordshire. Firstly I would love to share a gallery of photos of the many pieces of garden sculpture we enjoyed discovering among the plants in this wonderful garden.

This atmospheric garden was full of interesting plants used in original ways, in great combinations, in creative partnerships and set to catch the light. Two families of plants which enjoyed having the sun put them in the spotlight were the Persicarias and the Rudbeckias. I hope you like this photo gallery featuring just them.

We hope to return to this garden, surely one of the most beautiful and atmospheric of any we have visited, in the autumn when the light will be playing on the yellows, russets, reds and browns of that season.

Categories
colours garden design garden photography gardening gardens gardens open to the public grasses hardy perennials light light quality National Garden Scheme NGS ornamental grasses ornamental trees and shrubs outdoor sculpture photography Yellow Book Gardens

Aulden Farm – another Yellow Book garden

We open our garden under the auspices of the National Garden Scheme and love to see our garden in its famous Yellow Book. But we also love to visit other gardens from the Yellow Book.

We recently visited Aulden Farm which is in Herefordshire, our neighbouring county and we were particularly keen to wander around this garden as it has a similar description to our own in their Yellow Book entry although it is much larger! “Informal country garden surrounding old farmhouse, three acres planted with wildlife in mind. Emphasis on structure and form, with a hint of quirkiness, a garden to explore with eclectic planting.”

We had a lovely drive through beautiful countryside before parking on the grass verge and wandering up the gravel drive leading to Aulden Farm’s garden. A gravel area surrounded by interesting planting was a great place to enjoy tea and homemade cakes.

2015 09 07_5027 2015 09 07_5028

Alongside the tea courtyard was a gravel garden in front of a beautiful barn close to tumbling down. Verbena bonariensis was the star in this garden and the afternoon lit it up dramatically. Butterflies were attracted to it as much as me and my camera. This was an area full of texture and interest too good for any photographer to miss.

2015 09 07_5029 2015 09 07_50302015 09 07_5168 2015 09 07_51622015 09 07_5177 2015 09 07_51782015 09 07_5173 2015 09 07_51662015 09 07_5174 2015 09 07_51702015 09 07_5169 2015 09 07_5171

2015 09 07_5165 2015 09 07_5161

We eventually left behind our tea, cakes, verbenas and butterflies and wandered, suitably refreshed, through the shade garden where the low rays of the sun created pools of light and shade. from here we could choose different routes through the garden described in its own leaflet as “very relaxed, tranquil and some even say romantic, but that is for you to decide”. So we couldn’t wait to find out for ourselves.

2015 09 07_5035 2015 09 07_5036

2015 09 07_5037 2015 09 07_5038 2015 09 07_5040 2015 09 07_5042 2015 09 07_5044 2015 09 07_5047 2015 09 07_5048

Now come for a walk with us around this beautiful garden by enjoying my gallery. Please click on the first photo and navigate with the arrows.

I hope you enjoyed this photographic journey around this wonderful garden. Is it romantic? Yes, definitely so! This is a garden with atmosphere.

We left with an invitation to return whenever we wanted – bliss.

In my next couple of posts about Aulden Farm gardens I will share my images of two special families of plants that caught the beautiful light that day and my imagination, Persicarias and Rudbeckias and also a look at some of the wide ranging sculpture we enjoyed there.

 

Categories
colours garden design garden designers garden photography gardens gardens open to the public meadows

Return to Trentham Gardens

In mid-September we made a return visit to the gardens at Trentham which I featured monthly during 2014. This time we visited not specifically to enjoy the gardens themselves but to meet friends from university, friends we had not met since the early 1970’s.

While there our reminiscences were interrupted by the sheer beauty of a new area of planting, a meadow designed by Nigel Dunnett. The meadow was sown on a slope alongside woodland and even at this time of the year was full of colour and surprises.

Come on a journey around the meadow with us in my gallery below. As usual simply click on the first photo and move on by clicking on the arrows. If this new meadow looked this good in mid-September I can’t wait to go back next spring and summer to see what pictures they paint then.

Categories
garden photography gardens gardens open to the public ornamental trees and shrubs

Harold Hillier in Hampshire – Part 3

The third and final part of this series of posts celebrating our summer visit to the Harold Hillier Gardens in Hampshire features their wonderful collection of Cornus chinensis, a family of small trees. We were amazed by this collection as we had not realised just how many there were and how varied their bracts were in colour and form.

Please enjoy this gallery celebrating the Cornus collection, which finishes this little series of posts about the Harold Hillier Gardens.

Categories
arboreta colours garden buildings garden design garden photography gardens gardens open to the public hardy perennials light light quality ornamental trees and shrubs outdoor sculpture sculpture trees

Harold Hillier in Hampshire – Part 2

So here we are back in Hampshire and still wandering around the miles of paths along which we explored the Sir Harold Hillier Gardens.

2015 06 23_3141 2015 06 23_30932015 06 23_30952015 06 23_3109

The Acer Grove was full of colour when the sun hit the foliage after the dullness of the rains.

2015 06 23_3033 2015 06 23_30342015 06 23_3035 2015 06 23_3096

The Pinetum was a wonderful place to explore the many shapes of the trees and the texture and colour of their needles. Cones added even more interest. Not a great lover of conifers I felt myself enjoying being among their rich variety.

2015 06 23_3036 2015 06 23_3037

But the broadleaved trees were my stars of the gardens with their colourful bark, flowers and the leaves.

2015 06 23_3041 2015 06 23_30442015 06 23_3048 2015 06 23_3051 2015 06 23_30832015 06 23_3106

Jude was easily distracted by this wonderfully sculptural swing!

2015 06 23_3046 2015 06 23_3050

We continued to discover a huge variety of sculptural pieces along every path and around every corner.

2015 06 23_3101 2015 06 23_3098 2015 06 23_3100 2015 06 23_3097 2015 06 23_30432015 06 23_3090 2015 06 23_30872015 06 23_3053 2015 06 23_30522015 06 23_3038 2015 06 23_3039 2015 06 23_3080

But there was so much more than trees and sculpture to enjoy at these amazing gardens – we found so many interesting colourful flowering plants too.

2015 06 23_3112 2015 06 23_31102015 06 23_3108 2015 06 23_3102 2015 06 23_30922015 06 23_3107 2015 06 23_3103

I will finish part two of our visit to the Harold Hillier Gardens with these photos of an amazing archway over a path and a beautifully coloured and shaped pot.

2015 06 23_3085 2015 06 23_3089

Categories
arboreta garden design garden photography gardens gardens open to the public ornamental trees and shrubs outdoor sculpture sculpture trees

Harold Hillier in Hampshire

We have had the Harold Hillier Gardens in Hampshire on our bucket list of places to visit for a few years now so we decided that the summer of 2015 was the time to go. We had great expectations! But did it live up to them?

2015 06 23_3141

We arrived in heavy rain so made straight for the cafe and dawdled for even longer than usual over coffees and cake while keeping an eye, a “weather eye”, on what the rain was up to through the windows. We gave up waiting for a lull in the rain so donned waterproofs and wandered into the garden clutching the garden plan that was to get soggier and soggier as the day wore on.

The garden was simply brilliant so took our minds off the weather. When you wait so long to visit a place you feel set for disappointment but no such things here at the Hillier Gardens.

As we expected the trees were the stars. We wandered through the Winter Garden and on through the Acer Dell and stopped frequently to enjoy close up views of the huge range of trees. Within the trees though splashes of herbaceous colours shone through the gloom of the overcast and very wet morning.

2015 06 23_3009 2015 06 23_3010 2015 06 23_3011 2015 06 23_3013 2015 06 23_3014 2015 06 23_3015 2015 06 23_3016 2015 06 23_30282015 06 23_3012 2015 06 23_3032

We seem to have the knack of visiting gardens when there are sculpture exhibitions on and it happened to us again here. Sculpture always looks so good against trees and flowers. There was a huge variety of subject, material and style in the selection.

2015 06 23_3019 2015 06 23_3008 2015 06 23_30272015 06 23_3017 2015 06 23_3020 2015 06 23_3021 2015 06 23_3023 2015 06 23_3024 2015 06 23_3026  2015 06 23_3004 2015 06 23_3006

Spot the metal sculpture of a Little Owl among matching metallic leaved conifers.

2015 06 23_3025

The rain gave way to clouds mixed with sunny periods and we enjoyed the sight of raindrops on foliage. In part two we will continue our wanderings.

2015 06 23_3029 2015 06 23_3030

 

 

 

 

Categories
garden design garden furniture garden photography garden seating gardening gardens

Are You Sitting Comfortably? – Part 6 of a very occasional series

Number six in a very occasional series of posts all about the seats I find in gardens. Use your imagination and have a sit in each and see what you think! I hope you enjoy the view from some – you will have to use your imagination!

A visit to the famous Herefordshire garden, The Laskett, created by the couple Sir Roy Strong and Doctor Julia Trevelyan Oman, provided many unusual garden seats for us to try out and to photograph.

2015 05 13_1555 2015 05 13_1553

2015 05 13_1593 2015 05 13_1563

2015 05 13_1572 2015 05 13_1613

2015 05 13_1616 2015 05 13_1617

2015 05 13_1585 2015 05 13_1568

2015 05 13_1588 2015 05 13_1607

At the Laskett even the toilet seat is quality!

2015 05 13_1608

We will now look at another C20 garden, the gardens at Preen Manor near Much Wenlock not far from Shrewsbury. This is a garden of many”rooms” and each room seems to have a different style of seat.

2015 05 17_1648 2015 05 17_1649 2015 05 17_1653 2015 05 17_1654 2015 05 17_1664 2015 05 17_1669 2015 05 17_1671 2015 05 17_1678 2015 05 17_1682 2015 05 17_1684 2015 05 17_1692 2015 05 17_1697

On a visit to a Yellow Book NGS garden a good mixture of seats can be found, such as these four at Upper Shelderton Hall gardens.

2015 05 25_1998 2015 05 25_1997 2015 05 25_1974 2015 05 25_1963

Another Yellow Book Garden, Dovecote Barn in Herefordshire revealed these two seats, one well placed for a secret rest hiding in the polytunnel and the other a little precarious with a bit of a backward slope to it.

2015 06 07_2704 2015 06 07_2721

So there is my sixth selection of garden seats – I can now look forward to trying out lots more in my search for the seventh selection!

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