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autumn autumn colours colours garden photography garden ponds garden pools gardening gardens gardens open to the public landscapes light light quality ornamental trees and shrubs reflections Shropshire Staffordshire trees water in the garden

The Dorothy Clive Garden – Autumnal Super Sky!

Sometimes something happens that will remain with you for ever, a fleeting moment when Mother Nature shouts out, “Hey! Look at me! Check this out!”. She puts on a great show which disappears as quickly and silently as it appeared a short few moments previously.

While following one of our slow monthly ramblings around the Dorothy Clive Garden looking at what the garden had to offer especially for this month, we were, to say the least, waylaid by the weather.

As we walked slowly down the sloping path to the lower garden and the pool, we photographed the birches, trunks pale against the deep evergreen conifers behind them.

We looked over the hedge, the garden boundary, out and across to the countryside beyond. We saw that the light was changing rapidly and dramatically lighting up the countryside. A darkness crept over the approaching clouds which became the darkest blue-grey possible. Combined with the bright shafts of low November sunlight we were suddenly surrounded by the strangest weather we could ever remember.

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The birches against their dark backgrounds lit up further. In a matter of seconds it was all magic surrounding us. The first two pics are the first pair prior to the light change, and the following three illustrate the changes those few moments in time produced.

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Just look at the subtle changes in these three photos below taken just seconds apart. Look at the light on each tree and the reflection!

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We will now share the changing scenes of a fleeting moment in time with you via a gallery of photos shown in the order I took them. Enjoy.

 

Things began to calm down as a dark cloud took over the sky once again and we enjoyed a final view from this lovely garden bench. It is strange to think that this this beautiful short passage of time which changed our view of trees and the garden in general will never be seen again. An unforgettable experience and an unrepeatable performance!

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What a special moment, a moment we will never forget. In the short time this special lighting was putting on its special personalised show for us we were so excited and couldn’t stop pointing out special moments to share.

In my next post I will share the rest of our November visit to the Dorothy Clive Garden.

 

 

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autumn light light quality photography winter gardens

Simply Beautiful 1 – delicacy in the border.

Sometimes the simplest of things are the most beautiful!

Take one twig!

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Pink leaf petioles.

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A single flower from the complex head of an Hydrangea sitting on a leaf.

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I will be looking out for more such simple beauties and sharing them with you from now on. My new challenge for my Nikon lens!

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architecture buildings colours

Southwold – Beach Hut Special

In this blog I will celebrate to the unique beauty and eccentric natures of the great British beach hut. Southwold situated on the Suffolk coast overlooking the North Sea is rightly famous for its huts, having a style of hut named after it and having a couple of rows adding up to a few hundred brightly coloured little “homes-from-homes”.

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The Southwold style of beach huts has a tiny veranda with wooden balustrading along their frontage. some owners now enclose the balustrade with wooden panels too.

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Let us now enjoy the colours, patterns and quirkiness of the Southwold beach huts and spot the owners’ characters as we go along!

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autumn colours garden photography gardening ornamental trees and shrubs Shrewsbury Shropshire shrubs South Shropshire village gardens

Crazy but Beautiful

There are certain plants that are full of interest most of the year but they usually have powerful peaks. Such a plant is Clerodendrum  trichotoma var fargesii, which we grow in our spring border. It is one of those plants with lots going for it and to recommend itself to us gardeners.

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fruit and veg gardens open to the public kitchen gardens memorials National Trust remembrance Shrewsbury Shropshire The National Trust walled gardens walled kitchen gardens

Tree of Remembrance

In the words of the children’s song, “If you go down to the woods today are in for a big surprise!” proved to be true this week when we went for a walk around the National Trust property, Attingham Park.

And we were! I shall share these few moments with you when we felt very emotional by this surprise awaiting us. The gardening staff had created a “remembrance tree” by decorating, very tastefully, an old gnarled apple tree in the orchard abutting the old walled garden. It was a very special, personal way for the current team of gardeners and volunteers to remember the gardeners who worked at Attingham Park walled garden when war broke out and sadly never returned.

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autumn autumn colours garden design garden photography gardening gardens gardens open to the public hardy perennials ornamental trees and shrubs Shropshire shrubs Staffordshire trees

The Dorothy Clive Garden in October

Our tenth visit to the wonderful Dorothy Clive Gardens saw us wandering around in cool temperatures and lightly overcast skies in late October. We expected to see autumn progressing well and a few plants flowering out of season. The sweeping driveway up to the car park was full of promises of what delights we had in store.

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There were few visitors around which is typical of gardens once summer comes to an end. So many visitors to gardens think nothing goes on after September so stay away until next spring. We were there almost on our own sharing the joys of autumn at this beautiful garden with just a handful of other visitors. It is sad because there is so much to see in most good gardens in autumn and through into winter. The first few yards walk from the car park to the ticket office afforded distant views over the garden and a chance to study a newly planted border.

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Views along paths among trees and shrubs were greatly enhanced by the low bright light creating bright patches and deep shadows.

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The colourful Viburnum we enjoyed discovering earlier in the year caught our eyes again, its berries a more colourful mix of glossy red and black like jewels among its Persian carpet foliage.

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Flowering plants keep providing interest well into the autumn and foliage plants really come into their own especially grasses and ferns.

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Berries are a feature of autumn not to be missed. This year we are seeing more than usual remaining on trees and shrubs because there are fewer migrant thrushes visiting us to gorge themselves on our gardens’ bounty.

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Acers of course  feature strongly as it is in this season that their foliage changes by the day, and we can begin to appreciate some of the interesting colours of the bark.

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It felt good to discover something totally new at the garden after visiting all year. We noticed that the gardeners and volunteers had been hard at work crafting this rustic fence from old rhododendron trunks with all their curls and bends. It is also exciting to come across a plant that we do not recognise at all so have to seek out a label and if we get lucky we can then follow up with research. This Lindera obtusiloba first attracted us to it because of its startlingly bright yellow leaves but on closer study we were struck by the unusual shape of its leaves.

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Autumn is the season that belongs to trees as it becomes their turn to turn up the colours and get out their paint pallettes.

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That is it for our October visit so just 2 more monthly reports of our regular wanderings around the Dorothy Clive Gardens. November will see autumn ending and giving way to winter.

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allotments Uncategorized

My Garden Journal in October

Here is the 10th visit to my Garden Journal 2016 as we look at what our patch has got up to in October.

Peppers feature strongly and cover the first 4 pages of this month’s entries which begins with the words, “October arrived and temperatures started falling especially in the evenings and overnight. We seem to be verging on the arrival of our first frost. In my very first journal I wrote, “October arrives and brings Autumn. The first ground frost and the final crop of sweet and hot chillies. Best harvest ever!” This year we still have lots of peppers to harvest and enjoy and as yet no frosts.”

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I took photos of the different sorts of peppers to show the varieties we are growing and then took out my water colour paints to attempt to capture their individual charms.

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Soon after enjoying painting our lovely colourful peppers we harvested the chillies and prepared them for drying and freezing.

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Turning over the page reveals the left page showing off a few of our Persicaria amplexicaulis collection and the right a page of juicy sweet fruits. Persicaria amlexicaulis is one of my favourite herbaceous perennials and we have a dozen or so different ones planted throughout the garden. In my journal I describe it as “A true performer”.

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P. amplexicaulis Pink Elephant.  P. amplexicaulis “Blackfield”

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Persicaria amplexicaulis “September Spires”

Looking at the page of fresh, sweet juicy fruits I wrote “The fruits and berries of Autumn, some for us and some for migrant and native thrushes.” I took a few of pics of just 6 of our fruit bearing plants.

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Moving on from my fruit page I turn my thoughts towards two unusual plants sporting the tiniest of flowers. both of these plants draw a lot of attention when we open our gardens when visitors are totally fascinated by them and want to know what they are. The first is a Fuschia, one of only three we grow as we do not like the large flowered, over-developed cultivars most commonly grown. I wrote, “We grow very few Fuschias in our Avocet garden and those we grow are the species in preference to the more usual blousy over-blown hybrids. We both find them far too fussy for our gentle garden.”

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I then turned to my box of watercolour paints and my fine fibre-tipped pens to create my impressions of this little beauty. The Fuschia is called Fuschia minimiflora, more commonly known as F. microphlla.

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After my paintings I wrote, “I shall look at 2 other of our Fuschias in my November entries as we take them in for the winter.”

The second of my featured tiny-flowered plants is very rarely sold or grown and it is known as Polygonum scoparium. Turning to the same media I studied a tiny individual flower and a section of the stem.

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Of this unusual little plant, I wrote, “Polygonum scoparium is the plant with the smallest flowers imaginable. The plant shows its tiny flowers for months during the summer and well into the autumn. Each flower is no more than a few millimetres across, borne every few inches up the whole length of its deep green wiry stems, and the blooms are scented. We were surprised after 4 years of growing and enjoying this unusual and very special little plant, about 2 feet tall, to discover that it is classified as a shrub. It appears to have no leaves but early in the year tiny leaves a few millimetres long appear up the stem. These disappear during early summer to be replaced by a deep brown band fading to yellow above. What a special plant! We love it! Close up these minute little flowers reveal such beauty with bright centres and pale green on each petal.”

Next I returned to Sedum after looking at them in September and promising a return. I wrote, “I celebrated the Sedum family in September and looked at the many variations in the shades of pink and red found in the heads of tiny flowers. So for this month I want to look at them again and see how the colours have deepened and become more dramatic.”

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So turning to the next double page spread in my journal I continued by looking at a yellow flower called Leontodon rigens and some white flowers with yellow centres.

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About this wonderful rare yellow flowered perennial I commented, “Leontodon rigens is a most ugly, unfortunate name for such a beautiful plant. It was previously known as Microseris ringens which is just as ugly a name. It is a herbaceous alpine which flowers throughout the summer, but this year in our garden it is in flower again now. The yellow of the petals is so intense and when the autumn sunshine catches them in its front of border position hints of orange and even a little pink appear. Its foliage is in the form of a rosette and the leaves are hairy with toothed edges.”

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My next page is titled “Hearts of Gold” and is all about white flowers with golden centres, about which I noted, “Have you noticed how insignificant white flowers become in the misty autumn dawn? Give them a hint of gold though and they zing!”

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In contrast to yellows and whites I next turned to the deep richness of the foliage of our exotic Ricinus plants and their eccentric seed pods.

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I wrote, “Ricinus is a beautifully statuesque exotic plant with interesting foliage, stem colours and crazy seed capsules like spiky pink golf balls. Sadly few gardeners give it space in their plots because of its links  to poisons. We grow several varieties each year from seed and they vary greatly in leaf, stem and flower colour. We grow Ricinus “Blue Giant”, R. “New Zealand Purple”, R. carmentcita and more.” 

Under the third photo I wrote the caption, “Orange glow beneath this leaf matches leaf rib colours.” 

For the fourth photo I put the caption, “The orange of this Crocosmia contrast with the metallic purple leaves.”

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On the opposite page I noted that “Seed pods vary as much as the flower and leaf colour.”ric1-1 ric-4  ric-1 ric2-1 ric-2

Moving on through my October journal entries I take another look at our Agapanthus collection which I had considered the flowers of in my September journal. This month I decided to see how that were developing from flowers towards seed pods.

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I wrote, “I want now to return to our Agapanthus collection grown in our gravel garden, the Beth Chatto Border. Last month I looked at their flowers but now a month later we can observe the magical transformation from flowers to seeds.”

Across the double page spread I shared nine of my photos.

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Turning over in search of the next double page and colour is the theme, the colours of Autumn, but not the usual autumnal colours.

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I wrote, “The flame colours of Autumn usually refer to the changing colours of tree and shrub foliage but, red, orange and yellow add depth to the flower borders too, and even the colourful grass leaves.”

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Every gardener loves checking on the weather and talking about it too! It controls what we do if it gets too wet or too cold for us to get outside and enjoy pottering. So for the final two pages I turn to the skies!

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“We have wonderfully colourful skies over our garden in October. Rainbows add delight and bright hues.” 

The first pair of photos show “A rainbow finds its twin.”

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“The rainbow follows the curve of the Violet Willow.”

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The last page of the October entries for my October garden journal shows five pages of the sun and light changing over the fields beyond our garden fence. I added the caption, “Light changes over our borrowed landscape as the sun lowers and a storm approaches.”

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So October was a very busy month here in our patch at our home, Avocet. Next time we consider my garden journal it will be the penultimate visit to it.

 

 

 

Categories
colours garden design garden photography gardening grasses hardy perennials light light quality ornamental grasses outdoor sculpture reflections sculpture village gardens water in the garden

Take one little border.

This post will look at a small border in a Gloucestershire garden in a village at the bottom of Bredon Hill. It is a lovely garden, well designed and well cared with a calming atmosphere throughout. The gardeners and owners of the garden are my sister, Penny and her husband, Tony.

This little border in the front patch is a quarter circle in shape and covers only a couple of square metres but the choice of planting partners and artifacts together create a beautiful balanced feel.

The first photo covers the whole border in one shot which gives an indication of its size. The gravel mulch acts as a foil to enrich the colour palette, the bronzes, silvers and bronzes of the grasses and the rubies and purples of the sedums and diascias. The grasses also move and rustle in the lightest of breezes.

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Diascia personata and Sedum Purple Emperor compliment each other beautifully.

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Silken heads of soft grasses catch every iota of light and absorbs it to put themselves in the spotlights.

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Well chosen sculptural pieces crafted in suitable materials enhance the plants rather than detract from them. The rust of the corten steel is the perfect material both its colour and texture which allow them to sit beautifully with the silky heads of the grasses flowing past them.

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Clear water with a flat reflective surface borrows the colour of the sky and adds it to the composition. The simple contrast of foliage shape and structure of the plants in the bed works beautifully because of the limited number of different plants used.

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To see the rest of the garden just check back on my post published in August 2013 called “A village garden with a difference,”

 

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colours garden design garden photography gardening gardens gardens open to the public grasses hardy perennials ornamental grasses outdoor sculpture sculpture

Sussex Prairie Garden – a prairie garden in Sussex

This is a garden I have been reading about and admiring in photographs for several years and I have enjoyed watching it develop. Imagine our surprise when we were on a mid-week break in September and discovered that we were staying in a hotel not too far from the Sussex Prairie Garden. We couldn’t miss this opportunity so it soon found a slot in our schedule. The big question was “Can it really be as good as we are expecting?” and this stayed in my mind as we drove out to visit it. Surely we wouldn’t be disappointed!

We weren’t and we knew immediately that we wouldn’t be by the welcoming entrance, an unusual, quirky and humorous way in, coupled with a distinctive and beautifully designed garden sign.

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We also loved the simple stylized plan of the garden and the welcome notes on the back.

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The leaflet described the garden as an “extraordinary garden features huge borders of sumptuous planting combinations that inspire and immerse you in an ever changing wave of texture, colour and form.”

To get to the main garden and tea shop we diverted to follow a path through the cutting garden. This area was to prepare us for the wonderful main garden we would explore after our tea and cakes.

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There are 8 acres of naturalistically planted prairie garden containing over 50 ooo plants of over 1000 varieties and these are a magnet for wildlife. The only way to share such an exciting garden with you is to create a gallery for you to follow. As usual please click on the first photo and then navigate with the arrows.

We love sculpture in the garden and here at the Sussex Prairie Garden it was used very well, integrated beautifully into the planting areas and on open areas of mown grass.

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As we reached the furthest point in the garden from the entrance we were in for a colourful surprise before we continued on our wanderings, beautiful fabric hangings on the fence.

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So the Sussex Prairie was as good as we had hoped, the planting and design was remarkable. We must return again perhaps in the autumn season.

 

 

 

 

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garden buildings garden designers garden furniture garden seating gardens gardens open to the public Yellow Book Gardens

Are you sitting comfortably? – part ten of a very occasional series

Here we are – with the tenth post in my very occasional series looking at my collection of photographs of garden seats we discover as we explore the gardens we enjoy visiting so much. We have many seats in our own garden to allow us to sit and enjoy it. Equally we look for seats in every garden we visit to help us sit and fully appreciate what we see.

Here is a selection from a Shropshire Yellow Book garden, Windy Ridge. They show how important it is to place seats in suitable places so that they are in harmony with the plants themselves.

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Windy Ridge is a small family garden visited by hundreds of gardeners every year. We will now look at how a much larger garden uses different seats in different ways to suit its own particular circumstances. Hestercombe is a large garden designed partly by Edwin Lutyens and Gertrude Jekyll which is open to the public attracting thousands of visitors each year. The famous Lutyens benches obviously feature strongly as expected. This seat design must be the most famous and recognised of all garden furniture. As well as these benches there is a wide range of unusual ones to be explored, including several in buildings of many styles plus a few in a huge tent shaped like a shuttlecock.

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Where will our next selection of unusual, wonderful and strange garden seats come from? We are already searching them out!

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