Categories
allotments birds community gardening fruit and veg garden photography garden wildlife gardening gardens grasses grow your own hardy perennials kitchen gardens light light quality meadows natural pest control ornamental grasses ornamental trees and shrubs photography roses spring bulbs wildlife Winter Gardening

What’s on the Plots? An end of year wander around the allotments.

Mid-December often sees the allotment site under snow or at least coated in frost, but not this year. We wandered around today with camera in hand and we were appreciative of the bright clear blue sky overhead. The midday sun cast long sharp shadows and it had enough strength in it for us to feel its warmth.

Having checked the post box for messages, and left a few magazines in the communal hut for others to enjoy, we started our tour at Wendy’s lovely plot. There is always something of interest to see and new things going on. We were not to be disappointed today. The sun caught the bright fiery colours of the willow hedge surrounding her compost heap.

2013 12 17_5480 2013 12 17_5481

On an obelisk where the soft bark paths cross the striped flag glowed alongside a sparkling glitterball, while this character decorated her shed door. A cranky old monk? Brother Cadfael perhaps when he was dropped by the BBC.

2013 12 17_5482 2013 12 17_5483

We next moved to the Autumn Garden and our newly planted section alongside our young fedge. The tree here is a Crataegus prunifolia which gives rich red autumn colour and deep red berries which is underplanted with bulbs. The border is planted up with sedum, asters, ferns, some perennial native flora and small shrubs. The cones and catkins of alders are beginning to get their purple hue. Cotoneaster leaves are as red as their berries.

2013 12 17_5486 2013 12 17_5487

2013 12 17_5489

On many plots old crops sit forgotten in places whilst others await being picked throughout the winter. The sprouts will grace a plot holder’s Christmas dinner spread.

2013 12 17_5484 2013 12 17_5485

Chard leaves on a sunny day are delightful. The reds, yellows and purples of their leaves and stems glow with the sun behind them.

2013 12 17_5488  2013 12 17_5502

2013 12 17_5495 2013 12 17_5535

Further along the borders of the Autumn Garden we passed Trevor’s plot where there is always an interesting development to find. Today we discovered his new shed number. He must have problems remembering his plot number or needs to arrange to visit an optician.

In the final section of the Autumn Garden the grass Calamagrostis acutifolia “Overdam” stand tall and to attention and gentle honey scents flow from the lemon flowered Mahonia.

2013 12 17_5490 2013 12 17_5491 2013 12 17_5492

On the shed roof of Plot 68 the massive scarecrow is looking worse for wear after our recent weather featuring heavy rains and strong winds. In the summer he won our annual scarecrow competition. It is hard to believe how he wowed our visitors on our Open Day.

2013 12 17_5493

In the first orchard the last fruit hangs on, a golden crab apple. Fennel is already sporting new foliage on Alan’s plot and the last of the Raspberry fruits sit awaiting a hungry Blackbird. Close by in the first Buddleja Border a Shistsotylus bravely blooms on with an early Primula.

2013 12 17_5494  2013 12 17_5497

2013 12 17_5501

2013 12 17_5498 2013 12 17_5499

The Globe Artichoke in the second Buddleja Border will soon burst and finches will flock in to feed off them, especially Goldfinches and Linnets.

2013 12 17_5500

We then took a detour to see what is happening on our own plot, Number 37. The last of the flowers in our wildflower mini-meadow are bravely hanging on and a few of our parsnips have gone to flower producing chartreuse umbrella heads. A few autumn raspberries provide welcome food for Blackbirds.

2013 12 17_5503 2013 12 17_5504 2013 12 17_5505 2013 12 17_5506 2013 12 17_5507 2013 12 17_5508

We moved on towards our old oak tree past plots where winter grown crops await Christmas dinners in members homes, leeks with their glaucous strappy leaves and sprouts behind netting protected against marauding Wood Pigeons.

2013 12 17_5509  2013 12 17_5552

2013 12 17_5511

2013 12 17_5510  2013 12 17_5512

This little scarecrow bravely guards overwintering alliums.

2013 12 17_5513

The Oak invariably looks wonderfully majestic but on a winter’s afternoon it excels with its long sharp shadows and silhouette of bare branches. In the spring Garden nearby the first bulbs are coming into flower, a pale Muscari, pushing their way through fallen oak leaves.

2013 12 17_5514 2013 12 17_5515 2013 12 17_5516 2013 12 17_5517 2013 12 17_5518

On Sharon’s plot her frog thermometer shows it is mild for December and near by a lone apple hangs waiting to give sustenance to the Blackbirds.

2013 12 17_5519 2013 12 17_5520

Glyn’s plot is well covered in a mat of green manures, so no heavy rain is going to leach away the goodness from the soil. Now that is good gardening!

2013 12 17_5521

In the Sensory Garden the rose hips sparkle away in the winter sun which glows through the last of the rose bush’s foliage. Grasses here always look good but add extra movement in the gentlest of breezes.

2013 12 17_5522 2013 12 17_5523 2013 12 17_5524

In the big meadow the last of the Red Campion and the Honesty are gamely flowering still. A lone bloom of Rosa Shropshire Lad casts a beautiful fruity scent across the picnic area.

2013 12 17_5526 2013 12 17_5527 2013 12 17_5528

The bunting on Brian’s shed looks faded now but still adds cheer. The sunlight beams through the Dedge and intensifies the flat plate flower heads of the late Achillea.

2013 12 17_5529 2013 12 17_5530 2013 12 17_5531

The Winter Garden is beginning to come into its own with peeling bark, powdery white stems and fluffy grass seed heads.

2013 12 17_5532 2013 12 17_5533 2013 12 17_5534

Moving on into the site extension we find our newest insect hotel still standing after recent strong winds. As usual I have string and my Opinel garden knife in my pocket so tie it back to the fence. The bamboo looks settled in its new home at the end of the proposed Garden of Contemplation. From here we can see the mass of “keys” adorning every branch of our ancient Ash tree.

2013 12 17_5536 2013 12 17_5537 2013 12 17_5538

Our long shadows look out across the site.

2013 12 17_5539

In the second orchard the crab apples still have much fruit left on and these give bright patches of colour visible from all over the site.

2013 12 17_5540 2013 12 17_5541 2013 12 17_5542

The stems of the coppiced willows in the Withy Bed shine as they start to show their late winter colour. This is something we are looking forward to. We have 17 different willow here in every colour possible.

2013 12 17_5543 2013 12 17_5544

We are just beginning to prepare the ground for our new Prairie Garden which we shall make in the new year. This big patch of bare ground promises to become a riot of year round colour. We can’t wait to get started. On nearby plots we spot a patch of another green manure, Grazing Ryegrass and another lone apple on a tree.

2013 12 17_5545 2013 12 17_5546 2013 12 17_5547

On Ian’s plot a big pile of farmyard manure waits the time when he digs it into the soil to add nutrients, humus and structure. It won’t take him long – he is a strong chap.

2013 12 17_5548

Returning to the communal hut along the wide path we spot this old beer can acting as a cane top rattling away by the old sweetcorn stalks. On Mandy’s plot this little insect home will be looking after hibernating friendly critters who will emerge in the spring to eat pests such as aphids. Dave’s flags hang sadly atop their poles.

2013 12 17_5549 2013 12 17_5550 2013 12 17_5551

As we returned to the car we noticed the first signs of growth on our spring bulbs. The first leaves of the daffodils have just made their way through the bark mulch. A promise of golden flowers to come. Our wheelbarrows give a big splash of colour in low sunlight.

2013 12 17_5554 2013 12 17_5553

2013 12 17_5555

Categories
fruit and veg garden design garden photography garden wildlife gardening gardens gardens open to the public grasses hardy perennials natural pest control ornamental trees and shrubs

Dorothy’s Delights – The Dorothy Clive Garden

Whenever we have friends and family staying with us we take them to our favourite places, usually gardens, arboreta or special patches of countryside and of course to our favourite coffee shop with the biggest most luscious cakes. If it is late summer or early autumn then we often share with them the delights of the Dorothy Clive Garden. So in September we took my brother, Graham and sister-in-law Vicky to share in the box of delights.

The garden began as a woodland garden set in a deep dell, but as the years went on it spread outwards so now much of the garden is on a gentle slope down from the dell. The dell features huge mature trees and below them plants typical of shaded places rhododendrons, azaleas and ferns.

2013 09 25_3606 2013 09 25_3605

2013 09 25_3583 2013 09 25_3582

2013 09 25_3610 2013 09 25_3612

2013 09 25_3613 2013 09 25_3614

After half an hour in the tea shop our first port of call was the sheltered area close by, sheltered enough to allow the gardeners to take brave decisions and grow Tetrapanax, amongst other plants grown for their interesting foliage. The gardeners at this garden are masters at the art of “right plant right place”. The enclosed space here was so sheltered that tender plants thrived, including one of my favourite plants Tetrapanax. We can’t risk it in our garden with its cold wet winters. I love the texture and colour of the stems – softly furry and gingery orange – and the shape and texture of the huge palmate rough leaves.

2013 09 25_3584 2013 09 25_3585 2013 09 25_3586 2013 09 25_3587 2013 09 25_3588 2013 09 25_3589

2013 09 25_3594 2013 09 25_3595

Another of the big leaved plants growing here in the damper areas are the Rogersias, with several different varieties thriving in the shade.

2013 09 25_3590 2013 09 25_3591 2013 09 25_3592 2013 09 25_3593

We left the sheltered garden taking a path beneath a tunnel featuring some delicate sculpture and neatly trimmed box balls.

2013 09 25_3596 2013 09 25_3597

2013 09 25_3598

As we left the covered walkway we discovered another large-leaved architectural plant, the Onopordum, with silvery jagged leaves and stems with spikes all along their edges adorned atop by similarly spiky flowers. The Goldfinches will love them when they burst!

2013 09 25_3599 2013 09 25_3600

A new feature in this old favourite garden was an edible woodland garden. We were excited about seeing it and our anticipation was rewarded. This little shaded area under mature trees was full of atmosphere and interesting features.

We were impressed by the great insect hotels and the amazing wooden fencing found within the plants of the edible garden.

2013 09 25_3579

2013 09 25_3567 2013 09 25_3573

2013 09 25_3575 2013 09 25_3576

2013 09 25_3574 2013 09 25_3577 2013 09 25_3580

2013 09 25_3568 2013 09 25_3569 2013 09 25_3570 2013 09 25_3571 2013 09 25_3572      2013 09 25_3578  2013 09 25_3581

2013 09 25_3608 2013 09 25_3609

After this we wandered off along the meandering soft grass paths around the mixed borders. Enjoy them with us.

2013 09 25_3615 2013 09 25_3616 2013 09 25_3617 2013 09 25_3618 2013 09 25_3619 2013 09 25_3620 2013 09 25_3622 2013 09 25_3623 2013 09 25_3624 2013 09 25_3625 2013 09 25_3627 2013 09 25_3628 2013 09 25_3629

2013 09 25_3630 2013 09 25_3631 2013 09 25_3632 2013 09 25_3633 2013 09 25_3634 2013 09 25_3635 2013 09 25_3636 2013 09 25_3637 2013 09 25_3639

Part of the way round our border wanderings I spotted these lovely old chestnut gates and fences at the entrance to the kitchen garden.

2013 09 25_3640 2013 09 25_3641 2013 09 25_3642 2013 09 25_3643 2013 09 25_3644

2013 09 25_3646 2013 09 25_3647 2013 09 25_3648 2013 09 25_3650 2013 09 25_3651 2013 09 25_3652 2013 09 25_3653

Categories
allotments autumn community gardening garden wildlife gardening gardens grasses meadows wildlife

The Final Cut

At last a half day of dry weather allowed us a window in which to cut our last meadow on the allotments. This meadow is situated close to our very mature oak tree and within the grasses we grow wildflowers and cultivated plants that we know attract bees, butterflies and moths, hoverflies and all sorts of beneficial insects. It is home too to amphibians, small mammals and even grasshoppers and crickets. The flowering plants here this year just have not stopped flowering their hearts out so we have left cutting the meadow down until last.

So early in November four of us set to with strimmers, mowers and rakes and we made sure we had our water proof clothes at the ready. An hour into our work and we needed them. But we persevered and got the job done. Beautiful rainbows came out to wish us luck.

2013 10 28_4851 2013 10 28_4852

20131101_102927 20131101_102901

A few weeks earlier lots of members worked together mowing, strimming and raking away on the other meadows while the weather held. We were lucky to get so much done, finishing off all but one of our many meadow areas. It is really important to look after the meadows around the site as they are such an important habitat for wildlife and of course help us with our pest control by harbouring predatory insects.

2013 10 27_4762 2013 10 27_4765

2013 10 27_4766 2013 10 27_4767

The meadows grasses beneath the fruit trees in the orchard get very thick so take a lot of sorting out. Luckily, Ian one of our committee came along and he is a builder so he made light work of it.

2013 10 27_4759 2013 10 27_4760

2013 10 27_4771 2013 10 27_4768

2013 10 27_4770 2013 10 27_4777

The turf spiral is a very fiddly job but John came along and got to work with his strimmer. He loves strimming so we left him to get on with it! It looked really smart!

2013 10 27_4763 2013 10 27_4764

2013 10 27_4761

When we had finished we had time to appreciate the wonderful colourful fruit of the Crab Apples which we grow in the orchards to improve the pollination of our main apple trees.

2013 10 27_4780 2013 10 27_4781 2013 10 27_4782 2013 10 27_4783 2013 10 27_4784

When we stopped for our coffee and cake break we discovered that our resident Little Owl had been using the picnic bench before us. He had left a pellet for us to examine. We learned by studying it closely that he had been enjoying meals of beetles and mice.

2013 10 27_4772

Categories
autumn autumn colours garden design garden photography gardening gardens kitchen gardens Land Art ornamental trees and shrubs outdoor sculpture trees walled gardens walled kitchen gardens

The Gardens at Newport House

2013 10 24_4456 2013 10 24_4457

As promised we return to Newport House to concentrate more on the gardens. The pictures above show the enclosed courtyard gardens behind the cafe building. From there we moved on towards the gardens in front of the house.

2013 10 24_4460 2013 10 24_4461 2013 10 24_4465 2013 10 24_4466

The view across open expanses of lawn was broken by the sight of this magnificent Sweet Chestnut which was made all the more magnificent by tree house lovingly crafted to embrace the trunks and main boughs.

2013 10 24_4467 2013 10 24_4470

2013 10 24_4474

Formal Italian styled gardens with frameworks of low box hedging were cut into the lawns but inside these box structures was soft herbaceous plantings.

 2013 10 24_4468 2013 10 24_4469   2013 10 24_4472  2013 10 24_4473  2013 10 24_4475 2013 10 24_4476

Further pieces of sculpture were positioned within these plantings and on the lawn itself.

2013 10 24_44772013 10 24_44792013 10 24_44812013 10 24_4482

A particular favourite piece of all four of us was positioned to frame the lake and woodlands beyond.

2013 10 24_4488 2013 10 24_4494

From the lower branches of trees hung other pieces such as these steel spheres.

   2013 10 24_4495

Mother Nature herself was not to be outdone, so she cut these gently curving lines into an old stump of a felled tree. Around the other side of the stump we found that it had been carved into a giant story telling chair with other small wooden seats scattered in front of it.

2013 10 24_44962013 10 24_4497

We were delighted to stumble across these pieces of Land Art created using pieces of natural materials found within the garden as part of a recent workshop.

2013 10 24_4508 2013 10 24_4507 2013 10 24_4506 2013 10 24_4505 2013 10 24_4509 2013 10 24_4510 2013 10 24_4511

A small arboretum featured some interesting young trees which looked particularly good in their early autumn foliage colours. The tree below on the right was a stunning Crataegus and one that none of us recognised and the following two pics show the leaves and haws closer up. I have since found out it is Crataegus orientalis.

2013 10 24_4513 2013 10 24_4516 2013 10 24_4517 2013 10 24_4518

This tree in the following two pictures was another Crataegus  – prunifolia I think. After that the two photos following are of a tree with a neat habit, but again it was one we did not recognise. I thought it could possibly have been a Nyssa sylvatica but I shall have to check it out.

2013 10 24_4519 2013 10 24_4520

2013 10 24_4493 2013 10 24_4492

This lovely curved bed of coloured stemmed dogwoods acted as a boundary to the arboretum. The Cornus were displaying their rich red colours of autumn.

2013 10 24_4521 2013 10 24_4522  2013 10 24_4524

The next tree featured in the photos below is probably the best variety of Ash you can get, Fraxinus angustifolia “Raywood”, the Claret Ash.

2013 10 24_4523 2013 10 24_4533

2013 10 24_4532 2013 10 24_4534

Leaving the arboretum, after enjoying studying the selection of interesting trees, we wandered off towards the walled garden, passing a ditch crossed by a bridge formed from the roots of the native Ash alongside.

2013 10 24_4535

The walled garden itself was fascinating with unusual features to enjoy. The first photo below shows a peach canopy. The gardener’s cottage had been beautifully restored as had the greenhouses.

2013 10 24_4536 2013 10 24_4541 2013 10 24_4548 2013 10 24_4552 2013 10 24_4553 2013 10 24_4551 2013 10 24_4555

The pergolas which bridged the central paths was made of iron and were beautifully decorated.

2013 10 24_4558 2013 10 24_4559 2013 10 24_4560 2013 10 24_4561 2013 10 24_4563

So, although we came to Newport House to see the outdoor sculpture we found much to interest us in the gardens themselves.

Categories
autumn autumn colours climbing plants colours fruit and veg garden design garden photography gardening grasses half-hardy perennials ornamental grasses ornamental trees and shrubs Shropshire

A Garden Bouquet for October

October this year is a very confused month, with some plants thinking it is already well into autumn and others believing they are still in mid-summer. And some, judging by the number of berries dripping from the trees must be getting ready to feed the winter migrant birds. Come with me for a wander and you will see what I mean.

In the Freda Garden opposite the front door this beautiful Crocosmia with its flowers in orange with an unusual hint of pink continues to flower profusely. By the front door the pots are filling up with bright orange violas giving a cheerful welcome to visitors.

2013 10 22_4376 2013 10 22_4377

The leaves of the yellow winter flowering Ribes are turning all shades of pink and red while beneath it the perennial wallflower, Bowles Mauve, continues to flower even though it has barely had a rest all year. The lovely yellow Crocosmia sits comfortably alongside the Cotoneaster which is already heavy with berries.

2013 10 22_4380 2013 10 22_4382

2013 10 22_4381 2013 10 22_4383

In pots alongside the wood store sit these two Michaelmas Daisies which we bought from the Picton Garden recently and they still sit in pots waiting for us to find a spot for them. On the left is the variety “Coombe Fishacre” and on the right the species “elegans”.

2013 10 22_4378 2013 10 22_4379

Down the drive the berries of Cotoneasters and Rowan await the arrival of the winter thrushes but we will enjoy their rich red colouring while we can. Opposite them this beautiful blue Aster looks extra blue with the golden hues of the little grasses alongside.

2013 10 22_4384 2013 10 22_4385 2013 10 22_4386 2013 10 22_4387

In the Chatto Garden, which looks good every day of the year, the whispy strands of the Stipa tenuissima  move in the slightest of breezes behind the rigid dried heads of Bherkeya and the mauve flowers of Verbena bonariensis

2013 10 22_4388 2013 10 22_4389

Glaucous leaves of this Euphorbia afford a good background for the seed heads of Amaryllis. Close by another Euphorbia, griffithii “Dixter”, dies to a bright pink in stem and leaf.

2013 10 22_4391 2013 10 22_4392

The sword-like Iris leaves are similarly glaucous and they enrich the deepest pink of Huskers Red Pentstemon. A beautiful combination!

2013 10 22_4393

The white stems of Betula utilis jacqemontii “Silver Queen” glow against the evergreen background afforded by the Red Robin. In the same bed two varieties of deciduous Euonymus are changing into reds and pinks and busy white bell shaped flowers of Arbutus, the Strawberry Tree hang in full bunches. We have never seen so many flowers on our Arbutus before so we are anticipating a profusion of “strawberries” later on.

2013 10 22_4394 2013 10 22_4395 2013 10 22_4396 2013 10 22_4397

On the grass giant fungi sit like plates, dining plates for the slugs that feast on them.

2013 10 22_4398

Autumn colour is particularly well advanced on the Cercis “Forest Pansy”, Stransvesia and Amelanchier. The strange pink flowers of Lobelia tupa appear in a different place each year as they migrate around the Hot Border.

2013 10 22_4399 2013 10 22_4400 2013 10 22_4401 2013 10 22_4402

Moving into the back garden via the shade border we find the contrasting leaf shapes of Inula and ferns.

2013 10 22_4403 2013 10 22_4404

Arriving in the Rill Garden we can appreciate how the remnant flowers of the Pelargoniums match the berries strung out along the stems of the Cotoneaster.

2013 10 22_4405 2013 10 22_4406

These Ornithogalum are a new plant for us this year – we are so glad we grew them. It seems an awful long time ago we planted the bulbs in their big terracotta pots. In the border behind them the leaves of the Witch Hazel are colouring up nicely in patterns, the Hypericum berries are now shiny black and the Echinops flowers sit stiffly on rigid stems like silvery blue spheres.

2013 10 22_4407 2013 10 22_4408

2013 10 22_4409 2013 10 22_4410 2013 10 22_4412

Looking down the central path of the back garden the glowing red fruit of Apple Scrumptious still decorate the arch over the path.

2013 10 22_4413 2013 10 22_4415

I shall feature a few special favourites and then create a gallery for you to enjoy to illustrate what else is going on in the back garden. Schistostylus are a real late autumn flower but can flower at any time, some responding to the first frosts before they show. We have just bought this pale pink one but have enjoyed the red one for years now.

2013 10 22_4449 2013 10 22_4419

How about this for a Salvia – you can’t get blue much richer or deeper than this! The Persicaria is P. aucuparia Firetail which produces its poker-like flowers for months through the summer and autumn. Some of the flower heads at the moment are a good 3 inches long and an inch wide.

2013 10 22_4437 2013 10 22_4436

These two umbrella shaped flower heads are very different in habit. The glowing pink Sedum sits low to the ground on floppy glaucous stems while the Vernonia stands proud aloft tall 4 foot rigid stems.

2013 10 22_4434 2013 10 22_4422

An archway leading to the pool and Japanese Garden is covered in the red leaves of Vitis purpurea and alongside the pool is this willow. The stems of the Violet Willow are covered in a white bloom from now through to the spring when the winter rains return them to deep violet-black.

2013 10 22_4431 2013 10 22_4429

Now enjoy a wander around the back garden to see what October has in store for us to appreciate.

Categories
autumn autumn colours climbing plants colours flowering bulbs fruit and veg garden design garden photography gardening grasses grow your own half-hardy perennials hardy perennials light light quality ornamental grasses ornamental trees and shrubs shrubs succulents trees village gardens

A Garden Bouquet for September

September is the month when the first signs of autumn creep in and there is something special happening to the light. Misty mornings give the garden a fresh atmosphere. Darkness comes too early each day. Fruit picking is the order of the day and we get out our pruning kit, secateurs, pruning saws and loppers large and small to tackle the trees and shrubs.

Grasses begin to change colour, some flowers and seed heads are turning redder and more purple others towards the pale tints of biscuit.

2013 09 27_3768 2013 09 27_3769 2013 09 27_3770 2013 09 27_3771

The Blackberry vine is so heavy with fruit that it blocks the pathway and apples hang in thick bunches but seem slow to ripen. At last colour is creeping into the greenness of the grapes. Fingers crossed that the weather is kind to them and therefore kind to us.

2013 09 27_3772 2013 09 27_37732013 09 27_3777

2013 09 27_3774 2013 09 27_3776

This Buddleja is a special one with purple flowers at the tip of each arching branch. The out side of each individual flower is dusty purple-grey but the rich bright purple inside provides a beautiful contrast. Buddleys lindleyana is a very special shrub. A real favourite! And it looks even better alongside a bright orange neighbour in the guise of a Crocosmia. While we are on the subject of bright flowered Crocosmia the yellow one nearby is gentler but still a true bright beauty.

2013 09 27_3778 2013 09 27_3713

2013 09 27_3714

Shrubs and trees are thinking ahead to the winter and painting their leaves in reds, oranges and yellows. The first two photos are of a special Ribes which will give us yellow flowers in the winter. These are followed by deciduous varieties of Euonymus and Cercis “Forest Pansy”.

2013 09 27_3715 2013 09 27_3716

2013 09 27_3719 2013 09 27_3721

On the gravel garden, our Beth Chatto Garden, grasses are starring alongside the autumn stars, Michaelmas Daisies.

2013 09 27_3717 2013 09 27_3718  2013 09 27_3720  2013 09 27_3722

Bulbs usually mean late winter or early spring but these cyclamen and tulbaghia are showstoppers right now.

2013 09 27_3723 2013 09 27_3724 2013 09 27_3729

So off we go into autumn!

Categories
bird watching birds climbing plants colours conservation fruit and veg garden design garden photography garden wildlife gardening grasses hardy perennials ornamental grasses ornamental trees and shrubs photography roses Shropshire village gardens wildlife

A Garden Bouquet for August

It is time I took up my camera and took photos of the delights our garden has to offer. This is a particularly important set of photos as we have decided on August 3rd as the date we are going to open our garden for the National Garden Scheme next year. We keep looking for gaps or places in need of improvements be it little tweaks or bigger tasks such as re-laying our main central path in the back garden.

So I went off around the garden with my zoom lens attached to see what’s what in our patch. As it panned out there was so much to see in the back garden that all this month’s photos were taken there. Please enjoy the journey and feel the damp, cool morning air which acted like a soft lens filter giving a delicate misty blue atmosphere to some of the shots.

In the “Shed Bed” the delicate china blue flowers popping out of the spiky spheres of the echinops provide sustenance for our bees and the apple tree trained over an arch will provide sustenance for us. The odd white flowers come from the gentle creamy colours of the hydrangea heads.

2013 08 22_2847 2013 08 22_2926 2013 08 22_2927

Our tulbagias continue to flower in the new slate garden close by and above them the purple sedum foliage hangs from the old gypsy kettle on our old ladder.

2013 08 22_2928 2013 08 22_2929 2013 08 22_2930 2013 08 22_2931

There are lots of plants to look at around the end of the greenhouse where the vine is dripping with grapes awaiting late summer sun to ripen them and paint them in purple and black. The Quince vranga tree has a few fruits hanging at the tips of the branches and the soft pink curled flowers of Sanguisorba “Pink Elephant” brighten the border below.

2013 08 22_2857 2013 08 22_2933 2013 08 22_2935 2013 08 22_2936

In the long “Tree Border ” this lilac flowered clematis is dripping with flowers and the thornless blackberry is heavy with young unripe fruits.

2013 08 22_2862 2013 08 22_2938

The Secret Garden and the Chicken Garden are at their best, blooming brightly with the cordon apples full of ripening fruit acting as a backdrop, many of which are just beginning to develop a flush in their cheeks. The Shropshire Damson tree overhangs one border and its deep purple fruits are weighing down its branches so heavily that the fruits look like they are reaching out to hold hands with the flowers.

2013 08 22_2939 2013 08 22_2940 2013 08 22_2941 2013 08 22_2867 2013 08 22_2944 2013 08 22_2945 2013 08 22_2946 2013 08 22_2872 2013 08 22_2873 2013 08 22_2949

A few new plants are waiting, still in their pots, in the Secret Garden while we decide where to plant them. They seem to be the colours of citrus fruits!

2013 08 22_2950 2013 08 22_2951

Along the central pathway our pears are close to their peak picking time. As I pass each day I look longingly to see if a couple are ready. Surely this is the ultimate gardening experience, eating a juicy, scented pear still warm from the sunshine just seconds from leaving the branch. The few plums look sad and lonely – from all four cordons we have just one clump of fruit. A poor year!

2013 08 22_2878 2013 08 22_2877 2013 08 22_2955 2013 08 22_2956

In the greenhouse the tomatoes are producing prolific amount of fruit in shades of yellow, red and purple. We are picking and enjoying them daily and adding some to the store of produce in the freezer. In the late autumn we shall make them into chutney coupled with our onions and apples.

From the greenhouse door I can look out across the “L Bed” and the “Long Border” through an arch draped in richly scented roses and a delicate china blue clematis. This is a herbaceous clematis rather than a climber, but it does enjoy a good scramble over everything in its path.

2013 08 22_2958 2013 08 22_2960 2013 08 22_2961

2013 08 22_2963 2013 08 22_2964 2013 08 22_2965 2013 08 22_2967 2013 08 22_2968 2013 08 22_2970

This strange fruit is a heritage cucumber called Booths Blond, which Jude the Undergardener tells me is very tasty. I don’t eat them, they are one of the few fruits and veggies I don’t enjoy. This variety certainly looks very different to the long straight regimental cucumbers sold in supermarkets.

2013 08 22_2971

We have been concerned about the lack of butterflies and bees this year but recently they have come back in good numbers. Honey bees, bumble bees and solitary bees are all feeding furiously on any simple flowers. The butterflies are particularly tempted by the buddlejas and the marjorams. We garden with wildlife in mind particularly in the choice of plants we grow. Our flowers tend to be simple and  open, just the sort preferred by pollinating insects. We rely on our insects and birds to look after our garden for us. We garden totally organically relying on wildlife to do our pest controlling and pollinating of our crops.

2013 08 22_2897 2013 08 22_2969

As I am writing this the sky is full of House Martins and Swallows gathering together in readiness for their long migratory journey to the African continent. There they will find flies to feed on while here in the UK the insect population will disappear with the onset of winter. These acrobatic flying little birds seem to be celebrating a good English summer!

In the shrubs and trees warblers and titmice are busy feeding up after a period of moult. August and September are when we tend to see our warblers, Willow, Garden and this year even a Grasshopper Warbler. Chiffchaff and Whitethroat tend to be with us most of the year.

Categories
Cheshire climbing plants fruit and veg garden design garden photography gardening grow your own hardy perennials Hardy Plant Society HPS kitchen gardens Land Art ornamental trees and shrubs outdoor sculpture roses village gardens

A garden to make you smile.

On a blustery, heavily overcast day last weekend we visited two gardens on a day out with our friends from the Shropshire Branch of the Hardy Plant Society. Bumping down a narrow south Cheshire lane that twisted and turned a little too much for comfort, found us at “The Rowans”, a one acre garden loosely based on an Italianate theme. The elements reminiscent of the Italian styled gardens appeared in the structured garden rooms and the use of ornament especially sculpture, but I felt the theme of happiness was much more in evidence.

There were signs scattered throughout the garden to inform and delight.

2013 08 19_2759 2013 08 19_2776

Humour was potently presented in ornament and statuary. Animals dominated!

2013 08 19_2750 2013 08 19_2754 2013 08 19_2758 2013 08 19_2757 2013 08 19_2762 2013 08 19_2777

But not all the entertaining was performed by animals – there were lots of varied bits and pieces to find amongst the plantings and hanging from the branches of trees.

2013 08 19_2771 2013 08 19_2770 2013 08 19_2769 2013 08 19_2767 2013 08 19_2765 2013 08 19_2764 2013 08 19_2763 2013 08 19_2761 2013 08 19_2760 2013 08 19_2756 2013 08 19_2753 2013 08 19_2752 2013 08 19_2751

The planting was not of rare or desirable plants but quite ordinary plants well grown and well put together.

2013 08 19_2748 2013 08 19_2768 2013 08 19_2775 2013 08 19_2781 2013 08 19_2780 2013 08 19_2779 2013 08 19_2784 2013 08 19_2783 2013 08 19_2782

We particularly liked the dense planting in an old wheelbarrow and a miniature pool in a blue glazed pot. Oh, and of course we enjoyed seeing how someone else grows their veggies!

We enjoyed a refreshing cup of tea or two before leaving and left with a promise of some seeds of two plants we liked. The kindness of gardeners shows no bounds.

2013 08 19_2766 2013 08 19_2774 2013 08 19_2773

We then took off back down the bumpy lanes to find our afternoon treat, a woodland garden that is the province of two of our Hardy Plant Society friends. So in my next posting you should find us there enjoying a tasty Hardy Plant Society lunch.

Categories
allotments Britain in Bloom community gardening flower show fruit and veg garden design garden photography gardening gardens open to the public grow your own half-hardy perennials renovation Shrewsbury Shropshire town gardens townscapes

A town riverside walk

Although we live close to our county town of Shrewsbury we go for months between visits to the banks of the River Severn, in whose loops the town sits snuggly. In the summer the council garnish the river banks with bright coloured plants in all sorts of containers and hanging baskets.

2013 08 07_2411 2013 08 07_2412 2013 08 07_2413 2013 08 07_2414 2013 08 07_2415t

I am not that keen on these brightly coloured bedding annuals but they seem to fit in with their setting so well here. Mother nature herself adds a little subtle planting herself with wild flowers growing close to the water and wonderful waterfalls of reflections.

2013 08 07_2416 2013 08 07_2417 2013 08 07_2418

Our footbridge an old Victorian suspension bridge has recently been completely refurbished and it is looking smart in its new green suit. The builders greatest challenge was to make sure that after the make-over the old bridge retained her sway. As you walk across her she sways from side to side!

2013 08 07_2421

This weekend is time for the famous Shrewsbury Flower Show so when we reached the open parkland spaces alongside the river we found signs of the village of tents and rows of arena seats appearing at a great rate of knots. It seemed to be growing up around us as we walked towards the little sunken garden called The Dingle.We now anticipate our day out at the show on Saturday most eagerly. We hope to go in the afternoon and stay until closing time with the magnificent firework display over the river.

2013 08 07_2420 2013 08 07_2419

And so to the Dingle herself, which is not my cup of tea at all, but it is enjoyed by thousands every year. It is all a bit garish for my taste, but I do admit that it takes a great deal of skill to create and maintain it. It certainly gives pride to the town. Come on a tour with us and see what you think.

2013 08 07_2422 2013 08 07_2423 2013 08 07_2424 2013 08 07_2425 2013 08 07_2426 2013 08 07_2427 2013 08 07_2428 2013 08 07_2429 2013 08 07_2430 2013 08 07_2431 2013 08 07_2432 2013 08 07_2433 2013 08 07_2434

We wandered back into the town centre to have a look at how the town council had decorated the Square as part of their “Britain in Bloom” campaign. All the allotment sites in and around the town had planted up mini-allotments small enough to fit on a pallet and these were collected up and put in the square. Local artists crafted two scarecrows from metal to give an extra dimension.

2013 08 07_2437 2013 08 07_2436 2013 08 07_2435 2013 08 07_2438 2013 08 07_2439 2013 08 07_2440 2013 08 07_2441 2013 08 07_2442 2013 08 07_2444 2013 08 07_2446 2013 08 07_2447

Each post marking loading bays along the High Street had been given a topknot of Ipomaea in two foliage colours. Very subtle and very effective.

2013 08 07_2448

Categories
birds climbing plants colours fruit and veg garden design garden photography garden wildlife gardening grow your own hardy perennials herbs ornamental trees and shrubs village gardens

A cottage garden with a difference.

We visited my sister, Penny and her husband, Tony this week and enjoyed a lazy afternoon sat on the terrace under a large awning escaping the afternoon sun as the temperature rose well into the 30’s again. From their front garden, situated beneath Bredon Hill in Gloucestershire, you would believe that a traditional cottage garden awaited you around the back but prepare to be surprised.

2013 08 02_2408

The front is a gravel drive and turning point with neatly mown grass areas and gravel gardens, featuring a beautiful stone birdbath.

2013 08 02_2409 2013 08 02_2410

Move around the back and a wide inviting paved terrace greets you, and the pervading warm scents of herbs emphasises the feeling of welcome. The aroma of coffee brewing and comfy seating under the awning made us feel so welcome. This is good garden design!

Sit and enjoy your brew and wide steps constructed of recycled railway sleepers infilled with gravel entice you deeper into the garden through a lovely Japanese influenced archway

2013 08 02_2352

The archway sets the scene of what is to come, or at least in part. But relaxing over coffee and cake afforded us the opportunity to spot little details and elements of decoration and humour. An over-sized ceramic hand acts as a bird feeder, a terra-cotta green man watches us from the nearby fence and a recycled wood burner too large for the house has become a garden heater.

2013 08 02_2347 2013 08 02_2348 2013 08 02_2349 2013 08 02_2350 2013 08 02_2353 2013 08 02_2354

Up the wide steps and through the black wooden archway is a cool shaded garden based on the principles of Japanese garden design. A buddha, a Koi pool,

2013 08 02_2356 2013 08 02_2357 2013 08 02_2358 2013 08 02_2359 2013 08 02_2360 2013 08 02_2363 2013 08 02_2364 2013 08 02_2365

The atmosphere here is so powerful, there is a feeling of calm and peacefulness. Again – good garden design. The play of light and shade, cool and warm, changes as you walk through from section to section. The planned tea house should add another rich element to the garden.

Glimpses through the boughs of the tree provide clues to what lies beyond, a little productive patch, with fruit trees and raised veg plots. The tomatoes, picked from the vine and eaten while still warmed by the sun were delicious, sweet but with just the right amount of a hint of acidity.

2013 08 02_2361 2013 08 02_2362 2013 08 02_2366 2013 08 02_2367 2013 08 02_2368 2013 08 02_2369 2013 08 02_2370 2013 08 02_2371 2013 08 02_2372

2013 08 02_2373 2013 08 02_2374 2013 08 02_2375 2013 08 02_2376 2013 08 02_2377

The male and female components of this pine were present at the same time, the cones seemingly glued direct to the trunk and the female flowers wrapped around the stem near the final whorl of leaves. A fascinating little tree.

2013 08 02_2378 2013 08 02_2379

When you retrace your steps back through a garden it is amazing how you find new surprises awaiting you. The light hits things from different directions and puts the spotlight on objects and surfaces that failed to catch my eye before.

2013 08 02_2388 2013 08 02_2387 2013 08 02_2386 2013 08 02_2385 2013 08 02_2382 2013 08 02_2355

The harsh mid-summer light added depth to shadows and textures emphasised.

2013 08 02_2393 2013 08 02_2391 2013 08 02_2390

Wildlife is welcome, encouraged and appreciated here too as shown by the presence of birdhouses. There is the constant hum and buzz of an ecologically sound space. Stay still and you will hear grass hoppers, bees and the yaffling of a Green Woodpecker, the constant chatter of Goldfinches and Linnets. Butterflies are abundant and entertain with their movement and colours. To prove the friendliness of the garden and the gardeners towards our wildlife a grass hopper landed on my back before alighting on the window behind me.

2013 08 02_2405 2013 08 02_2406

However good the overall design of a garden is, in the end the little details can add another layer of interest. Penny and Tony have the knack of selecting interesting items that catch the eye just when you think you have discovered the essence of the garden.

2013 08 02_2404 2013 08 02_2403 2013 08 02_2402 2013 08 02_2401 2013 08 02_2400 2013 08 02_2399 2013 08 02_2398 2013 08 02_2397 2013 08 02_2396 2013 08 02_2392

This is a great garden to spend an afternoon in, relax and catch up with our sister and brother-in-law. And they present a fine cup of coffee and most excellent lemon drizzle cake!

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