Sunday, 18 April 2021

Woodland

That is what I call this bed, which I look out on when sitting in Dad's old rocking chair. It is tucked beneath the western boundary of the garden, on the north side of the house, so shady, with hazel up by the well, and flowering currant to add protection. As you step out of the sitting room, the Japanese lady welcomes you along the path.

You walk down, not knocking your head on the multitude of bird feeders that hang from the tree you pass: a good place for a cat to watch for a mouse. At the other end, a Japanese lantern is tucked beneath a rhododendron.


Halfway down you might notice this carefully tied back chaenomeles. Planted a number of years ago, it was subjected to indignities various as the path was constructed, and then reconstructed. I thought it lost, but it managed to hang on by the skin of its teeth, and is now bravely flowering at the base of the fence, more coral than pink as here. The lovely twisted ironwork is the lantern stand my son in law made me, some years ago - it holds a glass candle holder lantern we bought in Istanbul, you can see that in the first picture.


At the base of another leg, epimedium at its delicate best, with bishop's hat leaves and fairy flowers

it makes a beautiful backdrop to this little self seeded primula


Tucked away in its new home, fiercely protected with canes against badger and cat, some Solomon's Seal, generously offered to me from the garden of some friends, a few weeks ago. The leaves are just starting to unfurl. They are bathed in sun in the morning, protected by the shade of the house and flowering currant for the rest of the day,


If you turned your back on them, and looked across the garden you would find windflower and primrose, trickling down the bank opposite


and if you walked back up the path to the little waterfall by the pond, perhaps followed by a cat, 


you might find a few garden gods gathered over the years. They stand guard at the top, where the little birds come down to drink, and the blackbirds to bathe


Down by the pond the waterboy holds out his shell, reminding me it needs refilling


and the big and little fish bask in the afternoon sunshine


 Above, that cat has settled in his pot


and a daffodil by the door seems the perfect colour to be tucked into the woodland bed; to settle there once it has finished flowering.



Sunday, 11 April 2021

My "Water Music"

I was reminded of this today, because I have been playing the piano just a little bit recently, revisiting a simple Bach prelude which remains in my fingers. 

This piece is not Bach, but Chopin, Nocturne in E Minor, and has never been in my fingers. It is something my beloved Mum used to play, when I was a small child and we had moved "back" to Ganna's house in Hastings, after Dad died. I called it "Water Music" because of that wonderful flowing rippling line in the left hand.

So imagine, if you will, this little girl, twirling and swirling, arms outflung, toes pointing, using all her best ballet steps, round and round on the carpet in the drawing room, with its centre medallion,  knowing the music so well that her final dying swan was always at the heart of the motif. 


The pianist here plays it just as Mum used to - with my eyes closed, I could feel myself there.

Saturday, 10 April 2021

In the evening garden

A cat who is sure that ~ some day his mouse will come along


a soft, warm fading light 


and Down in the Dell, yes a badger really does dwell


fossicking about, snuffling up goodies


Then the following day, lady fox, snooping about beneath the bird tree for tasty morsels


before scooting up the big yew for a quick check for birds eggs or baby squirrels - can you see the tip of her brush as she jumps back down?


such treasures


Sunday, 4 April 2021

Aflutter

As I was taking this picture, to give you the context of my more usual close ups of flowers, a small group of jackdaws took flight across the garden. If you look closely you will find five black shapes, mid flight, with their shadows following them on the lawn. 

They have just swooped out from the bird feeding tree you can see at the very left. This holds many delicious things; fat balls, mealworms, peanuts, mixed seed, soggy bread and our wind chimes. Just opposite it across the path is the water bowl/bird bath in which the starlings, sometimes more than one, take excitable baths, or leisurely drinks, along with other birds when they can get a look in. The smaller birds avail themselves of the little cascade that ripples it's way into the pond, looking rather unglamorous at the bottom of the picture under its cover  - very necessary for heron visits!


The image shows our rear garden, dropping away down the hill behind the house, narrowing slightly as it goes. You can just see the roof of the greenhouse in the "kitchen garden" which sits below and behind the yew tree. Beyond this productive space there is the Dell where the badgers dwell; left wild for their delight, apart from an apple and plum, planted about five years ago. Beside the pond is an old stump, now support for honeysuckle, jasmine and clematis, on the opposite side our smart new shed and just behind the camellia, a trellis panel which forms the boundary of the new seating area we had made between the two sheds this time last year, before we knew how precious our garden was about to become as a space for musing during the impending lockdown.

So, this top bit is where you'll find hellebore nestled beneath the rhododendron


a ribbon of daffodils catching the sunlight as it peeps over the roof of the house


and pulmonaria, so vivid with their varied flowers and spotty leaves


Above, in one of the many trees that line our plot, Columbus the crow stands guard, shouting at the cats or foxes, or at his fellow crows in oaks at the other side of what was once a farmer's field but is now five gardens. What does he know of gardens, other than what he can find to eat in them?


The rescue camellia is doing well this year; one of four we have now


and the grape hyacinths are bubbles of blue beneath the yew.


Meanwhile in the front garden, always full of sun, the first of the pasque flowers are opening their purple blooms, so their shining yellow eyes can greet the rising sun on Easter morning,


My little corner of colour is shimmering; the soft blue grape hyacinth provide a lovely contrast with the singing colours behind them and the gentle yellow of the primroses


another ribbon of daffodils provides nodding spots of captured sunlight, now they have opened beneath the weeping birch


a double celandine is a little spot of wild yellow by the fence


the tulips, given us by a friend as a wedding gift three years ago are ready to burst into bloom


and, just by the front door, a delightful shadow echo provides brief pleasure before, with my late mother in law's warning in my ears ("one year's seeding, seven years weeding") I nipped it off to save myself later effort!


Happy Easter to you and yours, I hope the season brings you pleasure.