There has been an eerie silence in the valley today as the plummeting temperatures are keeping even hardened walkers curled up by the fire. With a reading of minus 5, the defrosting roof on the hive assures us that our resident pollinators are warm & cosy on the bee patio! We've hung little bee houses in the trees to provide warmth & protection for the wild bees.
Sunday, 28 November 2010
Saturday, 27 November 2010
Saturday, 20 November 2010
Low Mist Envelops The Valley
This morning the air is moist with the low hanging cloud & mist. For the first time it feels like we have passed through the portal from autumn to winter. Most of the trees are now bare of their leaves & fruit leaving the sky sillhouetted with their magnificent frames. Their presence & re-assurance of the continum of life is ever welcome. This week I mourned the passing of the garden of my childhood; learning that it had been purchased by developers who immediately felled the apple, pear, greengage & lilac trees which were part of the original orchard where the houses were built in the 1920's. It was under their branches that I played & their beauty inspired my love of the garden. Their spirit lives on & this is probably an example, on a larger scale, of the cycle of renewal. I hope that, at some point, new trees will be planted for the children of the future to experience their majesty!
Friday, 19 November 2010
Wagtails Piroette On The Lillypads
This morning an excited little wagtail was joyfully jumping from lillypad to lillypad in the early November sunshine, celebrating the wonder of washing her feet. Isis & I were mesmerised by her elegant dance, entirely choreographed by nature. Intermittently, she would soar skywards using the decaying leaf as a launch pad before looping down into the valley & returning to frollick in the pond some more! It was a really special moment & a priviledge to witness. What a wonderful start to the charity day for BBC Children In Need.
Thursday, 18 November 2010
Death of a Colony
Today the master bee-keeper phoned to let us know about the untimely death of one of his colonies & his new 'Buckfast Queen'! It is so upsetting when a tragedy like this occurs to a local colony. Bee- keepers are a close community with a shared passion and fascination with the secret life of bees! The decline of the colony was swift & deadly, it leaves us all in mourning for the loss of these wonderful miracle workers. Today, I was pleased to spend time gift wrapping 'Aphrodite's Honey' from the summer - it invoked memories of happy summer days amongst the flowers accompanied by the hum of our industrious little pollinaters.
The Wind Wreaks Havoc
What a week of contrasts; balmy autumn days to violent wind & rain. The upside is that the last of the apples have been stripped from the trees & are now nestled cosily amongst the leaves & geraniums in the composter. The dogs are delighted with the medlars hidden in the grass at the base of the tree & spend happy hours foraging for a treat. The garden rings to the sound of power tools blowing, strimming & mulching, a petrol head's delight. The white of the iris have been settled in the soil in anticipation of the season to come. Hopefully a cold snap will provide the few weeks respite required for the plants to go dormant & recouperate their strengh!
Friday, 12 November 2010
Ice In The Birdbath
When the birdbath freezes over - we know that winter is here & so do the wild birds. The drop in temperature restricts their access to fresh water for washing & drinking, so it's vital to check that it hasn't frozen over! Luckily here the stream runs freely even during the harshest conditions although I love to watch the birds ruffle their feathers at bathtime & peer in the window demanding more nuts. Wherever possible we are not overtidying so that we can leave them some warm, dry places to overwinter with some seed heads & berries to feast on. On the patio the frost has also started to affect the summer geraniums; so it's time for them to join the ingredients in the compost heap in preparation for a delicious mulch for next year's roses.
Thursday, 11 November 2010
Isis Forages For Medlars
Isis has a new role in the garden - 'Chief Medlar Detector'. An autumn spent sampling the delights of the windfalls has tempted her to upgrade to 'Haute Cuisine'& introduce sophistication to her palate. The musty apple & cinnamon flavour of rotting medlars is providing irresistable. The challenge is reading her bodylanguage & anticipating a 'find'; then popping it in the basket before she realises! Not an easy task, it requires speed, agility & determination.
Poppies. A Time To Remember
This morning at 11am on the eleventh day of the eleventh month, the power of nature was at it's mightiest as the rain lashed down & the wind roared through the valley like an anguished dragon howling in pain. Watching the leaves funneling up in the air like mini- tornadoes engaged in an aerial dog-fight was an moving sight for the two minute silence; a beautiful metaphor for the youth, strength & bravery of all those who have given their lives for their country.
After a few minutes the wild grief subsided allowing the sun to peep from behind the clouds & call us into the garden. Along the path we found a young poppy, encouraged by the temperate autumn, her leaves still crumpled in the bud as she prepares to bloom - A hint of her beauty to come. We wonder if the chill of winter will cut her down in her prime? The red flowering corn poppy, 'Papaver rhoeas', symbolises eternal sleep & resurrection, a fitting tribute to our brave & fallen.
Wednesday, 10 November 2010
A Gentle Respite
What a change in our fortune's after the bitter wind & rain of yesterday. Today the sun shone down from clear blue skies, tempting us to stop awhile & bask in her glory. Rose Palais Royal looked down regally today through the branches of the ornamental crabapple with it's ruby red fruit. What a delight to see this rose in full flower the second week in November. Although her bed-mate the clematis 'Niobe' is long gone, she is the perfect companion for a late autumn fruit tree.
Tuesday, 9 November 2010
The Barometer is Falling
This morning winter announced her arrival in dramatic style as the wind blast through the valley. The composter is full to brimming with leaves caught in her wake. Gentle investigation of the soil beneath the leaf-carpet revealed the tips of the snowdrops being encouraged by the warmth. Most of our trees are now almost bare, this week's fierce winds having stripped them of leaves. We have cleared the debris from the base of the hellebors to allow the air to circulate under their old leaves where the flower buds are developing to flower after christmas. Together with the snowdrops these are the garden's first gifts of the New Year.
When the wind is nipping at our fingers there is nothing nicer than retreating to the kitchen to make sloe gin, medlar jelly & apple chutney.
Monday, 8 November 2010
The Smoke Bush
Cotinus coggygria 'Royal Purple' - I just love this shrub. It's shapely form provides interest throughout the summer into the late autumn. Romantic in a summer planting, with open, pink flowering plumes covered in a smokey haze. The black/purple leaves turn tequilla-sunrise orange before falling in November. These pictures were taken just two weeks apart, just after the first frost & today, just before she de-robes! Definitely a plant for all seasons.
Valley Garden Produce
The Piquent scent of apple is permeating the house from the kitchen. Baskets of apples, walnuts, medlars & crabapples, the produce from our bumper harvest, cover the surfaces. It's hard to believe that this fruit began life in the spring when the trees were covered in clouds of five petal blossom. Plip, plip, plip; the clear claret syrup drips through the muslin in preparation for the delicacy 'crabapple jelly'. I must admit, the rolling boil to find the point where alchemy occurs is always stressful. The 'Bramley apples', Malus domestica, are being used for jars of Nigella's 'Spicy Apple Chutney', golden & fluffy ----- ummm Delicious!
Saturday, 6 November 2010
The Brightest Berries For Years!
This year's display of jewel coloured berries is truely amazing. Dark green foliage is being illuminated with a plethora of berries crossing the spectrum from tequilla-sunrise orange through ruby to black. Soft autumn light is gently diffusing the colours creating the effect of looking across the african plains at sunset; truely magnificent. Each morning a different plant enchants me with it's fiery foliage - this morning it was the turn of the 'Acer'under the canopy of the 'Copper Beech' tree.
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