The vaguely green-fingered thoughts of a rambling rose.

Yesss!


We created our pond in June 2014.  We have had several frogs visit and in the last year or so were given some tadpoles by TMTC's little cousin.  

Last week while taking Ellie for an evening walk, we could hear a frog croaking from under the shed beside the pond.  On that walk we saw another frog in the next street.  Obviously the time had come for frogs to come together.

Maybe this year?

This morning I was feeling a little down in the dumps.  We're not self isolating yet and as I work for the health service, I'm still required to attend work.  Therefore we as a family are being sensible and adhering to the social distancing measures.  The images all over the media about crowds flocking to beauty spots across the country unnerved me somewhat.  I'm baffled how this will help protect the NHS. In a matter of 2 weeks I fear there will be an explosion of cases linked to this crazy behaviour. 

Anyhow. 

I decided to go into the garden to find something to lift the spirits.

Look what I found!


Frogspawn 🥳



I've decided to try and find something every day to lift the spirits in these uncertain times.  Finding these tiny jellies, each with a small black dot inside certainly fits that bill.

Be sensible.  Stay safe.

An outlook less bleak


Covid-19 is causing unprecedented turmoil across the globe.  In the UK, the government has promised to pay up to 80% of the wages to try to prevent huge job losses, there are financial packages being implemented to try to reduce the risk of companies folding and mindless selfish people are stripping shelves of all manner of goods, without a care for anyone else, and regardless of whether they will actually use the stuff they've bought before it spoils, and the added risk of spreading the virus further!

However, while the human race hurtles towards impending doom, Mother Nature is quietly smiling to herself as fewer emissions choke the planet while lockdowns and self-isolations increase.

The sun continues to rise and set, continues to warm the soil as spring settles in.  Leaves are unfurling on trees, shrubs and bushes.  Insects come out of hibernation and go about their lives.  Herbaceous perennials thrust into the light and the birds busy themselves hatching and raising their young.  Not in the slightest are they bothered by pubs closing or how many toilet rolls they can stockpile.  Mother Nature will provide the necessities the creatures of our world. The Circle of Life will continue, all the more without humans poisoning the planet. 


Fresh red foliage of photinia Red Robin.


Swelling flower buds on magnolia George Henry Kerns in the Long Border. 


Clematis Armandii and filigree purple-black foliage emerging from sambucus nigra Black Lace in the Terrace Border. 







Euonymus elatus Blade Runner looks quite uninviting at the moment but the leaf buds are appearing and will soon soften the effect. 


All the hydrangeas are still wearing last year's faded papery bracts.  It's a little soon to remove them just yet as they are helping to protect the emerging buds beneath from spring frosts.





Take a moment in the fresh air, whether that is in an open space adhering to the social distancing protocols, in you own garden, or just by opening a window.


Now listen. Not to the low thrum of traffic but to nature. Bees are humming.  Frogs are calling and the birds are providing a stunning musical masterpiece.  


Now watch. Not the people walking by but nature.  Get close if you can. Take pictures. The zoom in features on mobile phones are amazing now and almost all the blog photos are taken on our phones.  
Watch those bees foraging. Watch the frogs pootling about in the pond, laying spawn, catching early midges.  Watch the birds as they go about their day, attending to nests, firkling about on a sunny wall to pick off insects in the nooks and crannies.  Watch the birds visiting a water source having a bath and a drink or squabbling over the best feeders.  It can be very entertaining. 


Now act!

Find a shallow container, a lid from a container, a dustbin lid even.  I use large saucers designed for large plant pots and put a rock in at the edge for stability, and fill with water for the birds.  
Use a smaller lid and fill with marbles before adding water for insects.

Clean out that grotty looking bird feeder and fill with fresh seeds. Use a variety of different foods to encourage different birds.

  We have a block of fat with berries, seeds and mealworms in it, which tits and robins like.  One of our male blackbirds has learned to hover to pick at this.  We also have feeders with niger seeds for goldfinches, sunflower hearts are adored by almost all our feathered visitors, along with a seed mixture, and I have another feeder for mealworms.  The feeders are all designed to prevent larger birds (starlings will empty all feeders in one sitting!) but the starlings, wood pigeons and other blackbirds do hoover up all the food that is dropped.  We also have other visitors including at least one wren, greenfinches, dunnocks, bluetits, long tailed tits, coaltits and great tits.

Plant wildlife encouraging plants and shrubs.  Look for evergreens to help with hiding places.  Look for trees and shrubs that feature berries.  Look for open flowers rather than double frilly pom poms to help pollinating insects.  Labels will help point you in the right direction as they will often have a picture of a bird or bee on them.

Choose perennials and shrubs over seasonal bedding if you cannot afford much.  Seasonal bedding usually lasts for that season only,  whereas perennials and shrubs perform year after year.  If you're fortunate enough to have a Botanical Garden close by, or maybe even a local allotment shop, plants are so much cheaper than the garden centre.  Places like B&Q sell off plants very cheaply as they go over - pretty much all my spring bulbs have been bought for pennies, and okay I have to wait a year to enjoy the flowers but oh boy are they sweeter for it!




Remember that there are four seasons and plant accordingly to ensure there's something to assist wildlife in each season.  This might be early blooms such as hellebores for those earliest emerging pollinators. Spring and summer are easier of course with blossoms, open landing pads like the various daisies, simple roses and lavender.  Then of course late flowering sedums, and all those lovely berries to take them into winter.  Don't be afraid to leave dying stems and flower heads, particularly if they're hollow where beneficial insects can hibernate inside, or provide a few bug hotels.

Leave the pesticides alone.  Remember the Circle of Life.  If there are too many green fly on your rosebuds, don a pair of marigolds if you're squeamish and squish them!  Go out with a torch at night and pick off snails and slugs, and handfork over the bare patches of soil before the plants fill out to unearth clusters of their eggs for the birds.

Recycling doesn't just involve plastics and paper.  Gardeners are constantly recycling.  We have 6 waterbutts...rainwater is free.
We also have 4 compost bins.  All the plant waste, egg shells and vegetable waste and spent teabags from the kitchen are recycled.  This all rots down and is spread onto the borders to improve the soil...again, for free!


Make 2020 the year you help Mother Nature.  Make 2020 the year you care.

Keep safe.  Keep well xx


Taking a breather


The weather has improved a little and the sun has inspired bulbs to emerge and bloom all over the garden.  


I'm taking a couple of weeks off work and it's so comforting to hear the birdsong in the mornings, from the tawny owl in the neighbour's eucalyptus tree before dawn, to the urgent chirping of the sparrows as they squabble over the prime positions on the feeders. 

As I take Ellie for a walk, I am so aware how lucky I am to have fresh air to fill my lungs with.  I'm a country girl at heart and never happier than being outside amongst nature.  I guess I have a little something in my blood as I come from farming heritage.  I reckon if I won the lottery, I would buy a house further into the countryside - perhaps on the edge of a village.  I don't think I would go the whole hog and have livestock but a small wood would be just perfect.  

I can just imagine sitting on a fallen log, listening to the birds and watching the sunlight filtered through the leaves moving in a gentle breeze.  Ahhh. And relax...

Gardening never stays still.  There's always something to trim, tweak or titivate.


Clematis Armandii has almond scented flowers. This has definitely found itself at home in the Terrace Border and with this warming sunshine, will soon be smothered in blooms.



Time for the cornus spring snip.  The vivid red stems are cut back hard to ensure next winter's display. 



In the Yen Garden, rhododendron Christmas Cheer is in full swing.  It clearly wasn't fazed by being moved into the ground last spring. 


The wisteria already has swelling buds all along the stems.  Last year we had a single flower and oh boy did that bring pleasure to the senses.  The plant has had a light winter prune to shorten the previously pruned stems (using the 7s and 2s process).  The very ends of some of the training stems had died back so they also received a nip.  This year I reckon the wisteria will reach the other side of the pergola.  Then it will be a case of filling out and keeping it healthy (and hopefully increasing the amount of blooms).



Pausing for a moment in the tranquility of the Yen Garden, the cherry tree also has new buds swelling.  Below the cherry is the young acer Sangokaku showing off its vibrant stems.



Over in Mugwart's Retreat, clematis Alpina Constance is waiting in the wings for its moment in the spotlight. 



Spring is almost upon us. I can smell it.