The garden is currently in its quiet mode, with the midsummer flowers gone and the late summer ones still not yet there. The Crocosmia 'Lucifer' is out in all its glory, as is its companion Lilium henryi, and the Francoa is in bloom, but otherwise things are a bit quiet. The next event will be the Buddleia, which is just coming into flower. I have succumbed to a few impulse plant buys recently but not yet done anything with them; and I'm afraid I just haven't got round to summer displays in the pots this year, partly because the tulips were so late in dying back. There's only the windowbox with its usual display of Mesembryanthemums, which have done miserably this year (too dry?? - but the reason I plant them is that they're supposed to be drought-tolerant!).
My vegetable gardening this year is best described as peasant gardening. The veg plot has been left rather unattended this year, so most of it is out of commission; there's a couple of rows of broad beans with some dill and coriander at their feet, a little wigwam of the runner/French bean cross 'Moonlight' (in very pretty flower but not yet fruiting) and a couple of French beans; two patches of potatoes (which won't have liked the dry weather), some garlic which is ready to be dug up, some leeks which were never thinned, and two winter squash plants, one coming on nicely and one still tiny. Most of these have been tucked into whatever relatively weed-free corner I could find. The courgettes (one huge plant and two still quite small) are cohabiting with the sweet peas and pinks in the old herb garden. It's all rather haphazard - rather like those little plots you see in Italy where someone has put in a row of beans, a couple of tomato plants and a few cabbages in whatever bit of ground they can find. Next year it will be better .... (as I always say ...).
I managed to salvage a couple of colander-fuls of gooseberries and a few raspberries, even though a fledging blackbird tried to defend the latter from me; he really didn't want to leave them when I approached. The plum crop looks like being good this year, but the apples will be small.
A nice sit down |
The birds seem to have thrived this year. The robins and blackbirds are now moulting but the sparrows are still feeding young and even mating. There are plenty of young starlings about, too. Some of the woodpigeons have become quite trusting, even bathing in the patio birdbaths (which are really much too small for a woodpigeon); we came home one day and found two of them just having a nice sit down on the lawn quite near to the house.
The lavender, which is now just going over, has attracted large numbers of bees
Small Whites on the lavender |
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