Wednesday 18 January 2017

Three's a crowd

Mid-January, and, although February is still ahead with its risk of freezing weather, there's always a sense around this time of year that spring is not so far away.  The robins have started singing properly, a sure sign that they're sorting out breeding territory.  I'm not sure how many we have in the garden - possibly four - but the one we see most often on the fat-ball feeder has entered into a slightly uneasy relationship with a mate.  They've been feeding together for at least a couple of days now, a little warily and with the occasional fractious moment, but they are definitely an item.  And when a third robin turned up today, it was seen off in no uncertain terms by the pair of them!  The dunnocks, who are a promiscuous lot anyway, don't seem to have a problem with threesomes; there have been three of them feeding on the patio from time to time for some weeks but without much sign of pairing.  The front-garden robin has lately been spending more time singing than begging for food, but he does like it when I leave the lid of the green-waste wheelie bin open so that he can forage for buglife in the weeds dumped in there.  I've started clearing ivy from the corner where he sits, so that he's not tempted to nest in there; it needs to be cut back and that needs to be done before nesting starts.

Other bird visitors have been two gorgeous male bullfinches, and a lively family of long-tailed tits who enthusiastically congregated on the fat-ball feeder for a few minutes the other day.  It would be nice if they turned up for the Big Garden Birdwatch later this month!  And we had a red kite flying low over the garden at the weekend.  What we haven't had this winter yet has been any red-legged partridges; there were ten of them in the field beyond the bottom fence a few days ago but none has wandered in as far as I've seen.

Osteospermum posy
The weather has mostly been on the dull and mild side, apart from one snowy day (barely a centimetre in depth, and so wet that it melted quickly, although the roads were icy in the morning).  A couple of days were very windy too, and we had a foggy spell; but apart from that winter hasn't been too hard so far.  The windowbox hasn't been cleared out for the winter, and there are still two osteospermums in there; I noticed today that, far from freezing to death, one of them has thrown up a flower bud!  (The other osteospermums are overwintering in the greenhouse; one of them produced a few flowers that made a nice little posy for indoors.)  The first snowdrops (G. elwesii) are in flower and even a couple of the doubles, which are usually late-flowerers, are showing some colour; the big hellebores have also started to open their buds.
First snowdrops

Not much activity in the veg plot yet, although the garlic is beginning to show and the broad beans - so far - are looking good.  In the greenhouse, the old growbags have salad seedlings coming up in them, but it would be fair to say that they're still barely at the microgreens stage - I haven't the heart to cut any yet!  I've started potting up the dahlia tubers; it's very early still, but I'm hoping to get some cuttings from them as I'm told that cuttings make better plants.  Only three varieties survived last year, so a few more purchases wouldn't go amiss .....

Viburnum x bodnantense 'Dawn'


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