We’ve had a real mix of weather this month – a ‘blackthorn winter’, with cold days and frosty nights, and a warm and sunny Easter weekend; currently cloudy with a chilly easterly wind. But overall it has been mostly dry, and often pleasant enough for gardening; being busy in the garden, I haven’t had much time for posting here, so there’s plenty to catch up on.
'Couleur Cardinal' tulips |
Most of the late winter/early spring jobs have been
done. The apple tree has been pruned,
except for a few high branches that I can’t reach; they’re a job for another
year, as I’ve already taken out some big branches and daren’t take these out
too. The buddleja has only just been
pruned. It was a complex job. Last year the plant was knocked around by
various gales, snapping some branches and leaving others leaning into the plant
at odd angles; and the relatively mild spring has caused a lot of shoots to
grow quite tall. Getting at the old
broken stems and removing them without damaging the new ones took a fair bit of time. This year I’ve cut up the thin
prunings for composting in the Hotbin, which I’ve just restarted (it went cold
last autumn and my inability to bend down meant that I couldn’t empty it to get it going again until recently). The bin is
again firing on all cylinders, and the half-composted material from last year
has been used, under black polythene, to suppress weeds by the edge of the
patio.
I’m rather later than usual in sowing seeds; tomatoes and
courgettes are only just sown, and ornamentals and most vegetables are still
awaiting attention.
The lawn has been cut a couple of times, avoiding the large
(and growing) patch of cowslips, and an increasing number of orchids.
I’m not the only one who has been busy around here. Nesting is in full swing. A pair of robins have been busily taking
nesting material into a crack in the neighbours’ garage roof, as seen from our
kitchen window, and a blackbird was gathering grass to take into the thick ivy
round the base of the electricity pole by the drive entrance – she looked
rather like a flying haystack. A song
thrush collected moss from near the pond, and I think took it into the hedge by
the holly tree; she occasionally appears round the edge of the lawn to feed. There are two male wrens down at the bottom
of the garden, singing furiously at each other, so there are probably a couple
of nests down there too. During the warm
Easter weekend we were able to eat in the summerhouse, to the apparent
consternation of a couple of great tits who came to sit in the hawthorn tree,
staring at us through the window; they occasionally had nesting material with
them, and seemed interested in the nest box but unable to pluck up the courage
to use it. I hope they’ve found
somewhere in the ivy-covered damson thicket a little further along the
fenceline.
Our patio blackbirds are being very grateful for the
partly-rotten apples that we’re still putting out for them; they nested early
and are feeding little ones. Yesterday
two youngsters broke cover and followed Mum to the patio for food; today Mum is
back on nest-building duties, collecting a huge beakful of grass and moss and
taking it towards the hedge, for the next brood.
Despite our best endeavours, starlings appear to have found
a gap high up in the north gable and are nesting there; we blocked up their
previous entrance, but they are persistent.
They’re messy neighbours, although now that the ash tree has gone their
flight-path out of the nest seems to have changed so that their droppings now
fall further away from the drive.
A couple of nest-related mysteries. A male sparrow was found flying around inside
the (locked) porch one day. How did it
get in? One had been sitting on the
porch guttering the previous day, and I’d guess that it tried to find a nesting
site in the porch roof; there must be a crack through to the interior somewhere. The other nest mystery wasn’t
a bird, though we’re not sure who was responsible. There are a few neat round holes in the grass
at the edge of the path – there’s a photo in a previous 2020 post – which are
probably being used by a small rodent or bees, but one day a fragment of green
tarpaulin was found wedged down one of the holes. By whom?
We left it in situ for a few days, but had to remove it to mow the lawn
and didn’t put it back. I hope whoever
put it there didn’t mind.
Tarpaulin in the hole |
Four-legged visitors are also around. One day I went to inspect the little fig tree by the wall (flourishing), and suddenly noticed a rat near my feet. It was among some old buddleja prunings, stacked there out of the way, and appeared to be asleep, but further tentative investigations showed it to be dead. I expect it didn’t feel well, tucked itself into a safe place and just fell asleep. Fortunately the ground round there is stony but diggable, so a fairly deep grave was excavated and it was quickly tipped in. Definitely alive, on the other hand, was a stoat that was very briefly spotted yesterday running along the wall from the woodstore to the gas tank.
Indoors, a friend brought a bunch of roses, which are brightening
up the dining table. I don’t grow hybrid
teas myself, but they do have the most perfect blooms!
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