Back after a break in Scotland, to a garden on the change from autumn towards winter. But the Choisiya ternata (Mexican Orange Blossom) thinks it's spring and is flowering its socks off! Little does it know that I have plans to cut it back (severely) next spring; it's much too big.
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| Choisiya ternata - in full flower in late October! |
The windowbox, however, was definitely in late autumn mode and in need of replanting for winter. I had started planning for this a few weeks ago; the narcissi 'Tete-a-tete' had been started off in pots for transplanting, and various self-sown pansies around the garden had been dug up and potted on in preparation for this job. I already had pots of the early-flowering snowdrop Galanthus elwesii and little rooted cuttings of Rosemary 'Miss Jessopp's Upright' (last year's windowbox plants had dried out irretrievably over the summer), and on a whim I dug up a couple of self-sown pulmonaria plants to fill out the space (we'll see if that works). The result is a little bare but will do for the time being. The summer planting has been dealt with; annuals composted and perennials potted up for next year.
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| Windowbox ready for winter |
The birds seem pleased to see us back, with the birdbath refilled (the weather was mostly dry in our absence) and feeders replenished. Over the summer we've had a pair of chiffchaffs about, and at least one of them seems still to be here; there has been a pair of blackcaps too, but I expect them to head south for the winter. The fieldfares are here already, and probably the redwings too, so we don't expect to have many hollyberries to save for Christmas; the berries were ripe as early as mid-September and the birds will polish them off soon.
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| Holly berries in mid-September |
The remaining eating apples still on the cordons have been picked and stored; we have plenty, but a great many have been eaten by the wildlife while still on the tree (and the pears too). Usually it's insects and birds, but most of the damaged ones have teeth marks on them - the squirrel? or a rat (they're a fact of life in the countryside)?
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| A munched apple core - who's the culprit? |
Something has also been rearranging the mushroom compost spread on some of the veg beds, and nibbling my radicchio plants; I had hoped that the latter would be too bitter for the wildlife to eat. Ah well, if you attract wildlife to the garden, you can't expect it to necessarily play by your rules.
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| Nibbled radicchio, despite the twiggy protection |
There are still a few small courgettes, and the French beans have a last few tiny pods, curled up against the chill, in addition to the old, larger pods left for seed; I need to pick and dry those off soon. Another job will be to weed out the large number of foxglove seedlings that are colonising the bottom part of the veg plot; some years ago I put a few plants in there and since then their progeny has rather taken over.
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| Curled-up beans |
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| Too many foxgloves! |
In the greenhouse, the tomato plants have been cut down and the last fruits brought indoors to ripen; I've also taken the opportunity to pull up the yellow antirrhinum that has been flowering in there for a couple of years now. It will have seeded sufficiently to come back next spring, and indeed I may have to do quite a lot of weeding to keep the numbers manageable!
I also have autumn-sown seedlings of annuals for an early showing next year: the blue salvia, marigolds and corncockles. But the orlaya, also sown at the same time, has done nothing. That plant really doesn't like me; it's supposed to respond well to autumn sowing, but I've never had anything from it.
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| Salvia, marigolds and corncockles - but no orlaya! |
The lawn has been mown twice this autumn, and is already looking a little long although the weather is probably going to be too wet now to do it again. There are more toadstools in the grass. Fungi seem to have had a bumper year everywhere; in Scotland we saw an amazing variety of them.
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| Three types of Highland fungi ... |
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| ... and some more on a fallen log |
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