Each time I walk into the garden something else has come to life and is looking wonderful. I never tire of just losing myself in a walk around, just touching, smelling, and enjoying all the beautiful colours and textures.
Watching the amazing variety of wildlife, hearing the buzz of insects and the birdsong gives me a tremendous feeling of calm and well-being.
It feeds my soul.
I take far too many photos every day so I've had to be ruthless in choosing which to show! First a bit of wildlife:
| 2 sparrows wait their turn whilst a starling has his morning bath |
| Just look at the iridescent green on the back of this fly visiting Euphorbia pithyusa |
| Mummy and baby toad in the orchard |
| Sorry this is a bit fuzzy but the little ant was moving so quickly to get his prized worm home! |
| The striking yellow, grey and black caterpillars of the Mullein moth munching away on a sacrificial wild verbascum (I grow many of them to distract the caterpillars from the cultivated forms!). I wrote about the little blighters here. |
| This little chap is Algernon-the-picked-upon who adopted us a few months ago and I must tell his story in a separate post |
Now for some plants and flowers.
| A lone orchid which has self-seeded into the orchard. I'm hoping it will set seed and spread. |
| Lichen on a pear tree |
When I open the front gate in the morning I'm always struck by how much seems to have sprung up almost overnight!
| Just look at the size of that cardoon to the right of the gazebo (as you look at it) and the foxgloves to the left! |
| The papery bracts of Salvia 'Vatican White' |
| Looking inside |
We have many different varieties of Sisyrinchium. Here are a few:
| The curious cream and chocolate/plum coloured flowers of 'Quaint and Queer' |
| Acid yellow star-like flowers set against the vivid blue of a prostrate campanula |
| Sisyrinchium striatum (it seeds everywhere!) |
| Close-up of the gorgeous creamy yellow flowers |
| Sis. 'Aunt May' with her beautiful striped leaves looks wonderful against the deep bluey mauve flowers of Salvia nemorosa 'Caradonna' |
| Deep blue bells of a Campanula in the gravel garden |
This little beauty always makes me smile. From amidst her pretty, stripy, and very hairy leaves she sends up a bright pink stem and then reveals a whole group of glorious flowers (I think they look a bit like angels or dancers) with spotty tops!
| Saxifraga cuscutiformis in front of Hosta 'Hadspen Blue' |
| The dark mauve, almost black, flowers of Aquilegia 'Black Barlow' set against the yellow leaves of Hakonechloa macro |
| Centaurea 'Jordy' in the gravel garden |
| I like the side-view best! |
| Pretty bracts on this variegated Euphorbia 'Ascot Rainbow' |
There are foxgloves in various shades, defying gravity and towering upwards in the most inhospitable places:
| Amazing, spiky casings from which will emerge the pretty purple flowers on this hosta 'Big Boy' planted either side of the entrance to the gazebo |
| The warm yellow flower of the scented Rosa 'Graham Thomas' (he's prone to blackspot but I still love him!) |
| Glorious blue Nigella (aka love-in-a-mist) whose seedpods I dry and use in winter flower arrangements. Each autumn I sprinkle the seeds into awkward places and she rewards me with an amazing display |
I have to stop now, although I could go on and on and on and on, so will end with this bright cerise flower of Lychnis coronaria. I love the contrast of the vivid flowers against the silvery grey felted stems and leaves.



3 comments:
Wow - some wonderful photos of your garden, the flowers and the wildlife. Thank you for sharing
Caz xx
What a stunning garden! Super photos :)
Evs
Thank you both for your kind comments. My garden is very special to me :-)
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