Cactus buds |
Aquilegia seed head |
Honesty seed head |
Sepervivum arachnoideum |
Bee on deutzia |
2 bees on Centaura |
2 bees on Cirsium |
Cactus buds |
Aquilegia seed head |
Honesty seed head |
Sepervivum arachnoideum |
Bee on deutzia |
2 bees on Centaura |
2 bees on Cirsium |
are more usual for April not May. However, it does make everything grow pretty fast. Keeping on top of the slug population by doing a morning and evening slug patrol has helped enormously, especially with the problem of the huge, so called Spanish slugs. They did get my Primula vialii so I have covered what is left of the plants with a 1/2 plastic bottle as a cloche so we shall see if they can still come through. The Aquilegias are fab at the moment, flowering away, but some of them keeled over in the ninja showers. I found bright orange aphids on the Mahonia out in the front garden, so hubby gave it a prune and that got rid of some of them. Aphids are everywhere just now and most of the time I jet them off with a water hose, or squish them as I check the plants (if I can reach them). The cactus in the conservatory have nice magenta flowers out now. I love the mahogany of the sempervivum , also in the conservatory. There are a few nice plant combinations that I have quickly taken a few snaps of (bit windy out there). Some I like for the flower colours together, and others have the same colours but different foliage forms. I have taken a few snaps of the raised bed from different angles as it is a kind of triangular shape. The Erica tree heath is covered in flowers, but just now it is a strange shape due to the pruning it had last year, so this year I won’t prune the spent flower heads off at all so that all of the branches will flower next year.
Selection of Aquilegias |
Orange aphids on Mahonia leaf |
Erigeron (and peony in background) |
Cactus in flower |
Sempervivum Reginald Malby |
Raised bed end on |
Raised bed curved side |
Raised bed back end on |
white Aquilegia and Primula snowflake |
Stumpery (part of) |
Stumpery (part of) |
Veronica and Tierella |
Osmunda regalis purpurascens |
Rodgesrsia leaf |
Rodgersia, fern and Polygonatom |
Hebe and Heuchera |
oh this fickle weather. You just never know when you can put the thermals away.
I spotted the common morels again this year but a metre or so over from where they last appeared. It is always lovely to see fungi in the garden. I often go around the garden looking for slugs and it is a great opportunity to find unexpected things popping up in the garden. I noticed also that the ragged robin hasn’t appeared yet so I don’t know if it has died, along with the blue poppies and the bronze fennel.
While I was on the patio I spotted a pigeon, just sitting having a wee soak in the pond, he then started splashing about having a real bath. I took a pic from upstairs of some of the back garden. I am finding it more difficult as the years go by to push over the grass, especially when it has been raining, so we will be getting more slabbing put down in June sometime. I don’t want to have a lot of slabbing but it will make gardening easier and a lot less messy. At the moment, every time I come in from the garden, I have to get a stiff scrubbing brush on my wheelchair tyres, and also an old towel, to get most of the dirt from my tyre treads before going into the house proper. The new slabs won’t prevent me getting pigeon poo in my tyre treads though, and it can be very tricky trying to dodge them. The grass is also very uneven and some of the slabs we put down years ago have actually sunk as they were only put down onto sand.
Morchella esculenta (common morel) |
Morchella esculenta (common morel) |
Pigeon in the pond |
May 2019 |
21° C today! You just don’t know what to expect, weather wise, these days in Scotland. I have been working hard the last couple of days to get all the plants watered and fed. Some of the hellebores are past their best and I have been dead-heading them regularly in the hope of more flowers. I have trays of plants to get ready for sale (at the Duddingston Kirk garden club plant sale on May 4th) getting hardened off. A lot of taking the trays out during the day, then bringing them back in at night, just in case of frost. Lots of weeding and moving pots around. The pots with bulbs, that have gone over, are now on the back steps until their foliage dies back. After that, the bulbs will get dried and stored. I am being ruthless, and anything that didn’t do well in the last couple of years is for the heave-ho. On my rounds around the garden I took a few snaps of some of the plants in flower at the moment. I am pleased to say, that after watching Gardeners’ world last night, that I have many of the shade loving plants that Carol Klein was enthusing about so I must be doing something right.
Fritillaria meleagris |
Cymbalaria muralis (ivy leaved toadflax) |
snails on the wall looking like a caterpillar |
Oxalis acetosella (wood sorrel) |
Dicentra formosa Bacchanal (bleeding heart) |
Polemonium reptans (Jacob’s ladder) |
Violet riviana (dog-violet) |
apple blossom (forget which type) |
Pellaea rotundifolia (button fern) |
Streptocarpus saxorum |
Streptocarpus saxorum |
Streptocarpus with button fern and Beaucarnea recurvata (ponytail plant) |
but the weather is supposed to warm up starting from Wednesday. I went into the garden this morning with great intentions of feeding and mulching the roses but I was just feeling too cold so I just took a few quick snaps. A couple I took a few days go when the sun came out. A few plants are going over now like the cherry and the pink corydalis. Even some of the hellebores are looking a bit ropey. Some of the narcissi are flowering away, like Cheerfulness, whilst others are not up yet, like Erlicheer and Pipit. Some of the brunnera and forget-me-nots are flowering but the brunnera ‘Jack frost’ is very nearly in flower, (the foliage look fabulous though). The cowslips are looking cheery but I had thought they would have self-seeded a bit but looks like I will have to divide it to get another clump.
My friendly crow followed me round the garden again so I blathered to him while he was pecking away at the old log.
Crow |
Astilbe leaves |
Brunnera ‘Jack frost’ |
Prunus Shirota Mount Fuji |
Corydalis solida pink |
Primula veris (cowslip) |
Corylus avellana Contorta |
Narcissus Cheerfulness |
on this – yet another dreich, Scottish day. Here is one of my favourite photos taken from the patio. It was a lovely warm sunny day in August 2005 and it was all looking splendid. Lush foliage of greens, purples, and reds. Smelling the scent from the roses wafting by, and watching the birds going about their day. Sadly the ivy got too heavy for the arches so they had to get chopped back. The photinia Red robin died, and the weeping tree got waterlogged and also died. The flowering currant got the chop, as did the cotinus. The clematis just disappeared! I had 3 different colours at the side wall but they gradually just went over to next door. I can’t even find their original plant stems. So today I will close my eyes and pretend I am back in summer 2005 enjoying the warmth and the garden as it used to be.
August 2005 |
yesterday saw snow, sleet and rain. Today, so far, a bit of sunshine and a chilly wind. Out in the front garden, the daffodils got a bit flattened by the snow and rain, but they have perked up again. The mahonia is looking a lot better this year, compared to the same time last year, and is flowering quite happily and smelly lovely. A brave hoverfly landed just as I was taking the photo. The tiny sulphur yellow flowers of the epimedium and looking good and so are the white vincas. I found loads of snails camped out behind the epimedium. There are a few little grape hyacinths coming through but not flowering yet. Out in the back garden the hellebores are all flowering (some better than others), some primula are flowering, pulmonaria is up and has started flowering, the snowdrops have all gone over, the iris reticulata haven’t flowered yet (although they were out this last year), a few pink corydalis are flowering, and a few chinadoxa too. It is a bit windy to get good crisp photos. The crow swooped down just above my head and landed next to me, and proceeded to follow me around the garden like the robins do. He didn’t mind me blathering to him either. The magpie was trying to get to the fatcake and not managing very well. Funny how we always think of them being black and white birds. I caught the blue colour of the wings but not the iridescent green of the tail. Still looking forward to some warmth of spring proper.
Daffodils and white vinca |
Mahonia |
Mahonia and brave hoverfly |
Epimedium sulphureum flowers |
Epimedeum sulphureum leaves |
friendly crow |
magpie, not just black and white |
I have been guarding the pond as much as I can from that bloody heron that keeps pinching the frogs – no wonder we only have a small clump of spawn so far. I know it is a wildlife garden so I can’t be too choosy about what wildlife visits, but I would like to see more frogs and toads, and it would be great to see some newts. Harry is going to make some kind of chicken wire thingy to see if we can prevent more frogs being nicked from the pond. The heron may still be picking them out from the borders around the garden too. I am not sure if it has a sore leg. It looked a little like it was limping, and when it flew away, it only stretched it’s left leg behind it properly. Maybe it knew it was just going to land on the nearest chimney so didn’t bother stretching them both.
Heron watching me from the garage roof. |
Heron taking a stroll around the borders. |
Heron, crow and hen pheasant. |
a couple of days ago I notice a blob of frog spawn in the pond – the first for this year so far. Last year I didn’t see the first frog spawn until around the 20th March, (beast from the East meant snow and ice last year) but this winter has been pretty mild. According to the Guardian the 26th February was the warmest winter day on record, but is pretty warm today too. It has been the warmest winter since records began in 1878 and there have been fires breaking out on some moors and even on Arthur’s seat in here Edinburgh. Sadly the nice weather is not set to last, and I hope the wildlife can cope with the change back to cold in the next few days. I read somewhere that a female frog only produces one clump of spawn per year and I can only see one clump so far. I hope to get more because that would suggest that there is only one female frog about which would not be good news.
1st Frog spawn 2019 |
so a slightly better picture of the sparrowhawk but I still haven’t got to grips with the new camera lens. I just can’t get a really clear focussed shot and through a window is never going to do it justice.
It was hiding beside a large shrub and checking out the bird feeder for little birds. It had it’s left claw tucked inside it’s feathers again.
sparrowhawk |