A few more of my meadow flowers
14 Friday Aug 2015
Posted in flowers, nature, photography
14 Friday Aug 2015
Posted in flowers, nature, photography
11 Tuesday Aug 2015
Posted in bees, nature, photography
Bees on the Teasels
Bees on the Thistles
Although the garden meadow ended up somewhat neglected this year, the summer weather produced a wonderful array of flowers. The field marigolds and corm cockles are pretty well at the end of their season now, but the cosmos and field scabious, along with the buddleia, teasels and thistles are still attracting both bees and butterflies.
At the other end of the garden, in the potager, the marjoram and aliums are also still feeding the bees and bringing in a few butterflies. The Blackbirds are already feasting on the Elder berries and I noticed that even the Blackberries are ripening in the warm summer sunshine.
and even the Blackberries are ripening in the warm summer sunshine.
14 Tuesday Jul 2015
30 Tuesday Jun 2015
Posted in birds, flowers, gardens, nature, ornithology
It’s been such a beautiful day. It started with the bluest sky and brightest sun and the air was filled with the whistles and screams of the Swifts, as they wheeled and dived high above my head.
As I looked around the garden the colours seemed so bright they almost seemed to shimmer and the blooms appeared to bow their heads, as if in greeting.
It was a day for sitting, for watching and for immersing yourself into the landscape and as I sat I could hear the birdsong as a soundtrack all around me.
The scalding trill of the Robin and the shrill cry of the Blackbird alerting everyone to the stranger in their midst.
The chatter and gossip of the Sparrows, which suddenly got louder and more urgent, as squabbling broke out and several of the males vied for their rightful place within their social circles.
The lawn had been cut. The Blackbird and Chaffinch took full advantage as they foraged in the short grass and probed down deep into the soil.
The water from the hose had dislodged many of the bugs from their hiding places under leaves, the Sparrows and Robin feasted on them in the borders.
The Goldfinches and Greenfinches lined up in the bushes, noisily waiting their turn for access to the newly filled feeders of Sunflower and Niger seeds. And the Blue Tits, Coal Tits and Great Tits surreptitiously flitted to and fro, their beaks full from the fat balls and suet cakes hanging from the arch half way down the garden.
Beyond the arch, the mini meadow. Sown with wild flowers to draw in the bees and the butterflies. It appears to be working! The Bees hummed loudly as they went about their task of collecting pollen and taking advantage of the supply of free nectar. The butterflies, however, arrived as silent as thistledown on the wind. They, too, fed on the abundant supply of nectar, as they arrived to meet and mate. Then the females headed off to lay their eggs, thus leaving us their gift of beauty and wonder in the year yet to come.
In the meadow the pink of the Campion, which has been flowering continually since the spring, has been joined by the pink of the Corm Cockles, which have taken over from the pinks and purples of the Aqualiegia. The blue of the Corn Flowers and the Nigella (also given the title of Love In The Mist, – which I think is almost as beautiful as the flower itself), now mixing with the pinks, the whites and the stripes of the Cosmos.
My Chrysanthemums – Polar Star – . their tiny, pale white, petals surrounding their black centers, ringed with yellow, shine like eyes watching the world from the country cottage border. In the company of the osteospermum – Serenity – with its’ luminous yellow petals around a white ringed, black center, appear to glow in the half light of dusk and in the pale light of the moon. As do the white Allysum which line the sides of the paving slabs, and thus illuminate the edges of the path in the darkness.
The Foxgloves and Lupins are going over now. Their petals. on their tall spires, are giving way to the little pods which hold their seeds, and the hope for next years colours, safely sealed inside.
As I had stood, in the early morning, dousing the borders with water from the hose, the scent of lavender had risen up to greet my senses. Now, in the evening, as the light is fading and the sun sinks below the horizon, I am standing by the back door surrounded by the fragrance of the Honeysuckle. It envelopes me like a blanket, airy and comforting. Soothing my senses and smothering the worries of the day, as if to clear them from my mind.
… it really was a most beautiful day.
12 Sunday Apr 2015
Posted in nature, ornithology
It was a cold, grey day but the birds didn’t seem to mind and whilst I didn’t manage to get out for much of a walk, I was at least able to sit a while and watch them through the window.
Piebald(the leucistic Blackbird), of course, was there. the garden wouldn’t be quite the same without him.
Then there were the two magpies who appear to have set up home in my neighbours large leylandii trees. I used to get frustrated by the way they block the sunlight toward the end of summer. At this time of year the sun is lower in the sky, so it is less of a problem. But this year, the promise of the Magpies nesting, and also the recent arrival of a couple of crows has endeared them to me and I am glad they are still there.
They also offer space for the pigeons, Even though many people aren’t too keen on them, I find even they have their charm. The Collard Doves are elegant, whilst the Wood piegeons amble around in a strange combination of strutting and bumbling, which can make them rather endearing.
The Greenfinches dropped by frequently to take advantage of the feeders stocked with sunflower seeds, whilst the Chaffinches waited below for tidbits that drop down. The ever present sparrow chattered noisily from the hedgerow, flitting across regularly to both the feeders and the fat balls.
The blue tits are currently feeding on bugs which seem to be plaguing the the willow buds. Whilst the great tits seem to prefer the easier meal from the fat balls, which they share with the sparrows.