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Gardens throughout the year

I thought it my be interesting to have a thread showing our gardens and the way they change throughout the year.  Here's mine looking a bit of a mess at the moment -

I di leave most of it uncut over winter to give the insects more places to spend the winter - well thats my excuse - I was probably just being lazy.

 

Best wishes

 

Stoat

I'm not bald. I've just got ingrowing hair!

  • Well just a few of mine - we have given up with the lawn and turned it to deep beds too

     

     

     

     

     

    Re-cycled Polystyrene boxes - see the solitary asparagus !!!

     

    \but we do have some flowers

     

     

    Cheers all

    Nick

    Thank you

    Nick

    Growing old is inevitable - Growing up is optional !

    My Photos  http://www.flickr.com/photos/clan_ranald/

  • Himself says sorry about the pictures, he'll try for better ones when the light is better (it's in the shade, obviously and it is an overcast day)and also that the stumpery is not yet finished - this is the start however. The glaring white at the back is the 'the bunker' - a nasty thing we can do little about at present on account it's holding the garden up at that point. The garden's on an awful slope:-(

    Kezsmum

     

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous 17/04/2011 02:15 in reply to Kezsmum

    I've never heard of a stumpery before Kezsmum!  I am guessing you have had a large tree removed and are utilising the stump by planting various ferns? What a great idea.

  • Unknown said:

    I've never heard of a stumpery before Kezsmum!  I am guessing you have had a large tree removed and are utilising the stump by planting various ferns? What a great idea.

    Hi Coral, Stumperies were a Victorian and Edwardian fashion in woodland gardens, a bit the way Grottos and fake ruins were a Georgian thing and I suppose decking and tree ferns will be a 20th century legacy. Our garden sort of lends itself to a stumpery because ferns grow like weeds around here and we have two shady spots, one we rather grandly call the Glade, an area the size of a small living room in a modern house, where we have a couple of statues, a large potted pieris, two potted Japanese acers, a stone bench, a Britannia table and our picnic table - a stumpery would look good there because there are Devon banks and a dry stone wall and hedging platns there, but I'm dodgy with moulds so we decided to put it away from the sitting area - it's stood against this wall that stops the garden sliding down the steep slope outside the back door. The stumps were supplied by the local tree surgeon as they're not suitable for log fires. The tree obviously had tree ivy growing over it because the stumps have the rather fetching remains.Dunnocks are already investigating the nooks and crannies:-)

    I can't claim the idea for the stumpery, Higgy came up with it. My, can that man garden! Very creative he is and as soon as he mentioned it I thought YES! So did Himself, who has a soft spot for ferns, as do I. It'll look better when the ferns mature:-)

    There's a wildlife bonus as always in my gardens, all sorts of beetles LOVE rotting wood:-) And I love beetles:-)

    Kezsmum

     

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous 17/04/2011 15:41 in reply to Kezsmum

    Kezsmum, your garden sounds like heaven!  A dream of a garden. My garden is quite pretty [we did it from scratch] but I would love a more "natural" garden. I have a hedgie box, a frog house, lots of nest boxes, a small pond and try to attract nature into the garden.

    Will get some pics on soon. Higgy is the garden man then!

     

     

  • Unknown said:

    Higgy is the garden man then!

     

    Hi Coral, Indeed he is! Not only a really good gardener, but he has a creative streak about a mile wide:-) I must ask him if he's left handed, lefties are really good at spatial stuff quite often, Himself is a leftie and a lot of tennis players are. Himself can look at a space and see exactly what should go in it and where. Me, I have to shift things about until it 'looks right'. Higgy has a gardening blog which you can access via the link at the bottom of any of his posts:-) Well worth a look.

    We came to this garden last August, so we're starting from scratch as well, but we have some natural advantages:- To the back is an old bit of scrubby woodland that belongs to our neighbour, neglected and great for wildlife:-) To the left as you face the garden is a bit of stately home parkland that rises to a ridge with a rookery and some great old oaks dotted about. Deer and hare wander about here (and cattle and sometimes sheep). Blocking off part of the parkland view is a huge barn, wood clad and covered in feeders, this belongs to another neighbour, no gardener, just keeps the acres of grass 'tidy' but a big bird lover:-) She also loves her ride on mower. To the right is next door's mature, overgrown mixed hedge that the birds love, it includes honeysuckle, beech, an apple tree, something I don't recognize with pink blossom and a large salix, the local willow that grows everywhere, not a weeper, more the sort you'd use for basket weaving etc. there's also an ornamental quince - all jumbled together with no breaks, forms a really good wildlife hedge. Then in the short stroke of the L (it's L shaped) outside the back door is The Glade, with the lovely Devon banks, drystone wall (ancient I should think) another hedge which includes dogwood and other stuff I'm not too sure about, this hedge has cow parsley, bluebells, the inevitable dandelions (we don't have grass, we have dandelions, moss and white clover in the Glade) and mushrooms in the autumn and winter. There are a couple of rather seedy looking buddleia (sp?) here that we've cut back, some shrubs that really suffered in the frosts, two we've had to cut to the ground because they looked, dead, they may come back. Another salix, the bees and birds love this. And some boring looking things, one a kind of laurel that have been pruned year after year but probably not at the right time - they've simply been kept 'tidy' There are a couple of conifers on the slope going up to the brick built and very old outhouse that is a bit rickety but has a wonderful, mature tree ivy growing over part of the roof that a robin and a blackbird are nesting in. The shrubs, the conifers, another shrubby thing I don't recognize, the cow parsley, dandelions, an ornamental cherry, the mushrooms, moss, bluebells and clover were the only things here when we arrived. We've put in a pond near the outhouse at the top of the hill and about 11 beds, some with wildflowers, some with herbs, others with perennials in. I also have a small strawberry bed and a raised bed made of ghastly painted wood which was once a bookcase. We need to paint that something other than the ghastly white it is now:-) I bet that's more than you ever wanted to know about our garden Coral. But I do so love a gardening 'chat'. I'll get Himself to take pics and post them and I look forward to seeing yours:-) Happy gardening, Kezsmum.

     

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous 17/04/2011 16:27 in reply to Kezsmum

    Thank you for that delightful view into your garden.  It really would be a dream come true for me.  We are now retired (one more year until my pension and bus pass lol and I have thought about selling up and moving to an older place with a rural garden, the only considerations are - two sets of elderly parents we are on hand for, two sons who have just bought their own property a couple of miles away and I would find it difficult to move further from all my family [ I don't drive]

    This garden is typically suburban, houses around but when we bought it it was ideal for our young family [schools, GP etc]  I am feeling more that it should be our time now though.

     

    I think my absolute dream would be to retire to Wales, Devon or Cornwall.

  • Unknown said:
    I think my absolute dream would be to retire to Wales, Devon or Cornwall.

    I can recommend Devon:-) We moved here last year and haven't regretted it for a second, the locals are friendly and kind - and stepson and grandchildren just 8 miles away. I have no family at all in this country, parents gone, siblings gone and my brother's children and grandchildren all in Canada and thus an unknown quantity to me. So I didn't have to make the tough decisions. Got the buss pass 4 years ago:-) But I still have to work - should be at it now but heading into garden to make a wildlife stack:-)))

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous 17/04/2011 17:20 in reply to Anonymous

    can't wait for my bus pass, I will be out everywhere! There, photos to show I do work hard!

    Oh on the middle one you can just see the nest box almost covered by ivy where the robin has been going in.