Hello Friends,
Well, I know that I & so many of my family & friends, were hoping for a very different political result on Thursday - one which brought some kind of progressive left alliance to our increasingly right-wing, insular-feeling country. Yet, in a scenario horribly reminiscent of 1992, we ended up with a Tory majority. I can only hope that the 36.9% who crossed that particular box are looking forward to the draconian austerity cuts which are now coming......because it won't just be those idle shirkers you read about in some or other 'Daily Mail' spewing who will be on the sharp ends of the cuts, it will also be every one of us who wants to live in a country which values those markers of a civilized society - a health service which puts people before profit, care for the most vulnerable, decent social housing, police, fire & ambulance services with sufficient numbers of officers to function effectively, properly funded schools with qualified teachers who feel valued, public libraries, the arts & our much-loved country parks. Just 1 day after the election, we are already reading that teaching assistants may disappear from schools. I'm sure parents of children with learning difficulties will be particularly appreciative of that one, Mr Gove. As an active Labour Party member, I know the election post-mortem will surely follow, but today, I needed to rid my head of it, to enjoy some simple pleasures. Decided to take a walk around our garden & share some pictures of calming green loveliness. It was a S-L-O-W walk......a bit like the slow canal trip shown on TV recently..........
.....so try to imagine you are walking around with me & we are not talking about horrible election results at all.
We're on the courtyard here. Why don't I call it a 'patio?' Because it's a dark, dank space where not much thrives (except Steve & the BBQ). This is a climbing hydrangea, which just about manages to stay this side of deceased. I like the green shiny leaves against the brickwork, & it does flower, albeit grudgingly.
Nobody really bothers about witch hazels unless it's their flowering season (winter), but they do fill out with lush lime-hued leaves in spring. The veining & the fact that I never remember to prune it makes it quite a textured tree.....more so in summer, when most years, our leaf-cutter bees arrive to chomp out, roll up & carry away little tubes of leaf for their nests. Love watching them in action.....that really is life in the slow lane as they return countless times, each visit leaving behind a perfect crescent shape in the leaf.
Remember our Christmas Tree? It can't be too unhappy in its pot, as it's producing fir-cones. Lots of them. These are just the ones I could reach to photograph. I expect the 5'11" half of the relationship will produce some sort of fancy-pants photographic fir-cone study before long!
It's aquilegia time here at 'Hagstones'. They are a hugely promiscuous plant. Seedlings pop up everywhere, sometimes purple, occasionally white or yellow, but mostly shades of pink.
This one insists on coming up each year in the tiny space between my herb bed & gravel path of the veggie garden & is such a strong vigorous specimen, I don't think I could pull it out if I wanted to.
Another self-seeded one - Years ago, a colleague gave me some seeds from a maroon-coloured aquilegia she was sick of, in return for some seeds from my pink ones. I still find traces of the maroon ancestry each year, like this one with dark red bonnets & white undercarriages. I find so many self-sown aquilegia seedlings in my borders, I should really be potting them up & giving them away to spread the planty love!
The hardy geraniums are just starting to flower. If dead-headed & given the 'Chelsea chop', they'll flower for ages. The one on the right grows like a weed here. If I need to fill any odd spaces, I just break off a piece of root, shove it in the ground, aim a watering can in its general direction & it romps away. Free = Definitely my absolute best kind of plant!
Some general shots of stuff in my borders now. The colour combination of this acid- yellow euphorbia & purple-leaved ligularia happened by accident, but I like it.
A carefully nurtured lammium - yes, I know it looks like a nettle, but it's actually a lovely domesticated member of the nettle family I bought at Cragside when we were up in Northumbria one year. It was a proper fussy sod about where it wanted to be planted & spent the first few years trying its utmost to cark it, but has now decided to do the decent thing & earn its keep. The bright blue petals in the background are dyer's alkanet - a native wildflower which looks fab in borders this time but reproduces like mad. It has deep thick taproots. Husbands generally break spades when called upon to dig them out.
Pleased with the clematis over our arch this year. Mum knows this variety as 'Mile-a-minute' because it is a really speedy grower & virtually indestructable. This is our second one (!). The first defied its nickname, withered & met an untimely end on the compost heap.
This poppy is 'Tangerine Gem' or 'Those Orange Buggers'. I sowed 3 packs of these seeds in successive years & not a single one germinated. When I was given another pack of seed, I gave it to my very green-fingered friend, Helen, saying, 'See if you can get these to do anything'. A few months later, she appeared with some plants for me & said it was 'those orange buggers you gave me'. The orange buggers are now thriving perennials & if deadheaded & not too icy, will still be flowering as late as November.
One of the last bluebells in the wild area under our apple tree, which is now coming into blossom.
Oooh, & look what I've spotted, another freebie - a self-sown hellebore, the native 'stinking' variety.....
......I know it looks a bit like a plant of much more.......er.......recreational use, but it really isn't!
And walking back towards the house, the blossom on the ornamental cherry is looking good.....
......and the under plantings change regularly with the seasons......
........so that's a slow leisurely walk around our garden. It did me good to commune with lots of green stuff after Thursday's long dark night of the soul .......& when I got inside, I found the ever-entertaining Albert Whiskers just starting to wake himself up in case there might have been any danger of his dinner appearing (there wasn't!)
I'm not happy about Thursday.How could I be? 63.1% of people who voted did not want this result. But one thing I do know. The Tories are mostly defeated not by other parties, but by themselves. They have some intensely difficult & emotive stuff to deal with surrounding the Scots & Europe. They also have a whole lot of rabidly right-wing back benchers (remember John Major referring to his particular cohort of these lovelies as 'the bastards'?) who will surely be planning a resurgence of their game-play now that they are no longer in coalition. I fear life will sadly worsen for the poorest & most vulnerable in our society & we must all help them fight their corner when we can. However, I have absolutely no doubt that the Tories will be the architects of their own downfall, so bring it on!
Peace.....& every respect to the people of Scotland who were brave enough to vote for change.
Yours until next time,
C x
I enjoyed my tour, thanks! I am very fond of aquilegia and it looks lovely? Love the arch too. Funny old AW, "wot's she doing now?, anyway where's me snap?" Lol.
ReplyDeleteI'm moving on from Thursday now, think I've seen enough tired, disappointed comrades who canvassed like mad, read too much. I've not watched the news for 2 days lol.
Now............"We go again!" :-)
Aquilegias are lovely, aren't they? I've spotted a self-seeded one this week which is a names variety - 'Apple white', I think. I had one years ago & it carked it, but a tiny seed must have come to the surface, meaning free plant, yay!!
DeleteAye, I feel your pain. After 25 years of voting Lib Dem, and having moved to Scotland during the last parliament, I registered my disapproval with all things Westminster by switching to the SNP. If nothing else, the future will be 'interesting'. I have to say, the garden of the Republic is looking mighty fine :o)
ReplyDeleteI can't blame you. Here in England, the nationalists are something different altogether. Thanks for nice garden comment. Yes, the flower beds are looking good, it's just the veggie garden I need to crack on with now.
DeleteGarden looks amazing, love all your garden nick-nacks too esp the bird (in the first pic)
ReplyDeleteFab blog post as always
Thanks, Ziggy. My sister bought me that metal bird. I've had him years. he sits just outside the kitchen window. Yes, am pleased with flowery bits of garden, but need to catch up with those all-important food crops.
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