Saturday 23 May 2020

Strange Times:- End of Week 10

What a week of lovely weather we have had (well, here in Suffolk anyway). The sun has shone on most days and it's been really warm and when Santon Downham in  West Suffolk (on the sandy Brecks) reached the highest temperature in the country on Wednesday there was a good breeze here which kept it more comfortable. Just ten minutes of rain on Thursday night - could have done with much more.

This weeks flowers for the table were rose buds (complete with greenfly - discovered after putting my glasses on!)

The quarter circle flower garden is full of aquilegia, some of which I'll try and dig out again when they finish flowering. Some very pale Irises in among the muddle.

This - something - that I got from the boot sale last year has done well and getting bigger. I could look it up to see what it is but  there's no need as someone reading will tell me!

In amongst everything there are Forget-me-nots - which look lovely until they go over and make a mildewy mess - although they have shallow roots so easy to pull up - unlike the Aquilegia.

Around the corner in the flower bed by the conservatory I have these, a clump dug from BiL's garden last autumn. A bit like a Crocosmia  but purple? I know how they got into his garden because I dug some from a big clump we had at the smallholding and gave to MiL - which must have been 20+ years ago. The smallholding ones didn't survive the dry summers but they clung on at BiLs house even after all these years.

What else have I been doing this week................. apart from taking photos of flowers........... 

Well, I went shopping to Asda in Stowmarket. 9am and no socially distanced queue to get in so straight in, plenty on the shelves except SR Flour - but I got a bag of Bread Flour.
Went into the town centre to the Post Office which is also a newsagent and small convenience shop and found a bag of Self Raising flour there. So strange not to be doing a tour of the charity shops which I would usually do when  in Stowmarket.

I stopped feeding the birds this week because the only things on the feeders were magpies and starlings - starlings haven't been around much here until this year  and the magpies are nesting in the top of the poplars again........... such noisy bullies. And anyway I needed the heavy cast iron stand that the feeder pole was using for my parasol on the patio - it's original and proper use.

Today I'm delivering some courgette plants to Col's sister and calling in at the fruit and veg shop in Debenham on my way home for beetroot, they are one of the few places to sell bunched fresh beetroot........... can't stand those squidgy vacuum packs. I've sown more beetroot here in the LARGE gaps where my earlier seed didn't grow. Also popped a packet through the letterbox at BiL's house several weeks ago after speaking to him on the phone..........."Have you got room for another row of beetroot? "Why?" "Because whatever I do my beetroot seeds never germinate well" "Why?"  "If I knew that I'd be better at growing them, but have you got room to grow me a few?" "Spose so". Weeks later it looks as if every single seed from the packet he put in at his house have grown. So what the heck do I do wrong?
This is why Colin used to do the outside seed sowing and all my seed sowing is done in the greenhouse!



This week I am grateful for
  • Good weather to get jobs done in the garden and greenhouse
  • Online shopping instead of having to go to Ipswich
  • Being able to post games to the grandchildren

Back Tomorrow with a quick extra post
Sue

30 comments:

  1. Hi Sue, the unknown plant is a white cammassia, and the tall one you got from BILs garden I think is a type of gladioli.I
    Regards Trisha

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    1. Thank you - I knew someone would know - bet I won't remember the names by next year!

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  2. I like your so-called muddle!
    Yes, I think the white plant is Camassia and the bright pink one is Gladiolus byzantinus. I'm missing mine this year; I can only see leaves :-(

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    1. Thank you for the names. The muddle looks OK at the moment but not so good when the aquilegia are finished. There's a small pink perennial geranium that's spread like crazy this year too. Its a big job to get everything under control.

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  3. I like the Muddle of Flowers they are very similar to mine except I have lots of Foxgloves they have spread everywhere which I like. I need to get my sweet peas in today but the wind has been so strong. Pleased you got some flour my daughter is on the look out for some. Take care Sue. Hazel c uk 🌈🌈🌈

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    1. I would love Foxgloves here. Saw some gorgeous colours on the Chelsea Flower show programme last night

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  4. Your flowers all look lovely, I know what you mean about when they finish flowering and look messy. That gladioli you have grows wild in Cornwall

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  5. I had a cull of my pale pink Aquilegias last year - they were everywhere in the stone garden. I transplanted some of the deeper colours which grow by the Damson Tree area so I have more variety. I have had some gorgeous new dark doubles this year so will save seed although sometimes you get doubles on a plant which also has single flowers!

    On-line shopping - yes, a necessity here as I am shielding. It is costing us a fortune though! My husband had me order various manly necessities yesterday for his woodworking and believe me, it was a LOT dearer than popping to B&Q or Wilko!

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    1. Online is just so easy and even the Hermes man knows where I am which is good! Lots of online has been secondhand hand so I'm not feeling too guilty

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  6. I think the tall one is a gladiolus of some kind.
    I'm terrible with seeds sometimes too. The runner beans don;t seem to be doing anything again, either at home or in the allotment, and I have no idea why not. It was the same last year too - nothing, not one plant. I had to buy some in the end. Very puzzling.
    xx

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    1. I knew people would know what I had growing - it's so much easier than looking them up in a book!
      Runner bean seeds not sown yet here

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    2. Hello Sue and Joy. These flowers could be Watsonias. I was given some years ago and split them with a workmate. Mine flowered just the once while my workmates flowered every year. They look like a smaller version of Dame Edna's favourite Gladioli. Happy gardening and stay safe, Michelle in Wellington, New Zealand.

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    3. Maybe I just sowed them too soon? Anyway, they have a week to do something after which time I will look in the garden centres. I've told them to get a move on!
      xx

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  7. I love it when everything muddles together, that's just how our front bed is at the moment, but my pride and joy are the Lupins in the large pot by the front door. The Foxgloves all around our paddock are in Nut Wood are just starting to open up now, so we do at las have spots of colour to tempt any viewers to the house that we can get here in the next couple of weeks.

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    1. I would like to squeeze in some foxgloves somewhere.

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    2. Once you've got them they just self seed and multiply year on year don't they. They grow along the tramlines in Manchester, lots of swathes of purple, blues and whites. The very best of natures 'weeds'.

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  8. Your garden is looking very colourful. I'm pretty OK with seeds in trays indoors but absolutely rubbish with bulbs. Without fail the ones I've planted have never grown. Quite a few people mentioning the lack of flour. Mum came to my rescue with some SR and I have a bag of plain which I think I'll have to use with baking powder from now on. Have a lovely weekend. xx

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    1. All the flour is in big sacks in warehouses somewhere - previously destined for catering companies.
      Hope my proper gladioli bulbs that I planted in the cutting garden produce some nice flowers this year

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  9. I do by the vacuum packed beetroot but as soon as I get them home I take them out, dice up and place in a Tupperware box with some balsamic vinegar on top. Every time I go in the fridge I shake the box. Delicious. I've just planted lots of beet root and I'll be starting more off soon. I hope they survive this horrid wind.

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    1. Perhaps the vacuum packed I've had were over done as I found them soft and squidgy.
      I keep checking outside but no damage here so far - certainly very rough

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  10. I welcome any Acquilegia seed which chooses to alight in my garden - I did have two I bought last year but this year I have got about a dozen different obes - you can;t have too many.

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  11. I love Acquilegias but they do not like my back garden for some reason so I have given up with them. Beetroot is about the one thing I can grow well. Lovely photos x

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  12. All your flowers are lovely! It is especially nice that you now have some flowers from the smallholding even if they did come in a sort of indirect fashion!

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  13. We had beautiful weather, but now add a howling wind to the sunshine

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  14. Had to laugh that you found greenfly once you put your glasses on. I put my glasses on last time I vacuumed the house, and it took me twice as long to do as I could suddenly see everything!!!

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  15. The flowers in your garden are lovely, Sue. I love it when something pops up unexpectedly, mainly Antirrhinums in my case.

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  16. Your flowers are so beautiful. I need to trim my rose bush as some are gone from blooming. I am thankful you found flour. We feel like early on when shopping...scavenger hunt...not at this store, oh look there it is at this store! I shopped for food at Megafoods Sat. and not as many people as expected. Found what I needed. Tomatoes and chicken thighs have been hard to find. Found some at another store, thighs, but too high of a price. Have a good weekend!

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  17. The white camassia is beautiful, I only know its name as DH and I have been thinking of planting some here, but possibly the blue variety as well. Your flowers are beautiful, what a treat to look out and see those each day.

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