Tuesday 28 November 2023

Tree Appreciation Tuesday - Growing up between the lines

I do like Birch Trees and planted a lovely specimen in a previous garden.  Here this multistemmed plant probably starting its life from a blown in seed, and  taking root around the time the Railway Station at Winscombe closed down in 1963/64.  This tree around 60 years old probably got cut down several times in the very early days as waggons passed into the siding. Since the station was closed to both passenger and good traffic,  it has grown up into a fine multi stemmed specimen gracing the heritage walk.


Yesterday the Short and Easy walkers from Wells WI drove over to Winscombe where we walked part of the Strawberry line.  It is a stretch which affords extensive views with a tree lined walk along the track bed.  I didn't have to go far before I found what may have been 'the tree of the day'.  For sure we passed many possible contenders, but on our way back, I become certain that this tree would be the tree for this week's post.


These weekly  Tree Appreciation Tuesday Posts are ongoing.   Do leave comments perhaps with mention of a tree you appreciation. 



Monday 27 November 2023

In a Vase on Monday - Sticks

 I wasn't going to post a vase today. Having sat down at 6 p,m, to view and comment on Cathy and friends' vases, I read that Cathy would even admit that given the hard frost we experienced a few days ago even sticks would do!


The vase is a new one not shown up till now.  I bought it from an art gallery where it was being sold as something in which one would put a plant pot and possibly a succulent or cactus.  Before using it I checked it for water proofness.  Although I had paid a reasonable sum for it, I love the design and decided to use it for dried arrangements.  These sticks came from my friend's very large Magnolia growing against her large Georgian house.  She was quite bemused when I asked for a few of the obviously dead twigs and I said they reminded me of deer antlers.  In front is a piece of bark and large seeds I picked up over two years ago.  I love that orange lichen on it.

Do look out for my post tomorrow on the Tree Appreciation theme, here is last week's. Now that winter has come, I am enjoying the trees all the more.  Do feel free to join me each week and post a tree you may have enjoyed. 

Saturday 25 November 2023

Six on Saturday - 25 November 2023

Not much gardening has been possible this week, but when the rain stopped, and yesterday a little sun came out, it did raise my spirits.  When does winter start in the garden?  Is it some date, or is it when all the deciduous have fallen?  I appreciate that it is after Christmas than the real hard winter can come and cause havoc.  I am starting to feel that I need to garden in such a way that I am not worrying about moving heavy pots around or cover things to evade frosts etc.  The great thing is that each season we can review what went well and find new and different plantings that fit one's plans.  Last Saturday at the Somerset HPS our speaker was Timothy Walker and the talk called 'Bordering on Insanity'.  Timothy is a truly knowledgeable, entertaining and excellent communicator. This after I am going sit down with my notes and the plant list from his talk, and just see if there are plants I need to add to my plant list.  I will also no doubt gain insights and inspiration from this weekly get together that Jim hosts over on his blog 'Garden Ruminations', failing that it is just great to read about what other home gardeners are getting up through their comments and links.

1. There has definitely been a frost, this morning the nasturtiums were overtaken by the frost, even after lunch after they have had a little sun on them, they have not recovered. As it was getting dark yesterday and I went out to gather some parsley, I cut a few nasturtiums flowers and they are now on the window sill in the kitchen along with some Alstromeria which is growing in a large pot under the overhang by our front door.


2. The Salvia 'African Sky' is flowering again after a good cut back, and even this afternoon there are bumble bees visiting, which means they find nectar on the flowers still.


3. Just before we had our seating circle reset, I had to move a rather fetching Helianthemum.  For now it is growing in a spare corner, where I also planted some heel cuttings straight in the ground.  It will be interesting to see whether they will root there.  I also put some cuttings to root in a small circular pan, and I am happy to say almost all of them have taken.  Next Spring I'll position them around the garden.

Helianthemum Golden Queen rooted cuttings

4.  Since I believe they are frost hardy, I am placing the Auriculas out on the table.  I think they had suffered from far too much rain over the last few weeks, with some growing shoots rotting through the middle.  I've cut those back, and hopefully they will sprout again.  I've not done this before and I hope this pot will be O.K. I have two other large pots of the same variety, and I think next spring after flowering it will be time to divide down and get rid of the older plants since they are about six years old now.


5, The colour on Pear Beth looked lovely this morning, I'm enjoying this whilst it lasts as I think by Monday all the leaves will have fallen.

Bright leaves on Pear Beth

6.  The order from the Cyclamen Society came in this week, they must have been short on the coums this year, but I have instead received doubling up on No 50 and 117.  It may have been a slip of the hand by the packers or  a harvest failure, but by working out that it will be two less pots, who am I to raise a query? 

I can't remember how soon I sowed last year's seed but I have been able to grow them on all through this year, and they are doing well.

Who knows if I will have six to show next week.  I really didn't think I would have enough to show this week, but ideas and thoughts have been going through my head this week although not much has been happening gardening wise.

Thursday 23 November 2023

To Eschew

 It all comes to one at some time, and now I am mid way between a temporary crown and the final one, which is in about two weeks.  There are so many of usual delicious foods that it is best to avoid.  Nuts, granary bread, crackling etc need to be eschewed, i.e. they must not be chewed!  It tickled me the use of the word eschew which means to avoid something deliberately is so appropriate when I need to avoid chewing!

As I have recovered my baking mojo what better than to make a ham, cheese and onion quiche.  It is ages since I had a spell of making those: before, for and after the coronation.


I have a dear friend Mandy and either on our posts or on Facebook, talk, discuss, share, tips on good food, sometimes frugal food, and very often luxurious food.  Here all three come together.  I bought a half cheese from our local cheesemaker and goat dairy woman.  It was a mature Burcott at a fraction of the price compared to if it had been portioned and separately packaged. Mr S and I saw this when we went up to say hello at our Wells Food Festival a few weeks ago.  Fellow punters glanced over and when I gave a cast-iron recommendation, there was a queue to buy up the rest of the full or part cheeses. 

When I got home I cut up the cheese, grated a whole lot, and put them into the freezer to use as and when we needed without filling up the fridge.  This went into the quiche.  Having ready grated cheese as good as any Manchego in the freezer, means that each time I wish to add some as a topping or within a dish, there is no need to get out the grater.

The ham was made up of some of the meat that I removed from a ham hock I had cooked with various herbs, and spices  for soup in the pressure cooker.  There was sufficient meat for two quiches, and three batches of soup, and one portion in a salad yesterday.  




Tuesday 21 November 2023

Tree Appreciation Tuesday

 It has continued to rain more than usual and the ground is now saturated, with water trickling from the banks each side of the road, forming shallow streams and gathering volume till it reaches ditches and rhynes which are currently overflowing onto the levels.  

Yesterday we went for our customary walk and it would have been damaging to the land to walk along the path that cuts through this field to get up closer to the wonder old oak tree.  I had taken this picture on the 6th of November the day I posted about the old Ash Tree.  Yesterday it was still holding its leaves through the colours were more autumnal.  I shall try to get a picture again in a few days time.  The sheep have been moved higher up the slope.



This wonderful old open grown English Oak is the first tree on our circular walk that always draws me to stop to admire it and the view beyond,  Less than five minutes walk from the house it stands in a corner of a field, and from this side of the hedge and back along the outer left hand hedge is a bank of beautiful wild flowers in the spring. Sadly the tree just this side of the large oak is now just a standing dead tree, hopefully it will be left there to form a habitat of beetles and other insects.

I ought to have made this the first of the trees in my Tree Appreciation series, as it was the first tree I appreciated the evening we moved to our new home a number of years ago. 

Monday 20 November 2023

Mincemeat and Apple upside down pudding

Autumn is time for puddings and tonight we had a slice of Upside-down Mincemeat and Apple Pudding.  I had some apples needing to be used, lovely two year vintage home made mincemeat, and milk to use up.

I had torn the recipe from Waitrose's weekend newspaper, and had it in the kitchen drawer.  However I wanted a smaller version, and the amounts prorated to 2 eggs was perfect for a seven inch deep sandwich tin.  The pudding baked in the oven as the same time as our jacket potato and other items for supper.


 A little more mincemeat and a brandy sauce would make a rather good Christmas dessert. For us the two egg quantity will serve six portions. Two will probably go into the freezer to keep for another time.

In a Vase on Monday - a small offering

 Yesterday we had a few hours of 'non-rain' and what better thing to do that do into the garden to assess what jobs needed to be done.  The roses did look straggly and although still November decided to give some of them a prune.  Rosa Grace looked the worse for wear and got trimmed and a few roses still in tight bud got salvaged.  As the leaves were really awful they all got removed and this morning a few snippets of Persicaria Red Dragon in flower were cut to balance out the arrangement.  



The seed heads and piece of rolled up papery thin bark from my friends rather lovely birch trees get moved around the living room.  Just as people have ornaments I have little piles of interesting seed heads or bark, which I arrange in a still life.  Many of them can be several years old, and when they get too dusty or I acquire more, they get chucked onto the garden.

In a Vase on Monday is a weekly affair created by Cathy, and several of us join in most weeks, to share flowers from our gardens. 

Saturday 18 November 2023

Six on Saturday

Given that it has continued to be wet for what feels like 75% of the time and the temperatures are sliding towards the norm for this time of the year, whatever that means, and having a small garden, wouldn't you think that a sensible person would have taken a sabbatical both from gardening and from posting six things on Saturday?  If butterflies, bumble bees, bees and humming bird hawkmoths can still fly to feed, then I am holding back from pruning back all the remaining flowers. Once the first frosts hit, they will need to be addressed. For more gardening and seasonal activities, do visit Jim's Garden Ruminations, who leads this weekly get together.

1.  This border auricula 'Old Cottage' thinks it is spring, and after being moved up a pot has promptly started flowering.  But what are the little critters that have been making these scars on the leaves?


2. With all the wet weather and lacking the luxury of a glass house with good ventilation or even a well ventilated alpine house, I am forever moving plants from the shelter of the shed albeit with a window, to the garden whenever there are a few hours of dry weather.  I haven't room for such housing by the way!


3. In late August I lifted the Limonium bellidifolium from the gravel garden, and divided it, but replanted it in a well drained gravelly soil into a pot.  In the spring I shall separate out the plants, but I am happy to report that all parts are doing well and growing very healthily all crowded together. 

Limonium bellidifolium

4. Along with picking up stones and bringing them back to the garden to arrange about the place, I have the habit of picking up other curious things, I did like and still like this stump of a tree which had been burned on some garden bonfire, and had been dumped on a grass verge. I once saw a sculpture make up of charred trees, and maybe that had inspired me! 

Charred tree stump in the garden

Sculpture made from charred trees

5. It has been a good year for Fuchsias in the garden, and even after I thought I had dug out one particular one last year, I couldn't have done such a good job of it, as this little has popped up in that spot.  The one that I moved is also doing well!


6.  Ferns too can take on autumn hues, its leaves paling, and it will be ready to shed them shortly.  Grown in a pot since I bought it in 2015, but repotted a couple a times.  With the passing seasons Athyrium otophorum var. okanum is growing little 'trunks'. I am sure Jim or another reader with a good handle on botanical terms will know the correct name, I would be ever so grateful if you would add it to the comment section.


That is all for now my friends, I am off to the HPS local group AGM and lecture this morning and am taking a few plants for their sale table.  I still can't shrug off this propagating habit!


Tuesday 14 November 2023

Tree Appreciation Tuesday

 Conditions were muddy, and water lying on the top of the Mendips on Black Down Moor. After a walk with friends of a couple of hours or so exposed to the strong winds and squally showers, we were lead by Janette into Rowberrow Warren to return to our starting point through the wooded hillside.

Rowberrow Warren Older Beech Tree

I have since looked up details of the Rowberrow Warren woodland on the Forestry Commission Site.  Most of the trees are relatively young, but just as we were leaving the wood on the West Mendip Way, transecting the path was a little stream toppling down the slope. Without the rain we have had and in the summer this is probably  dry gulley.  On the eastern bank there were a couple of much older trees, the farther one hardly still living.  The one closer to the path is the subject of this week's fulsome appreciation.

This post is in the series Tree Appreciation Tuesday.




Monday 13 November 2023

In a Vase on Monday - Tenth Anniversary

 A Happy Tenth Anniversary to Cathy's great post each Monday: In a Vase on Monday. For me this has been an almost weekly activity, and have enjoyed choosing flowers and materials from the garden, marking the seasons and the weather.  We still have not had a frost and just by luck the seeds from the early nasturtiums germinated in late August, and are now in full flower, which is why they are featuring.

We were set a little challenge should we wish to pursue it.  I was going to have no vase with a variety of pretty leaves with autumn colour consisting mainly of the beautiful yellow leaves from my new Ginkgo.  

Then I remembered that my little collection of herbs for using in the kitchen were due to be refreshed this morning.  With the evenings now being dark, it is not go easy to go picking the herbs by torch light when I am wanting them to garnish our evening meal.  Then I thought that one of the two stylish fine but strong glass jugs which sit on the kitchen window sill would do very nicely as a 'not vase'. Although they were bought mainly for water or milk, or some sauce, one of the usually has a bunch of herbs waiting to be used.



In any case you can't see the container from this overhead shot.  The pumpkins are featured again, and will most likely be baked whole and stuffed with cheese and nuts.  Maybe one of the herbs in the arrangement will join in with the stuffing or as a garnish.  I picked nasturtiums which are from late self sown seedlings, lovely abundant parsley, prostrate rosemary which I find with its softer and fragment leaves is now the culinary rosemary of choice, garlic chives and the Horopito New Zealand Pepper Tree: Pseudowintera colorata 'Red Leopard'.  I use that shrub in savoury dishes or in tomato dishes to add a good hot peppery taste.

Saturday 11 November 2023

Six on Saturday - November 11 2023

It is a quick SOS today, as I am off to plant bulbs and clear undergrowth from a nearby Somerset Wildlife mini reserve.  Today is going to be the first dry day for what seems like ages.  I am joining in with Jim again to share six things from my garden this week.


1.  Let us start with the best autumn colour in the garden this week:

Acer Wakaranai (Japanese for 'unknown')

I think this is the best year for colour on this acer.  I had thought that the colour and falling of leaves was late this year, but comparing dates on this blog in December 2021, there still was no leaf fall or colour! 

Acer  corner acer is still unphased by the lowest temperature so far at 3.8 C.  

2. The two Cornus sanguinea 'Midwinter Fire' are lighting up the garden even when it is a little misty as it is this morning. The promise of flame effect stems to come can also be seen.

Cornus sanguinea 'Midwinter Fire'

3. Either side of the blue bench the Japanese grass Hakonechloa Macra Aureola is still looking beautiful and doesn't seem to have suffered with all the rain. In the wild this is a Japanese forest grass




4. Chamaecyparis pisifera Filifera Aurea and it’s common name is Sawara Cypress is till growing in its pot.  It is said to be very slow growing and small, but I may just launch it into the garden this autumn. I do hope this is the nana version as I saw a similar cultivar at Bicton, and it was huge!   Use the link to see my post about Bicton and that tree.


5.  I 'titivated' the auriculas earlier in the week.  It was very wet during the week, and I broke down this job in stages, or otherwise I wouldn't have get round to doing it.  It is a little late in the season to do this, so I didn't replace all the soil, as they were newly potted up earlier in the year.  The new ones were ready to do into larger pots.  Phase one, remove all the old leaves, Phase two mix the compost, phase three move the pots to the potting area, phase four choose new pots, phase five pot on, phase six clean the outside of the pots, phase seven find saucers, phase eight move the pots and saucers to a sunny position.  Job done!  I had procrastinated long enough, but doing it this way, I managed to get this off my list even though it appeared to have not stopped raining for three days.


Downloading the pictures, I noticed all the water in the saucers.  Even though I had put a good layer of grit purposefully so that the compost is above the layer of the water, I just went down to empty the pots!

6. Still a rose so late in the season does catch my eye.





Tuesday 7 November 2023

Tree Appreciation Tuesday

 We have a number of local walks, and sometimes all you need is to stretch your legs and  feel the fresh air against your skin. We are lucky to have a regular walk, which can be extended to form a larger circular walk of just under two hours at our leisurely pace taking in the views.  

No planning is required, just deciding whether to take water proofs, and how many layers to wear.  We don't even need to look for car keys, as the countryside is just around a hundred metres from our front door. 

During the winter a walk along lanes and droves is the best option as soils here are clay and not easy to walk over after rain. This walk takes us down on to the levels where the lanes are called droves and these wind their way around fields where during the summer cattle and sheep are let out to graze on the rich grasslands.

If we don't want a walk of over an hour, we just walk along the lane.  Keeping a good space we walk to 'Our Tree' and back in just under an hour.  We do this walk once or up to three times a week. The Tree is question is getting more raggedy each year.  We are lucky however that it is well within a farmer's field, and no hazard to vehicles or other users of the country lane, or it would have been felled like many of the once iconic Ash  trees of the Mendips. Already since moving down to Somerset many trees have been lost in just the last five years. 


This Ash Tree works as a marker for us, and we can guage our fitness, as we recover from whatever we may have caught,  as to how easily we reach this tree, and whether the following walk will be a longer one. 

This side of the hedge is a drainage ditch, which this Sunday was full of water, the hedge yet to be trimmed but with the height of the tree it is easy to see into its canopy and see the number of dead or dying limbs.  I have no idea of how old this tree is.  It is fairly sheltered from northerly winds as there is a ridge of higher ground, crested by small collections of trees and scrub at the crest.  

This is not the first tree that we note on our walk, but this week I wanted to show it as the leaves are still on the tree which is the latest I have know Ash to hold their leaves.  The dead branches are easily identified too from this distance.

She is an old diseased isolated tree and once maybe have been part of a hedge as one can glimpse the remnants of an old hedge growing down the hill from the top.  Her canopy is much reduced since we first selected her as our way marker, Still with her gnarled trunk she is much loved and appreciated. 

 I wonder if birds may nest in her various hollows each spring.  We have seen birds of prey, pigeons, crows, and jackdaws perch but of course not all at the same time. 


A little before you get to this tree just up from the road a little is a dead Ash tree, with her skirt of scrub and bramble. Gradually as the bows decay and fall, and the thicket underneath increases, all memory of this tree will be lost.  Just how long will it take for 'Our Tree' to reach this stage?  If we are around, we shall shall still stop and remember her.

Monday 6 November 2023

In a Vase on Monday

I was surprised to be able to pick such flowers as I join Cathy on her weekly In A Vase on Monday celebrations of flowers from our garden.  It is coming up to 10 years for this get together and Cathy has suggested a challenge for our anniversary.  I may well join in this time!

Yesterday in the garden during periods of sunshine, there were butterflies on the Chrysanthemums and humming bird hawkmoths feeding from the Salvia Amistad, as well as Queen Bumble bees feeding on the Fuchsias.  It was almost like Summer, and today's post features the overlapping of seasons:  the roses say Summer but this is a late flowering hardy Chrysanthemum.



All be it that a few of the other petals damaged by so much rain were removed, the roses with their strong stems are from the Rose Home Florist Timeless Collections are a good colour match for the Chrysanthemum Hillside Apricot.




I'm currently reading 'The Treeline', which I happened to see on the shelf of the local library last week.  I have always loved trees and some of you may know that recently I have been devoting a weekly post to my appreciation of them.  I had heard of some of the concepts contained in the book, catching odd mentions on the radio: Ben Rawlence has thoroughly researched this book, visiting many of the areas and speaking to Scientists and listening to local indigenous people. I have had to look up the meaning of some of words and concepts about the botany of trees, which I have found very interesting. Having also touched on climatology in my OU studies there were were ground breaking and current ideas which are of great interest.  It is not an easy read, but an eye opening one.

Saturday 4 November 2023

Six on Saturday - 4 November 2023

We seem to have had several bouts of high winds and far too much rain.  Storm Ciarán may have come over what I know is that water is running off fields, over roads and finding the fastest downslope passage. Thankfully all the rain that fell has been absorbed in the garden.  I am already using any slight lull to go out and cut things back. We shall no doubt have a weather roundup as we join Jim who leads this weekly get together, and also hear from our friends abroad.

1. Wednesday saw some lovely sunshine, and I just had to get out into the garden.  The storm was expected to arrive later in the day, so I decided to do some gentle pruning of the roses to help prevent too much wind rock.  Although most of the new 'hardy chrysanthemum' shown previously have finished flowering, have been trimmed, and lifted for the winter,  Chrysanthemum Hillside Apricot is only just coming to its crescendo. Half of it remains here. But it is such a good one and went through last winter, than I am leaving this one in the ground.

Chrysanthemum Hillside Apricot
On Thursday 'in the eye of the storm', I picked flowers from this Chrysanthemum that is already 'half cut back' to enable the work on the seating circle.  I had four bunches, one to a neighbour and three others to friends at book club luncheon. 

2.  There were lots of different flying insects on the blooms, and I wonder whether this is the last sip of nectar for this Red Admiral. This one was photographed on 1st November 2023. I still have many insects buzzing, which means that shrubs such as the large Salvia Amistad haven't yet been trimmed back.  The big bumble bees go for these Chrysanthemums and the small ones go on to the Salvias.




3. Yes, the seating circle is now complete. I've been moving soil back around and wonder whether the snowdrops will have survived, hopefully they were safe several inches below the surface.  The furniture is now put back and there are no hazards with chair legs sinking into the gravel.


4. The green bin eventually got emptied six days late, but being a fortnightly collection, I was pleased to have the bin for a good week, before it was due to go back out this Wednesday, and already it is half full  Down the narrow side alley, where I stand the bin, out of sight of any of our house windows, grows some ivy, various pots and some bricks are also stacked there.  Look what was hiding in the holes!  Once despatched, the bricks were returned and they will be inspected regularly from now on. Why do I keep these assortments of bricks?  




5. Its a long story, maybe for another day, but I happen to end up with two Ginkgo biloba 'Mariken'.  This one not ordered is growing in the garden, and is turning a beautiful shade of yellow.  I decided to use a silver marker which I already had on this slate label, and will keep an eye to see how long it lasts.


6. There is no need for an outside thermometer to tell me whether or not there has been an overnight frost. I just look over to the far side of the gravel garden where a nasturtium came up from seed left from the previous years' plants.



You may also like to visit my post 'Tree Appreciation Tuesday' post, and by all means do join in whether regularly or merely from time to time.