Saturday, 1 November 2025

Six things about the Garden at the start of November

A fortnight has passed since I last posted about the garden, and clocks have changed, days are shorter, but the garden is still colourful.  Colour pops and details give a little bust of joy, and digging and destruction by unwelcome visitors are a constant downer at the moment come second in my mind. For more Sixes on Saturdays from a number of gardens following this link to Jim's post.

1. I acquired Chrysanthemum Picasso under the HPS Conservation Scheme, and have three good plants flowering in the garden this year.  I hope the person who bought the other plant at the HPS plant sale is pleased with hers.   

Chrysanthemum Picasso

What has surprised me is that the tiny cuttings which I took as the first shoots were emerging  have produced almost as good plants as the clump left in the garden.  I took them this early because one year the plant emerged with a number of shoots and then the whole lot just died off for little apparent reason. This has encouraged me to take many more cuttings next year to put back into the Conservation Scheme system and give replacements to friends at the HPS if they lost theirs. 

2. Cyclamen hederifolium are worth growing for their lovely leaves that last all winter. This is just a small selection of the forms and colour variations in the garden.



3. When we got back home from a few days away I looked at the nearby bed by the conservatory, and thought that neighbouring cats had taken advantage of our being away to start to use the garden as their 'convenience facility'.  Small plants had been moved aside but the soil replaced fairly tidily.  I ought to have taken my camera with me, to capture the  picture as I started to move the soil.  Rather that you know what, I found a pigeon minus its head and breast buried deep vertically with the tips of the wing feathers just below the surface of the soil. I removed and disposed of the dead bird and replaced the soil, moved a few of my bits of wood and stones and replaced the plants with some small Omphalodes linifolia seedlings.  The next morning I found the area dug out with no filling back of the hole.


I just hope the loss was acknowledged and that there will be no return, and  Mr S's beard trimmings were scattered in the area.  Human hair is said to help keep foxes away.

4. Just in case my seedlings of Omphalodes linifolia suffer further brutalities, I have selected a few and planted them up in compost and will keep them off the ground.  

Omphalodes linifolia

It has definitely been a mast year with the oak trees bearing an over abundance of acorns.  Further to that it appears that the local squirrels have had very successful litters.  At any one time standing by the back window you can see around five squirrels burying things in the garden, and with more up in the trees nibbling off stems with acorns which fall to the ground.  Nearly every spot has been disturbed, including plant pots by the blighters burying or practising deceptive cashing.  I have also noticed that they are nibbling the tips of the acorns before burying them, something that is quite new this year here.  At least I should have fewer seedlings next year.  However with all this digging and then no doubt more digging as they search for their hidden cashes, I am worrying about my snowdrops and other early bulbs.

5. So why for the second year running are the Cornus sanguinea 'Midwinter Fire' bearing flower buds in late October early November?

Cornus sanguinea 'Midwinter Fire' with flower buds in early November

6. I allow self seeded Corydalis ochroleuca  if they are in a convenient spot, otherwise they are easy to remove at any stage of growth and make a pleasant soil covering before the bulbs emerge.  Here it is filling a spot with its ferny green leaves and what is good about this fresh green growth is that it isn't one that slugs or snails have added to their menu!

Corydalis ochroleuca

There was I despairing about the damage done in the garden by wildlife, and wondering whether I should dig myself a hole, and forget the whole thing about gardening and blogging. However making myself go out and really think about six things has helped lift my spirits and my resolve to look past the angst!  Thank you for bearing with me.

15 comments:

  1. Blimey, unearthing a decapitated pigeon sounds rather grisly. Thanks for not taking any photos of it! Strange about the Cornus flower buds.

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    1. I shall take your warning to heart and make sure not to frighten you with any grisly pictures in the future either.

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  2. The Chrysanthemum Picasso is beautiful. I haven’t had much success with chrysanths in past attempt, but I’ve already added them into the 2026 autumn plan. If you discover what caused your gruesome find I’d love to know what it was. I’ve found birds, twice, in that condition - but not buried, with the head in one area and the body in another. We disposed of the first but a few days later I spotted our youngest grandson staring intently at something then a screech when he figure out what it was. So unpleasant. You think it could have been a fox?
    The Cornus might be a bit confused - and although it is unusual, it's also very attractive at the moment. Weather related? It's oddly very mild here (I'm not complaining!) with temps up to 14C forecast through to at least until mid November.

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    1. Peregrine falcons decapitate their prey, and are especially partial to a pigeon. I suppose it is a quick death!

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    2. It is just part of the food chain, and being so close to the open country and adjacent to the cemetery where I know there are badgers and foxes, and have seen both on occasion in the garden, I think though from the lack of flattening of bushes etc it must have been a fox.

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  3. The chrysanthemum is very pretty with its autumnal colours and it's a perfectly seasonal flower. I also really like the delicate foliage of the corydalis. Nice choice.

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    1. Thanks Fred, it does me good to focus on what is good at the present, and I think Six on Saturday is the perfect vehicle to focus one's mind.

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  4. Well that was a very Halloween style post! Hopefully the fox will not return. Sometimes it is an uphill struggle, especially when everything seems to conspire against you. You have a lovely garden, beautiful plants (adore the 'mum) and it will all come together again, I am positive! x

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    1. Thanks for your encouragement Sis, I had not thought of Halloween when I had written this! If I had I may have used a more dramatic approach.

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  5. The leaves are gorgeous! I also have a lot of squirrels, they sometimes plant squash for me - acorn and butternut that I never planted and did not have on my compost have grown. Shoot! At your mention of spring bulbs, I realize that my window is closing for getting my bulbs in. That also needs to happen this weekend, ideally today while it is above freezing!

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    1. Shoot? Sadly we have too many neighbours and I don't have a gun or license. There are so many trees that more squirrels would move in to take their place. I just hope they don't turn and start to eat the new acer shoots in the spring time as they have done in previous years.

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  6. Flower buds on the Cornus now...wow! It's lovely, though. We seem to have had a couple of recent mast years for our Oaks, too, maybe because we have several species here. The squirrels are certainly well-fed, but walking can be a bit crunchy and hazardous. You have a beautiful collection of Cyclamen plants. And that Mum is lovely, too...I've noticed they seem to form roots very readily. They're such great plants for the garden and for cut flowers!

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    1. You are spot on regarding the Chrysanthemums, and I love to cut them to give to friends too at this time of the year.

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  7. We don't seem to get foxes in our garden any more although we had seen then when we first moved in, but our boundaries are perhaps too restrictive for them now. Fewer squirrels since we removed the hazel trees but they do come after beech nuts from our neighbour's tree. Pigeon attacks are fairly common, a sparrowhawk we guess, but bloomin' cat poo is frequent, made worse because it tends to be buried, so you can stand in it without realising! 🙄Your chrysanthemum is pretty and it's good to know you have cuttings to help preserve its future. Isn't corydalis foliage gorgeous, and the cyclamen variations too?

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    1. And yet we still garden! Pleased to hear that has been better for you over the years, except of course the problem with cats: standing in it is one thing, getting it over one's hands is even more disgusting.

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