Friday, March 26, 2021

March flowers and wildlife 2021

Lungwort

Celandine

Dandelion

Speedwell

Daffodils

Crocus

Primroses

Sow thistle

Common daisy

Hairy Bittercress



red ants

Bee fly

Large red mites

Woodlice

Ladybirds (7 spot and harlequin)

Black ants

slugs (various)

Small beetle

Crab spider

Zebra spider

Jackdaws pruning an ash tree for nest material

Brown bees

Centipede

Comma butterfly (next door)

Yellow aphids

Earthworms

Tigerworms

Blackbirds

Robins

Pigeons

Ducks (above)

Herring Gulls (above)

Sparrows

Brown caterpillar on broad beans

March 2021

The weather has been improving so I have been outside as much as possible. Lots is happening - plants springing up everywhere, quite a few flowers, insects, arachnids and birds all over the place. And cats, but you can't have everything I suppose. 

This year's challenge is to sort out the borders as I have lots of plants growing nicely in pots, seedlings starting to emerge, plug plants on order, and lots of lovely birthday garden vouchers to spend! I started on the side border by taking the plunge and stripping the conifer of all it's branches. It wasn't the most pleasing conifer I've seen, and wasn't really in the right place, so after fifteen minutes with a bowsaw the garden looked considerably bigger and brighter. I have left the 8 foot high stump in place and will probably grow a climber up it - maybe transplant the honeysuckle from further up the garden. After that I weeded the border between the conifer and the hydrangea, so there is now plenty of space for the thousands of foxglove seedlings to grow. Might need to thin those out perhaps.

I have made a start on the other side of the conifer, but am waiting for the kale to flower so that there is some food for early insects. After that (it won't take long) I shall take the main border by the path in hand; this contains various well-established grasses and a fern that predate my occupancy, as well as several things I have just bunged in to keep them alive. That's April's project.

The lawn needed some attention, so I gave it a quick scarify and removed a lot of dead grass. I don't think it was cut by the previous resident so there is a lot of stuff to remove. I will repeat in the autumn as that is the best time of year for doing it. I also transplanted a few daisies into the lawn because they're pretty!

In the lean-to I have been sowing various seeds: flat-leaved parsley, chives, garlic chives, Wisteria, nasturtiums, geraniums, Cercis, and Alexanders. Some are starting to germinate now, but it is still quite early. I have no idea which variety of Wisteria I took the seeds from, and they certainly won't come true, but it is a fun experiment.  Six of the Pink-spotted Hellebore seeds germinated and these have been successfully potted on. The remaining seed tray has been left outside to see if any more germinate - there are purple spotted too - so fingers crossed that they do as they are from beautiful varieties. I have also been taking cuttings of Hebes, Nepeta 'Six Hill's Giant', and a purple Tradescantia that has been failing indoors. Wrong compost I suspect. I bought the Nepeta completely forgetting that it was actually catnip, and left it outside the back door. Next morning I discovered it knocked over and damaged, so took cuttings from the damaged parts and moved the plant to a table top where it has been unmolested since.

In the flower garden, the primroses, crocuses, miniature daffodils and lungwort have been superb, and I have spotted huge bumblebees on the lungwort. Daisies, dandelions, hairy bittercress and sowthistle are also flowering. Not a great deal going on in the vegetable garden yet, although the autumn planted broad beans are flowering, and I have begun to harvest the purple-sprouting broccoli.

Another project is to create a beetle hedge out of dead wood, so will use the stripped branches from the conifer and the hydrangea prunings to get started. I will probably put it at the back of the wild flower border.

My friends have continued to be generous, and have given me a large rooted cutting of Rosa 'Brother Cadfael', a champagne rhubarb, Euphorbia seedlings, and an enormous (I can barely lift it now it's potted) Sanseveria for the house. Fantastic!



Wednesday, March 3, 2021

February Flowers and wildlife2021

Primroses

Yellow and purple crocuses

Dandelions

Daisies

Celandine

Lungwort

Rosemary

Hairy bittercress

Miniature daffodils

Snowdrop

Euphorbia x2 species

Red deadnettle

Wildlife:

Robins, sparrows, pigeons, blackbirds, starlings

Buzzards, mallards, herring gulls, and crows flying overhead

Slow-worm

Red ants and black ants

Woodlice

Yellow aphids

Slugs and snails (not many yet)

Wolf spiders