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A Suffolk Lane

~ A diary of my life in rural north Suffolk.

A Suffolk Lane

Daily Archives: Feb 23, 2014

More Flowers in my Garden

23 Sun Feb 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in Gardening, Rural Diary

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Tags

Christmas box, crocus, daisy, grape hyacinth, iris danfordiae, iris reticulata, lichen, rosemary, Scilla sibirica, snowdrops, tete a tete narcissi, viburnum bodnantense, winter aconites, winter-flowering honeysuckle, winter-flowering jasmine

Scilla sibirica.  Brilliant blue flowers like miniature bluebells, they start to flower as soon as they emerge from the ground and continue elongating until they are about 10cm/4ins tall.  As you can see, mine have started to spread and the young ones are just coming up around the original group.

021Scilla (640x480)

 

Winter Aconites.  Eranthus hyemalis.  Hooray!  At last!  A member of the buttercup family.  I can’t get rid of creeping buttercup and these won’t spread – most confusing!

020Winter aconites (640x480)

 

Yellow crocus in the grass under the variegated sweet chestnut tree.

019Yellow crocus (640x480)

 

Yet another picture of my miniature iris, iris reticulata – I love them.  Look carefully at the bottom right of the group of flowers and you will see a bloom that has been nipped off and discarded by one of the kind animal visitors to the garden.  Towards the bottom left of the photo you can see some yellow iris danfordiae just about to come out.  I am really feeling quite smug about these as they are notoriously difficult to get to survive in this country.  The bulbs break up after flowering into bulblets which take a few years to mature and then flower.  One has to recreate the conditions where the plants originally came from – danfordiae from Turkey, reticulata from Turkey, the Caucasus, Iraq, Iran.  Good drainage; baked in summer, cold in winter.  As you can see, my soil is very stony in this bed and it is south facing so gets sun for most of the day in summer.

017Blue and purple miniature iris (640x480)

 

A tub containing snowdrops and tete a tete narcissi.

015Tub with snowdrops and Tete a Tete narcissi (640x480)

 

A rosemary flower.  Rosemary grows very well in our garden.  I have two large plants one of which is next to the front door in the herb garden.  Rosemary under the pillow wards off bad dreams and nightmares; rosemary next to the front door keeps witches away!  Rosemary for remembrance.

014Rosemary flower (640x480)

 

Daisies growing in the grass.  I couldn’t be without daisies.

013Daisies (640x480)

 

Viburnum bodnantense flowers.

012Viburnum bodnantense flowers (640x480)

 

And again!  I found it difficult to get the right angle to photograph them from.

011Viburnum bodnantense flowers (640x480)

 

Winter-flowering Honeysuckle flowers.  Again I found it difficult to photograph these.  Gorgeous scent.

010Winter-flowering honeysuckle flowers (640x480)

 

Christmas Box flowers.  These tiny flowers emit the most lovely scent – best on still, mild winter days.

009Christmas box in flower (640x480)

 

A really pretty tiny grape hyacinth.

008Grape hyacinth (640x480)

 

Mauve crocus under the weeping crabapple.

003Mauve crocus (640x480)

 

More mauve crocus.

001Mauve crocus (640x480)

Winter-flowering Jasmine.  This has been in flower since the beginning of November.

006Winter-flowering jasmine (640x480)

 

Two types of lichen on cotoneaster horizontalis.

005Two types of lichen on cotoneaster (640x480)

 

And again.

 

004Two types of lichen on cotoneaster (640x480)

 

 

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An Afternoon at the Beach

23 Sun Feb 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in Rural Diary

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

bumble bees, Dunwich beach, elder trees, little egret, Muntjac deer

I have had a busy week with hardly any time in the garden and no time to add a post to my blog – until now.  The weather has been a little better this week – good for all the young people on their half-term break. 

Wednesday 19th Feb:  A beautiful orange sunrise – a pleasant mild day with lots of cloud and some sunshine.  A returning to Sheffield today so she came with me when I took my mother shopping in Diss.  We took her to the station after getting the groceries and waited with her until just before her train arrived.  She texted later to tell me what a long and unpleasant journey she’d had.  A landslip between Chesterfield and Sheffield meant that she had had to change trains at Nottingham.  Over an hours wait for the new train to arrive and then a long circuitous route to Sheffield avoiding the damaged track.  A dislikes travelling at the best of times – delays make her doubly grumpy (don’t they A?!)

Thursday 20th Feb:  Rain overnight and a cloudy, gloomy, breezy morning.  While R and I were drinking our morning tea we watched a deer wandering through the garden – probably muntjac though might have been roe; couldn’t see clearly.  Heavy rain followed by rain showers today.  Did lots of food shopping and then lots of ironing.  Watched a pair of deer grazing in the field on the other side of the lane at the front of the house.  The sky cleared after dark.

Friday 21st Feb:  A beautiful clear bright morning – almost a frost.  Water droplets had become gel-like but not frozen.  As the sun rose everything shimmered and sparkled – heavenly!  Took Mum to the eye clinic at the Norfolk and Norwich hospital again to have another injection in her eye.

  Poor lady has glaucoma, cataracts and macular degeneration and the injections are for the latter.  Her eyesight was so good until fairly recently.  She now finds reading, knitting, sewing difficult as well as all her household chores.  She it was who taught me to be observant, teaching me when I was tiny the names of flowers and birds.  I remember her showing me how to colour pictures with the natural dyes from grass and flower petals while we were on a camping holiday.  She pointed out bilberries to us all when we were walking across the North York Moors.  All we could see were rabbit droppings at first so that was what we called rabbit droppings ever afterwards.

Surprised at the large number of dead deer at the sides of the road.  Noticed bumble bees flying in the garden this afternoon.

Saturday 22nd Feb:  Another lovely day – more bumble bees about.  I managed to take a few photos of flowers in the garden this morning while R was trying to do something about filling in some of the deep holes and ruts made by the JCB.  The elder tree is coming in to leaf.  I am so pleased we have an elder tree as I love the frothy flowers in mid-summer and the beautiful berries in the autumn.  I really like elderflower cordial and the flowers also go well with gooseberries – they are in season at the same time.  Elder trees are traditionally magical – some traditions have them as evil trees and some as good.  In some parts of the country it was thought best to ask permission of the tree before pruning it or taking anything from it. Boggarts are thought to live in Elder trees.  (I remember reading ‘The Boggart’ by Susan Cooper to A when she was little).  Elders are very useful trees.  Flies do not like their smell so they were often planted near to cottages – larders, kitchens, dairies, outside lavatories!

R and I decided to drive to Dunwich and walk on the beach this afternoon.  It wasn’t as busy as we thought it might have been seeing as the day was so fine.  Lovely rolling waves –  R pointed out the hissing noise the pebbles make as the water recedes before the next wave rushes in.  What a good work-out for leg muscles walking on deep shingle beaches is!  I found a mermaid’s purse,  a dogfish egg case, and gave it to E when I got home.  We saw a little egret fishing in a pool near the shore.  We drove home as the sun was setting – the trees, black silhouettes, showing every twig and growing leaf bud against the pale sky.

Waves on Dunwich beach

031Waves on Dunwich beach (640x480)

 

View out to sea

030View out to sea, Dunwich beach (640x480)

 

Stonecrop, rope and other bits and pieces above the strand line

027Above the strand line (640x480)

 

More waves with a juvenile herring gull

026Waves with juvenile herring gull (640x480)

 

A fisherman with the town of Southwold and it’s lighthouse in the distance

022Fisherman on Dunwich beach with Southwold in the distance (640x480)

 

View inland from the beach

024View inland from Dunwich beach (640x480)

 

Little egret in the pool

029Little egret in pool (640x480)

 

Little egret again.  Neither of these photos clear as I had to zoom so much to take the picture

 

028Little egret in pool (640x480)

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I talk about what it's like living in a quiet part of Suffolk. I am a wife, mother and daughter, a practising Christian and love the natural world that surrounds me. I enjoy my life - most of the time!

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