Cool Composting

Source: ‘The Organic Way’, magazine of Garden Organic, Spring 2013

PicPost: Scent from my Blackberry

PicPost: Bishybarnabee

Lady birds (Coccinellids) ‘are and have been for very many years a favourite insect of children. The insects had many regional names (now mostly disused) in English, such as the lady-cows, may-bug, golden-knop, golden-bugs (Suffolk); and variations on Bishop-Barnaby (Norfolk dialect) – Barnabee, Burnabee, the Bishop-that-burneth, and bishy bishy barnabee. The etymology is unclear but it may be from St. Barnabas feast in June, when the insect appears or a corruption of “Bishop-that-burneth”, from the fiery elytra of the beetles.

The ladybird was immortalised in the still-popular children’s nursery rhyme Ladybird, Ladybird:

Ladybird, ladybird, fly away home
Your house is on fire and your children are gone
All except one, and that’s Little Anne
For she has crept under the warming pan….’

Source: Wikipedia

PicPost: One foot in the groove

PicPost: Trunk Fruit

‘The Jaboticaba tree – a mature tree will give you 6 to 8 crops a year. Apparently it’s one of the most nutritious & delicious fruits you will ever taste. ‘ Grow Veg

PicPost: Great Garden @ Abbotsbury

Early History
Established in 1765 by the first Countess of Ilchester as a kitchen garden for her nearby castle. Developed since then into a magnificent 20 acre garden filled with rare and exotic plants from all over the world. Many of these plants were first introductions to this country, discovered by the plant hunting descendants of the Countess.

The Garden Today
After the great storm of 1990, a major restoration project has been underway. many new exotic and unusual flowers have been introduced to this fabulous Dorset Garden.

The Garden is a mixture of formal and informal flowers, world famous for it’s Camellia groves and magnolias. Noted in Dorset for its Rhododendron and Hydrangea collections and the charming Victorian Garden’

Source : Abbotsbury website

Old School Gardener

PicPost: Key planting

PicPost: Picnic Hamper

PicPost: Great Garden @ Tintinhull

‘Delightful formal garden

The garden, complete with working kitchen garden and orchard, lies in the charming village of Tintinhull, Somerset. Glittering pools, secluded lawns, colourful borders and clipped hedges provide the perfect spot to relax and unwind away from the hustle and bustle…

“My garden is, I think and hope, a happy one.”

Phyllis Reiss and her husband Captain Reiss bought Tintinhull in 1933 and here they created a most harmonious and carefully thought-out small garden.

There are six courtyards within the garden, each with very different characters.’

Source: National Trust website

National Gardening Week  - Seed Giveaway

It’s National Gardening Week next month and we’re celebrating by giving away 10,000 packets of wildflower seeds – let’s get Britain sowing! http://nationalgardeningweek.org.uk/

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