PicPost: Bearded Beauty

Bearded Iris drawn by Sue Walker White

Picpost: Great Garden @ Howick Hall

“The gardens at Howick are deliberately aimed at garden lovers with the extensive grounds offering a wide variety of plants throughout the year and are open from early February until mid November.

The season starts in early February with the ‘Snowdrop Festival’. In late March/April there are spectacular drifts of daffodils to be seen throughout the grounds.  In April/May the Woodland Garden is particularly lovely with rhododendrons, camellias and magnolias, and the tulips also appear in the wild flower meadows in May.   The formal gardens, including the herbaceous borders and terraces in front of the Hall, come into their own from June onwards. The Bog Garden lasts from June to September and is mostly planted with unusual herbaceous material grown from seed collected in the wild, which will be of particular interest to dedicated plantsmen. The late season brings brilliant autumn colour in late September through to mid November.

Howick Hall Gardens has been rated by the BBC Gardener’s World Magazine as one of the top 5 coastal gardens in the country and rated the Independent Magazine as ‘one of the Best 10 Gardens to visit this spring'”

Source: Howick Hall website

PicPost: For you, Mum, with love...

Happy Mothering Sunday!

PicPost: Fire Station

Photo from The Exotic Garden, Norwich

PicPost: Potty

PicPost: City Centre

PicPost: Vanishing point

Photo from The Exotic Garden, Norwich

PicPost: Do you play?

PicPost: Frittilary

‘Super talk last night by the Director of the Museum Christopher Woodward for the Friends of the Botanic Garden (Oxford). As with much trade, the railways enabled flowers to be sent to London and it was the wild Snakeshead Fritillary that grew on the wet Oxford meadows that yielded its flowers for admiration.’ from Richard Barrett, who was at the Garden Museum, London.

PicPost: Great Garden @ Elm Hill, Norwich

‘Our Norwich Shop is situated in one of the oldest parts of the city. We are housed in a beautiful Tudor building in the ancient cobbled street of Elm Hill. The original elm tree is long gone but the shop stands opposite a lovely plane tree which stands in its place. At the rear of the shop is a peaceful garden thought to have been designed by the late Gertrude Jekyll

We have two large Georgian glass windows which are always stuffed with bears, and shelves upon shelves of bears created by talented artists and all the top manufacturers.

Even on the coldest and dampest of days there is a warm glow from the windows onto the cobbles in the street.
Visitors are drawn in by the glow, and once inside they are encouraged to pick up the bears. We are definitely a ‘hands on’ rather than a ‘don’t touch’ shop.

In the Summer, the sunlight filters through the plane tree in the square outside and softly warms the Bears. We open the garden then for special events, when Customers can choose their Bears outside.’

Source:  Bear Shop website

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