"Nobody sees a flower really, it is so small. We haven't time, and to see takes time - like to have a friend takes time." - Georgia O'Keeffe
Salt marsh on the Gironde Estuary |
Some things, like the estuary with its tidal streams and brackish lakes, are simply too big at this time of year, and prone to overflowing. Later this March we face the prospect of an unusually high spring tide which might even reach into our garden... un vrai catastrophe for the plants, few of which would be salt-tolerant.
Penduline Tit |
That said, the reed beds of the marais do a good job of soaking up excess water and are beautiful to admire on a sunny day when you can look down on them from one of the nearby chalk cliffs.
Amazingly, in all the time we've been watching shore birds, we've never managed to glimpse a marsh tit; but this week we did come across a lively family of penduline tits (Remiz pendulinus) darting around an area of scrub bordering the reedbeds. Tiny and beautifully marked, they're fairly rare visitors who over-winter in certain parts of southern Europe.
Slender Speedwell (Veronica filiformis) with a Rough Hawk's Beard |
After so much rain, we've finally had ten days of dry, windy weather which has shaken some of the mud off the hedgerows.
When it comes to our own hedges, Christina is very particular about tidying up the space beneath them, taking out weeds and leaving space for a few early flowers such as primroses. To give them a bit more light, she snips off any messy lower branches of hedging - in this case Viburnum tinus, which is also underplanted with miniature daffs and edged with the ever-reliable Campanula poscharskyana.
You can also see evidence of our watering system running at the back of these plants - it certainly aids the establishment of new hedges as they get their roots down.
Mimosa (Acacia dealbata) - an ephemeral beauty! |
And it's great when a friend turns up for lunch bearing a fresh swag of mimosa which releases its haunting almondy fragrance as soon as you remove the cellophane from its blossoms.
We adored it for two whole days before our central heating started to wizen its tiny puffballs and its perfume gradually faded into nostalgia.
Shrub of the Month
Loved for its foliage as much as its blooms
Mahonia aquifolium
This is the low-growing spreading form of 'Oregan Grape' which is worth having for its leaves alone. It provides contrast to other evergreens by putting on a show of glossy foliage in late February to March, followed by clusters of yellow flowers which attract bees and other insects.
Fresh leaves on Mahonia aquifolium |
We also have the taller Mahonia japonica, with less impressive foliage but giving us beautiful sprays of scented flowers in the middle of winter. Both versions need careful clipping and pruning to keep them looking their best but otherwise are easy to maintain.
Wicked Weeds and other Pests
Shepherd's Purse
(Capsella bursa-pastoris)
(Capsella bursa-pastoris)
Regular readers will know I'm paranoid where weeds are concerned. Let's face it, their main aim in life is to take over your garden, by various means of stealth and deceit, and we have to get them before they get us!
No one is more cunning than this delicate plant that insinuates itself wherever there is enough nitrogen in the soil... pretty much everywhere in our garden. It then abuses your hospitality by firing out seeds in spring-loaded capsules, trying to catch you in the eye just as you're leaning over to yank it out.
My advice is: Grab it now - before its innocent little flowers have a chance to to form!
Caterpillars of the Pine Processionary Moth |
Although weeds might drive you nuts, they tend not to affect your health in other ways; whereas the caterpillars on the left, having emerged from their web-like nest on a warm day, pose a very real threat to pets who could ingest and choke on their irritating hairs. Humans, too, can suffer allergic reactions to touching them.
Many of our neighbours have these moth nests clearly visible in their pine trees yet seem to do nothing about them. Luckily, there's plenty of information on the internet about how to get rid of this pest.
Halfway down she unearthed her favourite weeding fork which had probably lain there for the past six months, feared lost forever, with its nice wooden handle now showing signs of having been nibbled by a rodent.
The day before she found a 'diamond' ring in the road whilst sweeping up some rubbish... who says the righteous don't get their just reward in this world??
Crocus amongst Cerinthe leaves |
They look delicious on a damp day, when speckled with rain or dew, petals folded protectively over their downy stamens. Their leaves are discreet but clearly striped to mark them out from other bulbs.
Then, when the sun finally deigns to shine again, whoosh... up they come to savour the light, greedy with desire, their translucent stems transmitting energy like filaments.
It's a flower that punches above its weight in the garden and seems to encapuslate our own deep-seated longing for sunshine and heat.
Last year we planted several of the Dutch 'striped' hybrids at the front of our new raised bed and they look particularly effective against a carpet of oyster shells.
'Pickwick' crocus flowering in the herb bed |
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