Monday 23 May 2016

May in bloom

Suddenly my garden is full of colour!
So I thought I'd round up what's best, from old favourites to new discoveries.


Tulips


Ragged Black Parrot and blousy Angelique. The tulips this year are my favourites ever, I love, LOVE my Black Parrot.


Fluffy Cherry Blossom, which is already all over the grass.



The bright, acid green Hakonechloa brightening the shady side of the terraced garden.


My lovely new Honesty or Lunaria annua Chedglow bought recently at Powderham Castle. Read about that trip here.


Argyranthemum (Marguerite Daisy) and Olearia scilloniensis turning their faces to the sun.


Brunnera Jack Frost - such delicate flowers and beautiful leaves - I need more.


Williams Pear and Apple blossom, one almost over and one just beginning.


This is my mystery shrub and it has never flowered so well. My mother-in-law gave it to me as a seedling grown from seeds she collected from a park. It has leaves a bit like a Kerria, deeply veined and, as you can see, white papery flowers. It has been forgettable until this year but now looks lovely. Any information anyone can offer as to what it might be would be lovely - I feel I should appreciate it more now!


Double Primulas - both, I think, Mothers Day presents from years past.


My Choisia sundance is flowering fit to bust, covered in new growth and looks very healthy. I'm still fooled by it's pale, colour-drained foliage. Sometimes it can look positively ill!


Euphorbia Fireglow and Euphorbia cyparissias are both popping up largely not quite where I was expecting. They seem to move every year, especially the cyparissias which is showing an alarming tendency to leave the bed completely and colonise the lawn!


This Berberis darwinii is flowering for a second time this year - what value for money! 


Spires of Tellimia grandiflora and whorls of Hosta are erupting, and the slugs and snails are already celebrating - but never fear I am on the case!


Geranium sanguine is creeping and has been flowering all through the winter.


My Euphorbia Mellifera is statuesque and glorious but is getting really too big. I must research how to control it, everything around it is decidedly cramped, but I couldn't do without it.

So there is my mid month roundup, but things are changing constantly. The Cherry and Pear blossom is already gone and the Alliums are bursting out. 

It is such an exciting time in the garden as things rush into growth and burst forth. Every year it catches me far behind with all the preparations I was going to make. Plants I was going to move are now buried in new growth, spaces I had cleared to add new things have miraculously disappeared, and weeds are already flowering. Every year it happens and now I am too distracted by the loveliness to do mundane maintenance - I never learn!

Enjoy whatever is happening in your garden (the rest will happen eventually).

Now I must check my vegetable bed!




Wednesday 11 May 2016

Beautiful Bluebells

Just outside Penryn, between Truro and Falmouth is the lovely Enys Gardens.
Having never been in the 8 years we have been here, I have now been twice in a week and what a treat it was.

Considered the oldest garden in Cornwall, every year it has a glorious Bluebell Festival, and on Bank Holiday Monday (in light drizzle) we set off to check it out.


Approached by a woodland drive lined with Pulmonarias and Hellebores...


there's a scattering of mossy, stone buildings, containing a history room, a tea room and a clock tower.
Follow the path one way and you get to the house, follow the path the other and you reach the wider garden.


First the New Zealand Garden, with plants collected by Victorian members of the Enys family...


and on into the park with glorious Rhododendrons and patches of the beautiful Bluebells.


Down mossy paths and through stone arches, and into the flower gardens...


with tall Camasias and bright green Euphorbia...


and vibrant tulips...



 and out into the Stumpery, strewn with with jagged, stripped stumps


 Further round is the pond, misty and still...


 bounded by Tree Ferns, Rhododendrons and Gunnera...


with winding streams and tranquil islands...


 and explosions of vibrant Candelabra Primulas.


But at the centre is the Parc Lye and at this time of year that is why people visit...


for the Bluebells.

The Parc Lye is an ancient meadow undisturbed for hundreds of years and the English Bluebells (and the wild garlic) are spectacular.


Drifts of them stretch for as far as the eye can see, dainty and purply blue, so much prettier than the Spanish ones I just can't eradicate from my garden!


They are a little late this year and on Bank Holiday Monday the Bluebells were only 30% of their full effect (according to the Enys Garden website - there's a bluebell update regularly). By my second visit, the following Saturday to celebrate a friends birthday, they were much further on. What a difference a warm week makes.


They were breathtaking - well worth two visits.

The dilapidated house was open both weekends I was there, the first for an art exhibition and the second for a craft fair. 


The house has been uninhabited for a number of years, has suffered from all kinds of rot (there's a whole list of types) and is home to a large bat colony, making renovation tricky. 
Slowly but surely, in a bat friendly manner, work is taking place and it is a marvellously decrepit backdrop for events.


Some bits look quite respectable, others not so much!


Some of the peeling grandeur looked quite like art itself.


The buzz of the art exhibition and then the craft fair bought it to life. This is my little party being persuaded into some craft purchasing (after a good deal of tea and cake purchasing at the lovely tea room - well it was Caron's birthday!).


 There were beautiful Bluebells surrounding the house...


and they had made it indoors too, although these are Spanish Bluebells. The dainty English ones are far too precious to pick!