Gardening

Spring growth in my London patio garden

Spring growth in my London patio garden

Horrific growth spurt in my London patio garden since I last trimmed in early May. Great the green spread of the Wisteria and the Mediterranean red of the Oleander flowers but control is a problem. Another round with the shears and cutters. Top priority is keeping clear air around the gas boiler chimney. Tree fern has done well too.

More photos: Garden growth spurt

Rhododendron flowers and Skiddaw in the cloud
Rhododendron flowers and Skiddaw Little Man summit (865 m.) in the cloud

Rhododendron gardening

Gardening in Keswick in temperate cloud forest weather: there’s been 68 mm of rain in my garden in the first ten days of June, great for horticulture but not enough to replenish the lakes and a disappointment for visitors.

Garden meadow in Keswick, Cumbria

My Keswick garden meadow has been benefitting from no-mow May, rewarding with flowers. Now it’s time to make paths to be able to look after the apple and damson trees. Of course there’s been rain but also the long run of sunny days, with the day length now approaching its maximum as the solstice draws closer.

Keswick garden hedgehog, Lake District

Keswick garden hedgehog, Lake District

Fantastic to sight a hedgehog in my garden in Keswick in the vicinity of the hedgehog house I placed outside when I first took over this garden. This was at the end of a rainy day, the sort which my cloud forest garden thrives on. Also the earthworms and other garden animals which hedgehogs and some of the birds enjoy to eat: so there aren't a lot of slugs and snails here... This hedgehog seems in robust health and confident; maybe this is a female and maybe the shape I saw of its behind as it sauntered onwards suggests there may be hoglets on the way.

Red Mason Bee on my Lemon flowers

Red Mason Bee on my Lemon flowers

It’s a good year for flowers on the citrus trees I grow in pots on my patio in West London, maybe the best since the lockdown year, 2020. The lemon harvest looks promising, especially now seeing the pretty flowers being grazed and pollinated by Red Mason Bees (Osmia bicornis), attracted by the scent. It’s a while since I introduced a colony of bees to my garden and although they no longer use the nest I provided, I’m very happy to see that their descendants have reappeared this year after hibernation. Red Mason Bees do not have a sting and are not only harmless but very welcome: I specifically don’t use weed-killers or insecticides in my garden so as not to endanger them.

Photography in my patio garden with a manual lens used by my Father for his research zoology work, a Micro-Nikkor 55mm f3.5.

More photos: Pollinators + Flowers = Fruit