'UP THE GARDEN PATH' by Pam Thompson
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The green and rolling countryside of Worcestershire, England, is home to the cider apple orchards which surround the gardens of Pear Tree Cottage. They enjoy a sunny south westerly aspect with sweeping views across to Martley Hillside, Woodbury and Abberley clock tower. The Teme Valley lies just over the hill and, not far away, is the Herefordshire border. Although our climate is temperate, our seasons are often uncertain and always a challenge to a gardener! This began in 2010 & follows the weekly ups and downs of garden work chronicling both successes and failures but, above all, demonstrates the fun enjoyed by three people who regularly garden in all weathers
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29 March 2013
Refurbished Cold Frames
On Good Friday last year...........
.........we were enjoying what turned out to be our short summer! Hosepipe bans had just announced, potatoes planted and seeds sown. The soil was warm and dry beneath a hot sun and we were being warned about a summer of drought. Garden centres had sold out of water butts as we were being told in dire tones to conserve water as reservoirs were dangerously low!
| Hand dried bricks beneath the blue pavers! |
Al came back from Costco with a hybrid Magnolia Wada's Memory from Seattle. It's a lovely specimen covered in white scented flowers. There is absolutely no hope of planting it in the garden with this very cold spell likely to remain until well into April according to the Met Office. It's actually sitting in the conservatory until things look up.
27 March 2013
Any Pond in a Storm
23 March 2013
Grovelling in the Gravel
22 March 2013
Global Warming Gripe!
............and while we're discussing the vicissitudes of the English weather: where exactly all those learned people who, not so long ago, earnestly extolled the virtues of drought resistant and drought tolerant plants? The same people who advised us humble gardeners that we should be growing arrid Mediterranean loving plants?? The people who told us that, due to high levels of global warming, we would no longer need to worry about 'having' to grow hardy plants and shrubs. The very people who straight faced advised that the British climate was becoming hotter. Not so very long ago, every T.V. gardening programme, periodical and magazine article lectured us all and actively promoted this style of gardening - in fact they positively preached until we were tired of hearing the same old drivel. I just have a couple of questions.
Did they heed their own advice? If so...
..how exactly did their gardens grow???
This link is definitely worth a second glance! UK Plant Hardiness Map
Drive Work in Arctic Conditions
| Chris at the helm |
| Mountains on the drive |
Why did the weather have to take so many turns for the worse as soon as the digger arrived? It was already far too cold. The only reason snow can't be seen in these photos is because it has been all dug up! Not that Chris or Nick were deterred by such meteorological downturns. They set about scraping off several layers of old compacted gravel and mud, loading up Clarence and taking it up to Chris's wood. The idea is to level the width of the drive for the first time and reduce the surface height so that the finished level of the 6 tons of new gravel (due to arrive tomorrow!) will lie at the original height and look smart and tidy. Well that's the theory!
| Hard at work |
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