Well I did say that we'd be busy creosoting the Pear Hut and repainting its frieze and 'Kay's Seat.' Here's the evidence. It looks rather smarter in it's differing shades of brown It will be entered in the this year's Shed of the Year Competition on the grounds that it is actually a 'shed' and can't be compared with many of the fabulous edifices against which it competes! Furthermore, it was made entirely from reclaimed wood and the frieze was made from the off-cuts of ceiling and floor boards. The pears were cut out of Elm and disguise an old cat flap in the door. The windows were an EBay purchase. The hospital sign? Well, it was one of those irresistible old signs that used to adorn our English roadsides. It contains a writing desk, chair and bookcase and looks across the orchard to the pond and summerhouse.

'UP THE GARDEN PATH' by Pam Thompson
- Home
- THE CAST
- THE GARDEN
- GARDEN WILDLIFE
- 2005 - 2016 GREENHOUSE UPGRADES
- 2008 -THYME SQUARE
- 2012 - THE PEAR HUT
- 2006 - OIL TANK SCULPTURES
- 2005 - RABBITS OUT-FOXED
- 2006 - BOUNDARIES
- 2004 - AN OLD BUOY
- 2009 - CULVERT+SUMMERHOUSE
- 2005 - PUMP RESTORATION
- 2010 - LIVING WITH HENS!
- THE WORLD'S MOST RECYCLED GARDEN!
- 'UP THE GARDEN PATH' by Pam Thompson
- 2025 - GARDEN MAP
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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11 March 2015
09 March 2015
More Winter Arrivals
Although not nearly was warm as predicted, we did have some weekend sunshine. Consequently, more and more flowers are springing into life. Bees have been out and about searching for pollen - head over heels in some cases! For more winter arrivals, see: Winter Flower Story
Whilst enjoying the sunshine, the gardeners were busy doing rather more mundane jobs such as creosoting the tool shed and the Pear Hut and giving 'Kay's Seat' and the frieze around the top of the Pear Hut another coat of green paint. After 2 coats, things are looking pretty smart once again. We also moved a couple of shrubs and trees......which we meant to do back in the autumn! Hopefully we were in the nick of time!
06 March 2015
Winter Waning?

Spring is definitely stealing nearer and nearer and down in the Woodland Border there's more and more proof .........of the floral variety! Before getting down to some serious border tidying, I took this photo of a some Hellebores, Snowdrops, Pulmonarias and Primroses with a Nexus 7 using the panoramic feature - for no particular reason. I never find photographing subjects in this border easy because it's always in shade with the sun at the back meaning that the photographer throws her own shadow just where she doesn't want it!
05 March 2015
Eggsotic Easter Eggs?
Maybe it's not just geese who lay golden eggs. The reality? More playing with Photomatix HDR photographs of the world's freshest eggs from the world's most spoilt chickens and making them look positively radioactive! This look would be perfect for Easter.
03 March 2015
Words on Birds
02 March 2015
Perfect Pansy
26 February 2015
Less of a Meadow - More of an Orchard!
After Saturday's planting, I can now claim that we have an orchard of our own!! I have hesitated to say that because we are surround by vast acreages of serious orchards. Wikipedia's & Google's definition of an orchard is:
| 1 tree with 3 grafted varieties: Cox's Orange Pippin, Sunset & Herefordshire Russet |
Orchard is an intentional planting of trees or shrubs that
is maintained for food production. Orchards comprise fruit, vegetable, and
nut-producing trees which are grown for commercial production. Orchards are
also sometimes a feature of large gardens, where they serve an aesthetic as
well as a productive purpose.[1] A fruit garden is generally synonymous with an
orchard, although it is set on a smaller non-commercial scale and may emphasize
berry shrubs in preference to fruit trees. Most temperate-zone orchards are
laid out in a regular grid, with a grazed or mown grass or bare soil base that
makes maintenance and fruit gathering.
Old English: ortgeard; the first element from Latin hortus 'garden',
the second representing yard.
Well, we have done our best to plant out in a grid but that
was difficult given the fact that we already had an aging pear and 2 fairly
mature apple trees which don't follow our grid pattern. From the photo, it
appears that the spacing between them is enormous but it really isn't. We were determined that they should not be
crowded and that each specimen should have room to grown and mature. I have yet to tie on our copper labels as I'm
waiting to see if any copper wire can be found.
Fingers crossed!
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