Saturday 29 September 2018

Bug house


Latest garden project is construction of a bug house

Made from plywood and self-tapping screws.
Bird box in roof gable
... and hedgehog house in the base
(enter through tunnel bottom left, turn right into chamber).
Based on these plans from RSPB.

Filling all the cells is a work in progress.
Chicken wire retains things that would otherwise flop out (thanks Struth Ravem, Beeston FREE-Recycle).
Pine cones and straw foraged from Nottingham University Park campus;
twiggy stuff from A52 verges just south of Dunkirk flyover, of all places.

Friday 17 August 2018

Sunday 22 July 2018

Bees

Seems to be a good year for bees. Here's a video of honey and bumble bees enjoying the Joe Pye Weed and Purple Loosestrife:


Joe Pye Weed, by the way, is the showy American cousin of our native Hemp Agrimony. Legend has it that Joe Pye was an 18th century native American medicine-man who used the plant to treat fevers, but the supposed medicinal powers of the plant have since been debunked.

There are several apiaries in the area. Didn't see any swarms this year but here's a video of one just outside the house last Spring:

We heard that a neighbour of the apiary on Cromwell Road got stung this year and complained to the council. Let's hope they did nothing more than offer to kiss it better.

Sunday 15 July 2018

Pond drying up!

This is the hottest and driest summer I can remember since 1976. Returned from a fortnight's holiday to find the pond level critically low.

It's not advisable to top-up a pond with untreated tap water because the chlorine can have an adverse affect on the critters. Also, excess nitrates can lead to algal bloom.

My friend Steve had already alerted me that his pond was critically low. He'd found this tap water treatment product at the local garden centre:

That 3ml pipette (not included with the product) is good for treating 30ltr of water, which is conveniently the size of bucket I use for fermenting beer.

Steve reported no ill effects other than a possible increase in algae. That figures, since - from what I gather - these Sodium thiosulphate based water treatments only remove chlorine/cholarmine, not nutrients such as nitrates. But I concur with Steve that "better a green pond than no pond!"

20 buckets later and the pond is at a reasonable level. Ever hopeful of a natural deluge, I won't fill the pond to the brim.

Sunday 24 June 2018

Runner beans


Runner beans - ornamental as well as productive

Tuesday 12 June 2018

Hogweed

I was rather sceptical when Heather told me her wildflower order from Naturescape included Hogweed (a.k.a. Cow Parsnip). Why not a more dainty native umbellifer, like Sweet Cicely or even Cow Parsley, I thought. But I'm won over now. It's a very structural plant and a great hit with the local honey bees (bumble bees seem less attracted).



Not to be confused with the Russian interloper Giant Hogweed (that the media was all in a flap about recently), our native Common Hogweed 'only' grows to about 6 ft rather than 18 ft.

While we're on native flowers not usually granted space in the garden, here's a picture of a 'weed' that turned up uninvited in the pond margin:
Prickly sow-thistle

Saturday 2 June 2018

Foxgloves in bloom

Mum's foxgloves are looking lovely. Not the classic purple variety we expected but a nice collection of pastel shades. And as for our white ones on the other side of the path: completely decimated by some mystery pest.

Tuesday 8 May 2018

Greenhouse

Out with the old...
... in with the new.
If I'd known this simple little greenhouse would take 2 days to erect (including re-levelling the slabs) I'd have considered paying someone else to do it. Happy with the final result though.

Friday 13 April 2018

Frogspawn

Delighted to find a small clump of frogspawn in the pond this afternoon. We were beginning to think we'd missed out for a second year.
One frog's worth

Nice also to see the fritillaries coming back.
Emerging snakeshead flowers

Saturday 17 March 2018

Wightwick Foxgloves

Popped in to see my mum in Wightwick on Wednesday. She encouraged us to take a few of the foxgloves plants that are overwhelming her herbaceous border.
These are apparently the classic purple variety, which will go nicely with the white ones on the other side of the path.

Obelisk

Geoff Hamilton was not only a respected gardener and broadcaster but also a clever designer of simple, practical woodwork projects. His 1995 book "Cottage Gardens" contains instructions for several, including a bench, herb table, auricular theatre, planter, cold frame, compost container, and an obelisk. The latter is just what we need for growing sweet peas up!







The timer cost about £12. The decorative piece on top is a cistern ball. Geoff Hamilton would have found and recycled an old one but Wilko sell them for £1 so it hardly seemed worth troubling Beeston FREE-Recycle.

Bog garden

We'll want more bog plants than the pond margin can accommodate, so adding a small adjacent bog garden.

Many differing recommendations on depth. We went for 2 feet.



Don't want it to get waterlogged so the liner is punctured.
A layer of gravel helps stop the holes getting clogged up.