Month: December 2016
Happy Christmas to you all x
Down to Earth – 18/12/2016 – @bbcleicester
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04hpnn9
Music and gardening tips for Christmas Eve. Baroque -style carols at 13.22 on the timeline.
Day 23 of my #AdventCalendar for gardeners
Remembering my grandparents. Amazing gardeners. My inspiration. They taught me to love nature. Sending my love to them, and to all of you today. I’ve grown paperwhite narcissi, red anemones, and chrysanths to go with the foliage from my garden and rosehips. My relatives are never far from my thoughts.
WordlessWednesday. Walled garden doors
Found at the National Trust’s Calke Abbey. We love the panel sides. Someone took a pride in this job. It’s right next to the Orangery, which dates back to 1777.
How many gardeners have walked through this doorway into the walled kitchen garden over the past 250 or so years. It’s good to stop and ponder as we close one door on 2016 and think about opening new doors in 2017.
Day 20 of my #AdventCalendar for gardeners- a visit to Calke Abbey.
Mossy roofed potting shed in the walled garden at the national Trust’s Calke Abbey. There’s a tiny bed in there for the garden boy whose job it was to keep the greenhouse boilers stoked. Alison and I have started a tradition to walk the gardens in the week before Christmas, and reflect on what life was like for the gardeners. Then there’s a food fair in the old riding school where we sample local honey, Leicestershire cheese, home made fudge and chocolates- and we stock up for the festive season. It’s rather a wonderful tradition to have started.
The walled kitchen garden is looking beautifully tidy. The beds are mulched and weeded. All set for the spring sowing season. Quite a cheerful sight to behold.
It’s nice to find something new in a favourite- much visited garden. This area was being excavated last time we stopped by. What treasures were under the mounds of earth, we wondered. It looks like a boiler for the hypocaust heated wall. Isn’t it amazing it’s still here. And the beautiful brick floor is still intact.
We mooched in the peach house. I think this blue paint is my all-time favourite colour. I’d love to paint my potting shed the same hue. It reminds me of the Mediterranean.
We peered through the misty peach house windows. In the summer these open right up. There are deckchairs to sit and gaze at the wild flowers and waist high grass.
View of the peach house /orangery from the church. We spotted these glorious giant white-painted cloches. And coveted them!
A few ancient espalier fruit trees remain in the walled garden. We love their mossy-covered boughs.
We hadn’t noticed this door in the walled garden before. In summer there’s so much to see. But in winter, we notice the bare bones of the garden and home in on wonderful details like this.
We’ve never seen the sheep grazing right to the house before. We like this seasonal change. The sheep set a scene that could easily grace any Christmas card. We just need some snow to complete the picture.
I hope you’ve enjoyed my tour of Calke Abbey and the kitchen gardens. Do you have a garden that you love to visit as often as you can? Do you find new treasures each time you visit? Thanks for stopping by, and please feel free to comment- so I know I’m not just talking to myself.
Day 16 of my #AdventCalendar for gardeners. Spiders web in the middle of my pergola. Snow from last winter. Have a great weekend, all x
The pergola goes from the back patio to the corner of the house and then round to the front drive. On the corner turn, there’s a spiders web. It’s totally overgrown with ivy and Montana clematis at the moment. Another winter renovation project. I’m choosing lots of new climbing roses and clematis for the replanting.
Day 15 of my #AdventCalendar. My garden is along this country lane. The light at sunset shines on the road and leads the way home. Enjoy your day x
Day 14 of my #AdventCalendar for gardeners. Christmas preparations in the pottingshed.
Day 13 of my #AdventCalendar for Gardeners. White alstroemeria,Stallion chrysanths-home grown. Ivy from the hedgerow.
Day 12 of my #AdventCalendar for gardeners
Day 11 of my #AdventCalendar for gardeners
Day 10 #AdventCalendar for gardeners
I’m making table decorations with these bellis daisies. They look just right for Christmas. And they last about two weeks in a vase, or jam jar in my case. Great for making ahead-so that I can concentrate on all the last minute cooking and present wrapping. They are another kind of messy flower that I love. The variety name is Pomponette, and Mum grew these for us to share. One packet of seeds makes about 100 plants. Great value for just a few pounds. Enjoy your weekend, all of you. x
You can also find my ramblings on twitter @kgimson and also on instagram at karengimson1.
Day 9 of my #Advent Calendar for Gardeners.
This reminds me of a Christmas star. I never fail to be delighted by the simple beauty of creamy white flowers. This one is called Leucanthemum Goldrush. Commonly known as a shasta daisy. I love all daisies, but this one is my latest favourite. It’s kind of messy- which I like. It flowers all summer, and if you pot up some plants and keep them in a warm greenhouse, you may have a few blooms in December, if you are lucky.
Wordless Wednesday – 7th December 2016 -a line of oak trees.
Day 6 of my #AdventCalendar for gardeners
Working in the Garden- using battery powered machines
I’m re-blogging this today as I’m currently trialling Stihl’s latest addition to the compact cordless range, a cute little lawn mower, MA 235. It should really be given a pet name. It’s such a delight to use, weighing only 14kg, and with no cable to get wrapped around your legs and trip you up! It is perfect for small to medium lawns up to 200m2. The grass box capacity is 30ltrs, and the machine is extremely easy to use. I’m in favour of anything lightweight. I don’t have to ask anyone for help. Plus, being battery powered it is quiet. It doesn’t scare the cat, or the wildlife I’ve been so keen to attract to the garden. More photos to follow. I’ve been given these machines by Stihl in exchange for an honest review. All views are my own and if I say nice things about them it’s because I haven’t been pressured to do so.
Here’s what I wrote about the other machines in the range, including hedge trimmer, leaf blower, trimmer and chain saw. All are interchangeable.
Gardening is hard work-there’s no denying it. I sometimes think I must be mad to try to control an acre of ground. If I turn my back for five minutes the brambles are suddenly head high and thistles and stinging nettles look as if I’ve grown them on purpose.
It’s not a sensible hobby for someone who has no muscles to speak of. I am five foot tall and weigh 8 stone. Then in addition, I have dodgy knees and a bad back. I really ought to take up sewing or knitting or…well, anything not requiring strength and stamina.
But then, I have always been contrary. I never give up on a difficult task. I have only to delve into my family photo album to see where I get my streak of quiet determination.
The oldest photos in the album show my great-great grandmother Charlotte Foxford, leading a shire horse down to the plough. There are pictures of her working the stony ground at the farm where she lived with her husband James in Oakford, Devon.
She looks exhausted. And I want to step back through time and give them a helping hand- modern medicine, health care – and machinery.
And yet, later in the album, I see them smartly dressed. Great-great grandfather James wears a suit and a jaunty hat. And I’m delighted to see them standing in the farmhouse doorway, with beautifully pruned roses around the porch. She had time to plant a garden- with all the cares she must have had to keep hearth and home together. And there are photos of them standing proudly next to the gleaming, well-groomed shire horses. Phew!They cared for their animals too. Such a reassurance and a welcome sight. And they are holding hands. They loved each other. A lesson in life in just 10 photos.
There’s one picture that makes me happiest of all. It is the one where Charlotte sits holding a baby- my grandfather, Ted Foulds- and is surrounded by her family. She is smiling. Her happiness and contentment shines out from the page. A great relief to me.
I just wish I could tell her- we have all copied her example. We’ve continued the tradition. There’s a long line of tenacious and determined women in the family- and we have all thrived on hard work. We are good at finding solutions.
So I may be a physical weakling- but I never give up. And I never wait around for someone else to do a job, if I can do it myself.
My latest solution to the problem of coping with an unruly garden is the discovery of the new Stihl compact cordless range of power tools.
We already have petrol machines- but they are too heavy for me, I nearly wrench my arm out starting them up. Plus they are so loud they frighten me, and the cat, and the cows in the neighbouring field.
I was relieved and delighted to find four battery powered machines that I could actually manage- all by myself. Lightweight and easy to use.
I used the chainsaw to tackle the hazel coppice. Usually I use a handsaw and loppers. But the Stihl chainsaw cut through them in minutes. I’ll use the hazel rods to make an A-frame support for sweet peas in the cut flower garden.
Next I cut through a low field maple branch that was growing over the drive. The logs will be used on our open fire.
We will leave some brushwood and logs for wildlife habitats.
I’m going to tackle the apple trees next. Apple and pear logs are a special treat for Christmas. A gentle flame and no sparks from fruit wood- plus the whole house is scented with a most glorious, exotic perfume. No candles or chemicals can match it.
The chainsaw lasted about 45 minutes before the battery ran flat. I was ready for a cup of tea and a piece of cake by then, so I put it back on charge. It took about an hour or so to charge up again. I was busy tidying the logs, so I didn’t mind waiting.
Here are my notes on the Stihl chainsaw MSA 120 C-BQ Compact Cordless Power System.
The brochure says the chainsaw is ideal for garden maintenance, cutting firewood, shrubs and branches.
1. Weighs 2.5kg without battery. Lithium-Ion battery weighs 1.2kg
2. Sound Level 94.0 dB A. Amazingly quiet. No ear defenders are needed. This is a good because you can be more aware of what’s going on around you while you are working, if you can hear.
3. Battery Life : The brochure says up to 35 minutes. Mine lasted 45 mins.
4. Cutting Performance: Up to 100 cuts in 10cm x10cm square timber.
5. Bar Length: 30cm
6.Chain Speed: 13.2 m/s (max)
7. Quick Chain Tensioning: Tensioning the chain without tools by turning the adjusting wheel. Even I could do it. The guide bar is automatically secured by tightening the sprocket cover.
8. Safety Feature: I liked the pop out battery, which meant you couldn’t accidentally switch the chainsaw on whilst carrying it around.
I chose Farol Ltd at Hinckley, Leicestershire, to commission the chainsaw. Special mention to Sarah Nottingham and Jacob Shellis who kitted us out with protective trousers, boots, gloves and glasses supplied by Stihl. They took such care to show me how to use the chainsaw, and the hedge trimmer, strimmer and leaf blower in the range. I was impressed by their knowledge and the time and care they took to explain everything in terms I understood. I feel as if I have a good back up team there. I can ring or go back and visit at any time if I have any problems or need advice.
Safety is a prime consideration. I did an assessment of the work I planned and double checked my capabilities before starting. I will still need a qualified tree surgeon for larger projects in the garden.
Chain saw and other machinery courses can be found at Brooksby Melton College in Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire.
Have you found any solutions to your gardening problems ? I’d love to hear them.