Tag: gardens

  • 8th June 2024 – Chew Valley, North Somerset

    8th June 2024 – Chew Valley, North Somerset

    This robin was very keen to join us for lunch

    I spent my teenage years in the Chew Valley and regret that, at that time , I had little interest in nature. I did enjoy the aesthetics of the pretty village cricket grounds and always enjoyed cycling the lanes. I do remember occasionally taking in the wonderful scenery of this beautiful part of the country; but I failed to show interest in the specifics and failed to learn any of the names of the flora or to spend time studying the birdlife. What a waste!

    However, I hope I have made up for it in recent years.

    This morning we crossed the city before most people were active to visit an amazing garden south of Bristol in the Chew Valley – the Yeo Valley Organic Garden near Blagdon.

    The view from the garden café

    The gravel garden

    It was a bit early in the day (and still quite fresh) to see the great variety of butterflies that we usually see here at this time of the year. We had to make do with a scruffy Painted Lady and lots of damselflies.

    Painted lady

    Common blue damselfly

    There were birds to be seen too; notably robins, blackbirds, goldfinches, chaffinches, chiffchaffs , pied wagtails, and swifts and house martins flying across Blagdon Lake.

    Pied wagtail

    Lots of pollinators in the garden
    The view to Blagdon Lake

    Canada geese over the lake

    Swifts over the lake

    … and a little closer

    The goldfinches were much closer still

    Chaffinch singing its heart out

    Common chiffchaff

    The birch grove

    Big grass bed

    The veggie garden

    This bed of alliums was probably my favourite area today

    The red and lime beds

    The bronze garden

    The bronze garden

    Glasshouse

    Despite the sun not appearing very often the garden still looked stupendous. I hope some of my photos do justice to this lovely garden.

    After a tasty lunch at the on site café we stopped off at the village of Ubley and had a quick visit to the local church.

    The garden café

    Ubley Church north façade

    Ubley Church south façade

    Sadly, our return journey across the city was rather tortuous as we got caught up in the traffic of people going Saturday shopping. If they only knew, they would have been much better off driving out into the countryside!

  • 3rd September 2023 – The Veddw House Garden

    3rd September 2023 – The Veddw House Garden

    Not a bird in sight (well at least not in my sight) and only one butterfly captured by my camera. However, I have decided that gardens that we visit are well worth recording on my blog as they show nature as fashioned by man (and very often woman).

    The Veddw House Garden, the garden of Charles Hawes (prize winning garden photographer) and Anne Wareham (garden writer) on the Welsh borders near Devauden up above Tintern Abbey was quite a challenge to photograph with a high sun on a Sunday afternoon – but Sunday afternoon is the only time it is open to the public. How wise of them to keep it to themselves to savour and possibly photograph in the golden hours.

    The owners say it’s “all about patterns, shapes, colours, drama, sculptural hedges and views”. I hope you get a sense of all that from my photos.

    Red Admiral

  • 1st August 2023 – The Newt in Somerset

    1st August 2023 – The Newt in Somerset

    I’m afraid my link to bird photography becomes rather tenuous at this time of the year. Many bird photographers often turn to butterflies at this stage but my focus turns to gardens. All the same, nature in all its glory is very evident in these wonderful tended gardens.

    Our trip to The Newt in Somerset was a birthday treat. In fact, due to the inclement weather my birthday treat turned out to be watching cricket on the television as England levelled the “Ashes” series with Australia. So, our trip to Somerset was delayed by a day and generally we had dry but very cloudy weather.

    Why The Newt? The name has been chosen because of amphibian friends that have been found on the estate. As The Newt’s own website says: ‘They also possess the incredible ability to regenerate, retaining their functional and structural properties. And so this resident was a perfect fit. ‘

    The Newt hotel in the background

    The Garden Café offers a perfect vantage point over the kitchen gardens and orchards below

    Lemons from Babylonstoren, their sister property in the Western Cape of South Africa, greet visitors to the gardens

    The gardener’s cottage (at one time!)

    Windows around the garden lead to one spectacular vista after another

    Perhaps an onion from this plot formed the main ingredient of one of my dishes at lunch?

    Can’t wait to go back and explore further afield and perhaps find some birds!

    I’ll let my slideshow of our trip to The Newt in Somerset do the rest: