Showing posts with label honeysuckle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label honeysuckle. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 August 2023

The garden in late August

 

The garden in late August


 Lavatera 'Barnsley Baby'

A couple of months ago We moved this buddleja from the front garden, where it has lived for several years, to the back garden, and feared it would not survive. It has flowered beautifully - I hope it's not its last gasp!


 Achillea millefolium 'Summer Pastels'

 Coenosia tigrina on yarrow

Little fly with a big name on yarrow



Honeysuckle


Hibiscus

Garlic chives

Rose

Buddleja

Saururus cernuus in the pond

Commonly called 'lizard's tail', this aquatic plant disappears completely in winter.

Pears have been disappointing.  Lots of pear rust and only three or four pears from the trees.

Apples have been very productive - a large basketful every day.

                                                    Polyanthus

                                                       Apple mint

                                                        Plums

                                            Greengages


                                                    Chillies

Begonia fuchsioides on its summer hols
This cane begonia is ridiculously easy to propagate and grows like a weed. 

This is another of the house plants enjoying a summer holiday outside. This is Pachira aquatica, known as the Guiana chestnut or Money tree.

Sunday, 11 June 2023

Heavenly!

 

Heavenly!

Our garden is a concentration of perfume at present – jasmine, honeysuckle, ceanothus, Sweet William and orchestrating it all the intensely sweet scent of Philadelphus.

Simply heavenly!

Friday, 14 April 2023

A to Z challenge 2023 – L is for . . .

 



A to Z challenge 2023 – L is for . . .

My theme for this challenge is Nature in all much of her wonderful diversity. My posts will reflect the fact that I am resident in the south of England.

All photographs in this post are the property of the writer.

Lonicera (honeysuckle)


One of the most generous and delectable plants in the garden, honeysuckle comes in a wide variety of colours, can be evergreen or deciduous, usually climbs but can be shrubby. 



Lonicera attracts butterflies and bees during the day and night-flying moths at night. 


They have a wonderful, heady scent although we have one in the garden, ‘Copper Beauty’, which is evergreen and is reputed to have ‘fragrant orange-yellow flowers’. 

Lonicera 'Copper Beauty'

 It certainly has the pretty flowers but I have never noticed any fragrance.


 The rest of the honeysuckles make up for it, though, and it is good to see the glossy green leaves in winter.


Libellula depressa

The broad-bodied chaser or darter is one of the commonest UK dragonflies, with a wingspan of about 70mm (just over 2¾ inches) and is not one of the most attractive. The male has a pruinose blue abdomen. Now, pruinose is an adjective unfamiliar to me and I rather liked the sound of it. Simply expressed, which suits me, as I’m a simple soul, it means ‘frosted –looking’. I have seen the colour described as 'powder blue', which makes it sound quite delicate.

However, the one in our photographs is a female, described as ‘golden or greeny-brown’. 

Broad-bodied chasers are on the wing from May to July and eat midges and mosquitoes, so are a welcome visitor near bodies of still or slow-moving water.


Lily beetle

 This little beetle's scientific name is Lilioceris lilii - isn't that a lovely name? It rolls off the tongue.

Lily beetles are attractive scarlet pests that attack lilies (surprisingly!) and fritillaries and need to be removed.

Lily beetles doing what comes naturally

 I don’t like squashing them so throw them in the pond for the fish. It’s probably far crueller to drown them! 

Tuesday, 3 January 2012

ABC Wednesday Y is for Yellow


Yellow is such a cheerful colour in the garden particularly after the often dreary winter days when daffodils bloom in Spring . . .
 . . . followed by Kerria japonica which often flowers again in summer
Yellow Archangel (Lamiastrum galeobdolon ) is a wildflower native to central and southern England and common in Europe. It is a plant of ancient woodlands and old hedgerows, its yellow flowers in May and June bringing brightness to damper, darker areas. It grows well on chalk or heavy clay but can be invasive in the garden. Young leaves and shoots and flower tips can be eaten when cooked. In herbal medicine it has been used to treat sores and ulcers and to stop bleeding. It is rich in nectar and attractive to bees.
Yellow nasturtiums and marigolds also attract bees
Yellow pansy
Yellow courgette flower followed by green or yellow courgettes
Yellow honeysuckle
Yellow roses
Yellow honey bee (Apis mellifera)
We saw very few of these in 2011. I hope there will be more in 2012.
Yellow sunflower. 
Until last summer I thought all sunflowers were yellow but there are some very pretty red ones.

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