Tuesday, 2 March 2021

March tips in your Garden

March Jobs 




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www.gardening-fairy.co.uk/
my-blog-gardening-fairy



"Whether you tend a 
garden or not, you are the
gardener of your own 
being, the seed of your
destiny."

The  Findhorn Community




Days are starting 
to get longer 
which is truly wonderful.


  
Gardening-fairy-clematis 



1. If you don't currently 
have a garden
but desperately want 
to grow something
get some old egg boxes, 
buy some seeds like cress
or parsley and plant 
them in some 
compost on your window sill.



2. Cover them over 
with some cling film 
idealy and leave them 
in the light.



3. Leave them alone 
apart from a little water 
and wait until some growth 
starts to appear 
through the compost. 



4. It is pure delight when 
your little seeds start to show 
through the compost.



Gardening-fairy-sarcococca


Some helpful tips 
for beginners


Snowdrops, crocuses 
and daffodils 
grow from bulbs.

 

They have to be planted 
during the autumn
 so they will flower 
in the spring.



Gardening-fairy-hypericum




5. This is just an example 
of a shrub that I have just 
pruned in my garden.


By this I mean, cut off 
its dried seed heads
and cut it back so
 it looks tidy and
ready for the new 
growth to start over 
again. 


So the leaves you 
see is the new 
season's growth.


Gardening-fairy-winter-savoury


This is a winter herb 
which is healthy but needs 
to be cut back, removing
 the old dead growth
 so it will keep growing well. 


We gardeners like a tidy plot.


Gardening-fairy-sage



More gardening tips for March


6. As it is still early in the year
if you can't wait any longer,
then buy little vegetable
plant plugs to grow indoors.



Gardening-fairy-miniature-daffodils



They can be peas 
or broad beans.

But they need to be 
in direct light on 
a window sill 
where they can keep 
growing evenly.




gardening-fairy-compost-containers




7. We need to start 
thinking about
using our home made 
compost around our plants.



Here are two compost 
containiers 
which I have in 
my garden. They are just 
for woody stems and 
bigger garden compostable 
branches, raked up grass etc.




gardening-fairy-daffodils



Composting is a really 
importatnt part of 
having a garden.


gardenig-fairy-composter-bin



If you do not have 
a lot of space you can
 buy large composter bins. 

Like these ones here. 


I have two large 
composter bins which 
I fill up with vegetable 
scraps,egg shells, 
cardboard etc.



gardening-fairy-fig-tree




Thursday, 18 February 2021

What to do in February?

February Jobs



See my blog on my website
www.gardening-fairy.co.uk/
my-blog-gardening-fairy




Tidying up your garden 
is a job that feels a bit like 
hard work at this time 
of the year. 



It is cold and not usually
 very inviting. Try having 
warming ginger tea 
beside you.




 
1.So wrap up well and 
try to keep moving. 



2. If you have bulbs 
you previously planted, 
clear away the leaves 
and twigs around them 
so you can see them
as they push up through 
the earth.



3. Keep watching out
for new shoots as 
they appear. 



Be gentle when clearing 
so you avoid snapping off 
any new growth.



Gardening-fairy-cyclamen



New cyclamen 
leaf I just found in the ground.


4. Keep pots well watered 
as they will always dry out. 



5. For some seasonal 
colour find some nice 
small pots and fill with 
primulas and violas.


Without a doubt 
it will lift your mood.








Buy from any good garden 
centre, not online as you 
can't see the quality 
of the plants

Or a good market stall.


6. Tidy around pots and 
sweep up any remaining 
leaves.


7. Make sure your plants 
are protected from frost 
and cold winds 
by using horticultural 
fleece or place in 
the shelter of your 
door step.



8. It is a good time 
to look at seed 
catalogues
to 
get some 
inspiration for the 
year ahead. 



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www.gardening-fairy.co.uk




Gardening-fairy-geraniums  
and nasturtiums



February is the month 
that starts us thinking
about the gardening year. 


I look out at my garden 
sometimes and think 
how sad it looks 
but as the days go by 
there is a glimmer of hope. 


Planning is the key to 
any garden space.

 Have a good look 
at your space.

While there is a 
skeleton of a garden 
go out and take
some notes
of what you see and 
what you would 
like to create.



Today's haiku

Winter's garden 
Ah, the moon, 
a silvery thread
As insects hmmm

Matsuo Basho

fuyu niwa ya
tsuki mo ito naru
mushi no gin




More jobs for February

Gardening-fairy-daffodils




1. Make a note of bulbs 
you would like to plant 
next season.


2. Think  about 
the colours 
you really like 


Gardening-fairy-primulas



3. Cut back any dead twiggy 
growth on shrubs 



4. Remember to 
clean your tools with a 
safe disinfectant spray.

Gardening-fairy-bamboo




5. Clear pathways of debirs 
and old leaves



6. Cut back any 
dead flowers,
berries
you have left
from the autumn.

Gardening-fairy-hypericum




Depending on how tidy 
you are, you could 
leave berries
for the birds to 
feast on.




Monday, 11 January 2021

Gardening tips January 2021

 




Gardening Jobs 
for January


Leaves need to be raked up 
(good exercise for the day).


Put your leaves into their 
own compost bay.
(not with the rest of 
your compost).


If no space for above, 
gather into plastic bags
 and makes holes in them. 


Tie the bags up and leave.



Leave for the season until 
the leaves break down
into beautiful homemade
 compost. 








Feed the hungry little birds 
in your garden.


Give them shop bought 
bird feed and place 
in bird feeders.


Can give them bread
 or fruit too.

Put out clean 
water regularly. 


Watch your winter flowering 
plants and take in the perfume.


Make sure your pot plants
 are well watered 
as terracotta dries the plants out. 



 

Winter Season 2021

Friday, 24 January 2020

January 2020




January 2020



Summer scents inside
 a conservatory





January is a time of hope 
for the new year ahead of 
us but it is a difficult 
time of year 
to feel inspired. 





Out of the cold and protected 
by an old glass 
conservatory feels comforting
and a good place to be, as 
in this beautiful photograph above.






These beautiful fruits and flowers 
take me back to being a 
young and care free kid in 
warmer climes. 








Wednesday, 13 March 2019

Mostly Haiku









"What a strange thing!
to be alive
beneath cherry blossoms."

Kobayashi Issa 




"Where flowers bloom so does
hope."

Lady Bird Johnson






"It was one of those March 
days when the sun shines hot
and the wind blows cold,
when it is summer in the light 
and winter in the shade."

Charles Dickens




"It is spring fever.
That is what the name of it is.
And when you've got it, you
want -oh, you don't know quite  
what it is you don't want,
but it 
just fairly makes your heart
ache, you want it so!"

-Mark Twain 





What is haiku?


Michael Dylan Welch wrote -

"There's something poetic about a garden.
A japanese garden seems 
especially poetic."




Haiku 
is a poetry of nature
but it is also a poetry of 
human nature. 


It gives readers feelings 
and shows human 
existance amid nature.


On reading a good haiku, 
we are mentally and 
emotionally moved to experience 
what the poet experienced. 



"Haiku is a means of sense awareness,
of mindfulness, a poetic window to the
suchness of the full range of existance."





"Birds singing
in the dark
rainy dawn."

Jack Kerouac



"The taste
of rain
- Why kneal?"



"Warm winter evening-
the chairs asked."




Poems by Kaga no chiyo 

"In this lively place
the peony
most beautiful."



"The morning glory!
It has taken the well bucket,

I must seek elsewhere for water."






James W Hackett was quoted to say
"A Haiku,
is like a finger pointing at the 
moon, and if the finger is bejewleed, 
one no longer sees the moon."





Haiku is comprised of detail 
observed by the five senses.


The poet witnesses an event 
and uses words to distill that 
experience so others may
understand it in some way.



What did you notice 
about the subject?


What colours, textures, 
and contrasts
did you observe?



How did the subject sound?


What was the tone and 
volume of the event that 
took place?


Did it have a smell, 
or a taste?


How can you accurately 
describe the way it felt?




More haiku poetry 




Red Oak

red oak tassels gone
yellow pollen lingers, coats .....
spring storms stir ...

Sara Kendrick




Spider running ....
cat's pink tongue ....
nature's breakfast, sparkling
spring sun ....


Panagiota Romios





How wild the sea is,
and over Sado Island,
the River of Heaven



Morning and evening
Someone waits at Matsushima!
One-sided love.





On Buddha's birthday
a spotted fawn is born -
just like that


Behind Ise Shrine,
unseen, hidden by the fence,
Buddha enters nirvana







Tuesday, 19 February 2019

Metaphors and their meanings


Metaphors

While I was looking through 
gardening books I came

 across some really interesting 
gardening metaphors. 







Here I wanted to look 
at some metaphors 
and what they mean?



While it's the dormant 
season in the garden, 
let's see how we can keep 
our brains active!





I was searching for month 
by month seasonal 
poetry and came across some
of these metaphors I would
 like to share with you.

 






Let's start with the first one I found. 
"Putting down roots"







I feel it is such a firm and 
stable metaphor in the 
world of gardens and plants. 



It can mean so many 
different things to each 
of us. 



Perhaps I see it as 
digging a small vegetable 
patchwith nutritious soil 
and carefully opening
 a packet of tiny seeds 
and placing them in a 
small prepared
 area to set root.




What about you? 
What does "putting down roots" 
mean to you?



Please share with me your thoughts.



Next metaphor I really liked is 
"As the twig is bent."









This quote makes me think 
how meaningful 
trees are to us in a garden. 



Why can we bend a twig and 
make it into something else,
 
like a place to mark some bulbs 
for the months ahead? 



How we can take some 
bamboo stakes 
and bend them into an 
arched piece to grow 
a plant up to enjoy.




Or some willow branches 
which are so
flexible and can be 
bent and shaped into basket
 ware or even hedging. 





Next I found this lovely quote,

"She was a rose among thorns"



I do feel this is refering to 
a difficult gardener 
who was beautiful but stubborn 
in her ways.



She wanted things her own way, 
and why not if she was the gardener. 







Or simply refering to a truly 
beautiful rose with the 

most exotic perfume which was 
growing in nature and the plants 

around 'her' were insignificant
 beside this rose. 




Where do you think this 
metaphor originates?







I feel metahpors are very 
clever ways of using words 
for us to use and then it's 
really interesting 
to hear the origins of them.



Next metaphor I liked was 
'Cherry picking'



It's such a lovely metaphor as 
it feels like we all need to only 
select the best plant,


shurb, tree, or fruit tree. We want 
our gardens to be beautiful 
places and why not have 
the best we can.








"March brings breezes loud and shrill,
Stirs the dancing daffodils."

Sara Coleridge 




"I hear the sparrow's ditty
Anear my study door;
A simple song of gladnesss
That winter days are o'er;
My heart is singing with him,
I love him more and more....
Oh, Spring is surely coming,
Her couriers fill the air;
Each morn are new arrivals,
Each night her ways prepare;
I scent her garments,
Her foot is on the stair. 



John  Burroughs 
"A March Glee."




"In the spring, at the end 
of the day, you should
smell like dirt."

Margaret Atwood




"Where flowers bloom
so does hope."


Lady Bird Johnson



"And Spring arose on the
garden fair,
Like the Spirit of Love felt
everywhere;
And each flower and 
herb on Earth's dark
breast
rose from the dreams of 
its wintry rest. 


Percy Bysshe Shelly