I've been using Feedly for some time now ... so I'm reading dozens of blogs and commenting on some using my Blogger ID
However, I rarely blog here now ... so if you've followed links to find me from a blog comment, take a look here and here ... I'd be grateful if you'd leave a comment on those sites so I know you've found me!
I do wonder about starting another blog here on Blogger ... but 'of the making of blogs there is no end' so I hope you have a moment to click on one of the above links to a more up to date location. Thank you xx
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Saturday, January 24, 2009
Blogging
I've recently come back to this blog - well, these two blogs as they originally were, it's been 18 months since I was last here, and there are loads of new features including a merge option - and I still really like many of the photos here.
I'm horrified to realise it's been 18 months, though, since I posted anything ... I've been posting elsewhere all this time, I haven't 'dried up' though I don't seem to have as much time ... but I've a number of other blogs and online commitments, so I'm not sure whether to resurrect 'In my small corner' or simply let it go ...
Watch this space!
I'm horrified to realise it's been 18 months, though, since I posted anything ... I've been posting elsewhere all this time, I haven't 'dried up' though I don't seem to have as much time ... but I've a number of other blogs and online commitments, so I'm not sure whether to resurrect 'In my small corner' or simply let it go ...
Watch this space!
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
August
It rained most of July ... even though we weren't affected by the floods that many experienced, it was still wet and dull and just horrid. Even now the sun has broken through, it's patchy - one day it's sunny all day and the temperature is up to the mid 20's (which, surprisingly enough, was the day we had chosen to spend at the beach!) and the next it's showery and much cooler. Still, at least we're not struggling in temperatures of 40+ as is much of Europe.
The rain did for the remaining potatoes - I left them in the pots just too long and they had blight. It doesn't appear to have affected the tomatoes, although the outdoor plants are looking bedraggled and unproductive. The strawberries, too, have suffered, although they were delicious while they lasted. In the greenhouse, I am just coming to the end of a regular supply of cucumbers (I had no idea how much better they could taste ... nothing like shop-bought) while the tomatoes (Gardener's Delight) are just starting to ripen.
The runner beans too are finally catching up ... and we'll be away for two weeks this month - how typical! But I've enjoyed the courgettes, lettuce, cabbage (Greyhound and Primo), carrots (Autumn King), peas (Kelvedon - now over) and beetroot. I just hope our visitors (using the house while we're away) know their onions (as it were!!) and can see what needs picking ...
We had a day at RHS Rosemoor yesterday ... I don't often see it this time of year and was delighted that at least some of their veg patches are no tidier than mine! Their greenhouse tomatoes gave me some ideas - I'd like to try Sungold as a variety next year, for example.
I don't know much about plants, and can probably only identify ones I've grown, but serendipity has played it's part this year, and one or two of my own veg patches are rather more like a cottage garden than I'd intended, with self-seeded flowering plants of different (and to me unidentified) varieties 'softening the edges'. DH puts in a lot of time weeding, edging and tidying ... but he's chosen to leave them and they are a lovely addition.
The rain did for the remaining potatoes - I left them in the pots just too long and they had blight. It doesn't appear to have affected the tomatoes, although the outdoor plants are looking bedraggled and unproductive. The strawberries, too, have suffered, although they were delicious while they lasted. In the greenhouse, I am just coming to the end of a regular supply of cucumbers (I had no idea how much better they could taste ... nothing like shop-bought) while the tomatoes (Gardener's Delight) are just starting to ripen.
The runner beans too are finally catching up ... and we'll be away for two weeks this month - how typical! But I've enjoyed the courgettes, lettuce, cabbage (Greyhound and Primo), carrots (Autumn King), peas (Kelvedon - now over) and beetroot. I just hope our visitors (using the house while we're away) know their onions (as it were!!) and can see what needs picking ...
We had a day at RHS Rosemoor yesterday ... I don't often see it this time of year and was delighted that at least some of their veg patches are no tidier than mine! Their greenhouse tomatoes gave me some ideas - I'd like to try Sungold as a variety next year, for example.
I don't know much about plants, and can probably only identify ones I've grown, but serendipity has played it's part this year, and one or two of my own veg patches are rather more like a cottage garden than I'd intended, with self-seeded flowering plants of different (and to me unidentified) varieties 'softening the edges'. DH puts in a lot of time weeding, edging and tidying ... but he's chosen to leave them and they are a lovely addition.
Monday, July 09, 2007
Midsummer
I harvested the potatoes last week - about 25kg weight - am really pleased. There are still four or five pots of potatoes, but they can stay there for a while. I might plant the pots up again before Christmas though, in the greenhouse. I've not tried that before. We pulled all the broad beans plants too, lovely with an onion sauce for Sunday lunch!
So I had a vacant space - no longer! I've been out in the garden, dodging the showers, and have sown peas, beetroot, carrots, rocket and salad mix, as well as planting out some lettuce, chard and kale. I'm not sure if any of the seeds will germinate, apart from the peas - small seeds struggle in my sandy soil, but anything will be a bonus And I've sown some more lettuce and cabbage (primo) in pots ...
The weather had been horrid for so long - we have had some sunshine over the weekend, but it's beginning to get me down (although I really don't like the hot weather) ... there's still a couple of weeks before the children finish school ...
So I had a vacant space - no longer! I've been out in the garden, dodging the showers, and have sown peas, beetroot, carrots, rocket and salad mix, as well as planting out some lettuce, chard and kale. I'm not sure if any of the seeds will germinate, apart from the peas - small seeds struggle in my sandy soil, but anything will be a bonus And I've sown some more lettuce and cabbage (primo) in pots ...
The weather had been horrid for so long - we have had some sunshine over the weekend, but it's beginning to get me down (although I really don't like the hot weather) ... there's still a couple of weeks before the children finish school ...
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Garden (winged) visitors ...
As we've watched the garden develop over the five summers we've been here, we've also gained an interest in our garden visitors ... with the apple and cherry trees and the unruly fig against the back wall, there are plenty of hiding places and a varying food supply throughout the year. We're not such tidy gardeners, after all, so there is plenty to keep the insect population going, but I don't go looking for them!
The birds come to us ... and recently I added to their menu by putting up a bird feeder.
We've had all the common varieties of finch ... but few tits although I know they frequent the garden ... we hear them regularly. There was a great tit nest in the hollow trunk of the apple tree, but it was raided by a cat, so I'm not surprised, just saddened.
They're getting through half a feeder a day of seed (not all eaten, they sort it through, throwing to the ground anything they don't want ... so there is plenty for the ground feeding black birds and robins, and I suspect also the occasional raid by pigeons and rats). I've since put up a nut feeder in the hope of luring back some of the tits, but it's not as popular and is as likely to be used by finches as tits. Maybe the tits will return next spring.
One of our two cats had a bell on his collar but was still able to hunt as he knew how to move without it sounding, the other had lost her bell altogether ... so I've now given them two bells each, much harder for them to move so quietly. We've had no kills brought home since, certainly!
Recently, we learned to identify the tawny owl by call ... not the twit-twoo call, we know that well and hear it occasionally, but the screech of a location call. We know there are owls living in a steep, wooded valley behind the house ... but having heard the call on SpringWatch (and recognised it from our time on holiday - see Bolt Hole) we were surprised to hear it one night at home ... we ended up outside in our nightwear, watching as it looped round above the houses after dark.
Another surprise this week, to see a SparrowHawk perched high up in the conifer tree ... I had thought earlier this week that something was upsetting the local gull population (some of them are nesting on chimneys down the road) and thought I saw a glimpse of a predator of some kind, but was unable to identify it at the time. This time it was gone before I could grab a camera, but we all had a good view and identification was easy!
Something Old for Something New ...
The church of which I'm part was partly destroyed by incendiaries in 1941 ... it was rebuilt after the war, but in haste, and we have struggled to maintain the building ever since, because of the damp that now infests the walls. Long before I came to worship here, the church have been working towards redeveloping the site ... and this week, the project began:
We'd been to a meeting on the site for the developer to take some publicity pictures before the demolition started ... not so good in the pouring rain, but the photographer coped marvellously! Then on to somewhere else for refreshments and a radio interview. It was on the way home that we saw the first piece being taken out of the side of the church ... so I stopped to get some pictures. I could have watched for hours, it was fascinating A small crowd soon gathered, and DH spent a while talking to folk explaining what's happening, while I snapped away with the camera:
You could hear maisonery falling inside the church with a tremendous noise ... all very dramatic. I expect it will come down quite quickly now Lots of memories for different folk, but a millstone round the neck of the church for many years now. It will be some time before we can meet on site again, in a new church surrounded by flats, but the church continues as we meet each week in a local school. We're not simply biding our time, waiting for a cosy, warm and dry building in which to meet - while we're in the school we have contact with an area we don't usually visit ... how to make the best of it, that's the question!
We'd been to a meeting on the site for the developer to take some publicity pictures before the demolition started ... not so good in the pouring rain, but the photographer coped marvellously! Then on to somewhere else for refreshments and a radio interview. It was on the way home that we saw the first piece being taken out of the side of the church ... so I stopped to get some pictures. I could have watched for hours, it was fascinating A small crowd soon gathered, and DH spent a while talking to folk explaining what's happening, while I snapped away with the camera:
You could hear maisonery falling inside the church with a tremendous noise ... all very dramatic. I expect it will come down quite quickly now Lots of memories for different folk, but a millstone round the neck of the church for many years now. It will be some time before we can meet on site again, in a new church surrounded by flats, but the church continues as we meet each week in a local school. We're not simply biding our time, waiting for a cosy, warm and dry building in which to meet - while we're in the school we have contact with an area we don't usually visit ... how to make the best of it, that's the question!
Out of Place
I've been meaning to show these to you for a while ... this is the second year they've nested on the slipway next to the water ...
Last year they had four cygnets, although sadly none survived. I'm not sure how many they started with this year, but this little one is the only one I've seen. Perhaps they'll have more success with just one to look after, but they don't give the impression of being particularly clever swans ... look where the nest is situated ...
... right by the foot ferry Nice to see them when you catch the boat, but hardly a safe place to raise the kids
Last year they had four cygnets, although sadly none survived. I'm not sure how many they started with this year, but this little one is the only one I've seen. Perhaps they'll have more success with just one to look after, but they don't give the impression of being particularly clever swans ... look where the nest is situated ...
... right by the foot ferry Nice to see them when you catch the boat, but hardly a safe place to raise the kids
Saturday, June 09, 2007
Bolt Hole
This is the view from the bedroom window of my bolt-hole ... our holiday home on the other side of Devon. It's a place where I relax the minute I walk in the door ... it's been a haven for us for nearly 13 years now.
This view looks north, across a field where there are remains of a Roman villa, so we have the assurance that it will never be built on (we are surrounded on three sides by housing). Which means that we have a wealth of wildlife around us and we are constantly surprised at the variety. This time we saw the usual range of birds (blackbird, great tit, blue tit, sparrow, pigeon and the inevitable gulls!) as well as fledglings (esp. great tit - they flock in the hedgerow and make such a lot of noise), swifts, swallows ... and the magnificent sight of a tawny owl, looping round and round the houses late one night, calling constantly ...
A neighbour told us that she nests in the oak tree that is part of the boundary between our garden and the field, and has been a successful mother, with chicks these past two years - a shame we won't be there this year to see them fledge.
We caught only a glimpse of another joy - the bats. We are used to seeing three or four flying round the garden at this time of year, but only had a good view of one this year.
We put up another bird feeder ... and our most regular visitor is the squirrel family ...
Not such good photo against the light - but you have to take your chances, they are such acrobats!
Wednesday, May 02, 2007
Heron
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