Down To The Lakes At Iris Time

After an uneventful forest drive when no-one was about,

Jackie and I brunched at the Lakeview Café beside Orchard Lakes.

Before we ate, I walked around the pair of manmade lakes circled by banks of buttercups, daisies, and dandelions, bordered by hedges hosting may blossom; with scattered lifebelts placed in case someone fell in, the water was the fixed focus of attention of carefully socially distanced silently reflecting elderly gentlemen gazing into the depths in hopes of a tug at their periodically adjusted line or a tell-tale surface ripple signalling a flailing finny catch.

It may be lilac time at Kew, but here it is the time for yellow flag irises.

With the rest of the family all out for the day, and having seen our brunch, no-one will be surprised that Jackie and I enjoyed small amounts of left-overs this evening – mine our takeaway curry, and Jackie oven fish and chips – with which she drank more of the Zesty and I drank Moerbei Testarosso Sangiovese 2020

60 comments

  1. Great fishing photos, Derrick, what are they fishing for? Bangers and beans, yummy! I’d love to have breakfast there. ????????????

  2. Should one wish to walk around the lake must one detour to avoid the fishing poles, or step over them, or ask permission to move them? Or do they have priority?

    1. I wouldn’t dare touch them, John. I kept my distance. Thanks very much

  3. Looks like Jackie is about to steal one of your sausages! No wonder. You certainly seemed to have the lion’s share of the breakfast!

  4. Irises are such beautiful plants.If there had been a rhyme for “irises” that “daffodil” poem might have been very different.

  5. I’ve never seen what seems from your photos to be a quite different form of fishing gear. Are they actually using those long poles, rather than rods and reels?

  6. All the yellow flag irises brought back so many good memories from where I grew up! They are beautiful flowers, and such a lovely golden yellow.

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