Working The Rose Garden

Listening to the tinkle-trickle of the water fountain and the tuneful trilling of a red-breasted robin’s deceptively sweet-sounding war cry delivered from our southern neighbours’ garden, Jackie and I worked together in the Rose Garden this morning dead-heading, weeding, and sweeping in the warmth of the summer-sunshine. With an eye to next spring the Head Gardener also continued planting the vast array of tulips and daffodils she has been collecting from garden centres in recent weeks.

By a now sweltering mid-afternoon, the direct sun having moved around a bit, I photographed some of our results and the

bustling bees still working over the Japanese anemones.

Later I read more of ‘The Berlin Diaries, then watched the next episode of ‘Freddie Flintoff’s Field of Dreams’.

This evening we dined on baked gammon; piquant cauliflower cheese; boiled new potatoes, carrots, and Brussels sprouts, with which I drank Reserva Privada Chilean Malbec 2023.

70 comments

  1. We know why your garden is so beautiful–it’s the constant work.
    I really like the gallery of bee on Japanese anemone photos, especially the first. I also really like the word anemone. 🙂

  2. Listening to the water fountain and the robin while surrounded by beautiful flowers sounds like a lovely way to work! I am looking forward to seeing the results of all that bulb planting come spring! Much love to you and Jackie.

  3. A beautifully described and illustrated piece. Glad to see you had wine with your dinner – in your last few posts you have not even had water to drink!

    1. Thanks very much, Anne. Just finished second round of antibiotics – which haven’t really helped

  4. I’m amazed at how warm it is down there, we managed to get to 17°C yesterday. i finished the final episode of Field of Dreams a couple of nights ago.

  5. Those anemones are a lovely colour – Jackie (I assume it was her) has chosen well. Bees are a bonus. Always a delight to get into your garden. I just discovered that I’ve been spelling, and pronouncing, anemones wrong all my life. I do the same with apothecary too. Just goes to show this is the first time I’ve ever typed anemone.

    1. “Anniemoans” has always helped me, Quercus. The coloured ones were here already and proliferate well. Jackie added he white ones. Thanks very much.

  6. Every one of your delightful posts on your garden makes me think that I have to hide your blog from my wife, since she is the head gardener indeed, and might fancy putting me to work in our garden. (God forbid. Ain’t got no green thumbs).
    Take care. (Oh yes, American sense)

  7. It is neverending work and I applaud you both for getting out there! I did a little dead-heading (and to be honest some serious winter chopping) of my roses out front. It takes time but as you showed us, the results are satisfying. I wish this perfect weather would last for a month, because I like to sit down on the ground while I work, but I fear the rains will come soon.

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