Monthly Archives: November 2024

Six on Saturday 30-11-24

Happy St. Andrews Day to all who celebrate. The garden has gone from very cold, back to fairly warmish this week. Here’s a selection of things from different weathery parts of the week for my #SixOnSaturday this week.

A warmish start with wallflowers having a go at gently struggling into flower.

Sage keeps its leaves all year, looks good in rain or snow.

This is the time when robins form territories. There are several beginning to pair up in the garden now. Here’s one hoping I’ll do a bit of digging.

Some veg are pretty if you let them go to seed. This is a leek from last year. It put up a huge flower in summer and this is what remains of the seed stem.

I had to look hard to find any leaves left after a couple of storms have passed through. The colour and frost combination are appealing here. A very short lived garden scene.

Teasel again, looks great with a touch of frost. This is a wonderful native plant that has a place across all seasons. I’ll always welcome it self-seeding around and about in the borders.

I hope you enjoyed this week’s frosty and not-so-frosty selection for #SixOnSaturday. And thanks to those leaving comments on the blog – sorry if I don’t always get back to you on time! The blog is going well, but it would be great if more folk on Mastodon, or other parts of the Fediverse got into tooting a Six! Go on, it’s a much kinder form of social media, not controlled by crazy billionaires. All you need to do is find 6 things in your garden to show us. Then post on social, or add a link at Jim’s blog below. For regulars, our organiser is Jim at https://gardenruminations.co.uk/. And I’m on mastodon @julie3dharris@mastodon.scot

Six on Saturday 23-11-24

The cold finally arrived out of nowhere. 5 days with daytime highs of 3-5 deg C, and at night -3 or -4 deg C. We were lucky not to get the snow that hit further south. All of the lush growth has collapsed, but it seems fitting as we’re VERY close to winter now. Here’s some of the recent garden sites, and a couple of comforting edibles.

First, wow, squish went the nasturtiums, who had been growing well over knee high, all around the garden.

Perhaps that wasn’t surprising as there was a really decent grass frost over all these recent nights. Its is beautiful to see it clinging to grass and moss.

There was some fairly major collapse in the main borders too, 1.5m tall persicaria are coming down. Time for the compost heap.

I was a little sad to see the last roses flopping after the frost, they have been so beautiful and so long lasting this year.

Yet a late crop of broccoli have escaped those pesky caterpillars and appear to be growing on.

These cold days have also provided an opportunity for finally giving up on the greenhouse chillies. The crop has been very poor after a dull summer, but at least there are a few and colours are pretty.

I hope you enjoyed this week’s frosty #SixOnSaturday. And thanks to those leaving comments on the blog – sorry if I don’t always get back to you on time! The blog is going well, but it would be great if more folk on Mastodon, or other parts of the Fediverse got into tooting a Six! Go on, it’s a much kinder form of social media, not controlled by crazy billionaires. All you need to do is find 6 things in your garden to show us. Then post on social, or add a link at Jim’s blog below. For regulars, our organiser is Jim at https://gardenruminations.co.uk/. And I’m on mastodon @julie3dharris@mastodon.scot

Six on Saturday 16-11-24

In mid-November temperatures have been warmish 6-12 deg C, and not much rain this year (unlike the deluge of 2023). I guess the new normal just isn’t normal, or the same, it’s just different, so far. Whatever it is, there’s plenty to be looking at in the garden. This week I’ll be showing off some still-green stuff and a couple of pops of colour for my #SixOnSaturday.

I’ll start with some green. I’ve decided to keep the window boxes simple for winter this year, letting these hardy succulents look lush and green through the harsh weather. They have recently taken up residence on the windowsills, where non-hardy geraniums spend their summers.

An unusual pop of colour, or is it colourlessness? Honesty seed heads are just beginning to pop and lose their ghostly glow.

Some colour next. No serious frost yet, I’m not sure I’ve ever seen nasturtiums up to 1m tall and flowering their way well into November.

Most trees have shed their leaves for the year. There has been so little wind that each tree has a puddle of leaves below it. Here’s a hazel, hanging onto it’s last few green leaves, with a golden carpet below it.

These plants just go on and on, overall my garden favourite. It has to be the hardy geranium, glowing purple in the middle of November!

I’ll finish today with a final green edible. These are oca, a member of the oxalis family (as is easily noticed from the petal shape), sometimes called New Zealand yam (though they are not a yam, and don’t originate in NZ!). Their leaves make a tasty lemony addition to salads, but what’s hiding underneath are colourful roots, a bit like a Jerusalem artichoke, but with lesser gustatory consequences. BUT, those roots keep growing until the leaves are frosted, and as you can see, we’re nowhere near there yet…..the coming week looks promising.

I hope you enjoyed this week’s surprisingly green #SixOnSaturday. They have given me something to be cheerful about. And thanks to those leaving comments on the blog – sorry if I don’t always get back to you on time! The blog is going well, but it would be great if more folk on Mastodon, or other parts of the Fediverse got into tooting a Six! Go on, it’s a much kinder form of social media, not controlled by crazy billionaires. All you need to do is find 6 things in your garden to show us. Then post on social, or add a link at Jim’s blog below. For regulars, our organiser is Jim at https://gardenruminations.co.uk/. And I’m on mastodon @julie3dharris@mastodon.scot

Six on Saturday 9-11-24

Still mild, still rather grey, and overall still still. A very calm autumn given the deluge we were subject to last year. And some odd patterns of flowering too, allowing me to show you 6 blooms on a pink theme for this week’s #SixOnSaturday

The most surprising bloom comes first this week. I saw my giant poppy having a go by putting up a few flower shoots weeks ago, most of which got frosted. But since then we have had mild temperatures, and a bloom has made it through. My first November poppy.

In a sheltered border a just-about hardy fuchsia is having a final go. These flowers are gaudy, and yet so delicate. A lovely late-autumn friend.

My next choice is a regular for giving a last blast of colour, and often one of the first of the season too. I love the intricacy of the fine veining on the petals of this one.

Another surprise. These sweetness were sown in a shady bed and sulked for months. yet here they are still pushing out flowers in November. Nice!

Roses sometimes save a few blooms for the dull days. This one is a favourite. A big blousy flower (I hope), a fabulous spicy scent. If this one makes it, it might be gracing a small vase before Monday is out.

Last, but not least, here’s another beautiful hardy geranium. This one battles through heat and drought in a very dry bed next to the house. And still has something to give me now. What a great value plant.

I hope you enjoyed my remarkable pink six, in this week of terrifying international politics. They have given me something to be cheerful about. And thanks to those leaving comments on the blog – sorry if I don’t always get back to you on time! The blog is going well, but it would be great if more folk on Mastodon, or other parts of the Fediverse got into tooting a Six! Go on, it’s a much kinder form of social media, not controlled by crazy billionaires. All you need to do is find 6 things in your garden to show us. Then post on social, or add a link at Jim’s blog below. For regulars, our organiser is Jim at https://gardenruminations.co.uk/. And I’m on mastodon @julie3dharris@mastodon.scot

Six on Saturday 2-11-24

The autumn decay continues, amidst some oddly warm weather. I’ve focused on form this week. here are some slightly spooky snaps of the garden to celebrate the season.

I’ve had a good look round, few flowers now, but the anemone seedbeds pop out like mini lollipops.

Much more colour can be found in what was left when I cleared out by runner beans. They were very late this year, so late that I missed rather a lot. I have harvested the seeds, some for next year’s planting, some for adding to soups in winter. What amazing colours!

Plomus do very well here and I’ve always enjoyed their rather elegant look, which continues into autumn and winter with stately seed heads.

Back to some colour now. It appears that our cold, damp and fairly miserable summer has provided the perfect conditions for growing Swiss chard. The leaves on many are almost 50cm long this year. Not sure why, but the red one amidst the greens does seem a bit spooky, sort of.

Another firm favourite on the seeded front, teasel have had a good year here too. I’m hoping for more self-seeders next year.

To finish up, the remaining nasturtiums have just the right colour for this time of year, bright, cheerful and Halloweeny.

I hope you enjoyed my slightly spooky selection as much as I have. Need to keep up our spirits as the clocks change and the dark really comes in. And thanks to those leaving comments on the blog – sorry if I don’t always get back to you on time! The blog is going well, but it would be great if more folk on Mastodon, or other parts of the Fediverse got into tooting a Six! Go on, it’s a much kinder form of social media, not controlled by crazy billionaires. All you need to do is find 6 things in your garden to show us. Then post on social, or add a link at Jim’s blog below. For regulars, our organiser is Jim at https://gardenruminations.co.uk/. And I’m on mastodon @julie3dharris@mastodon.scot