It’s Cherry Picking Time!
Last year I wrote how Freddy and Archie delighted in spending hours munching their way through the ripened grapes growing over our pool house. Well, this year Archie’s already in his element with the cherry tree in our front garden. His tactic is a simple one: jump. And it’s not just cherries he’s after either. He and Freddy (aided and abetted by Maggie May) have had a grand time pinching all the strawberries too. Just for fun I decided to grow some strawberry plants out by the office terrace. However, no sooner had the juicy fruit turned red than three hairy monsters gobbled them up, returning to the office smacking their lips in delight. I have since moved the pots out of reach in the hope that Nigel and I manage to eat one strawberry before the birds get them.
Actually, on the subject of gardens, you may like to know that France is to hold it’s national Gardens to Visit (mine is not on the list) next week which you may like to note in your diary. Entitled Rendez-vous aux Jardins, it takes place on Friday 30th, Saturday 31st and Sunday 1st June. This is a wonderful opportunity to visit some gardens not normally open to the public. Culture France has set up a special website with a programme showing all the gardens available to visit throughout France. Though the site is in French it’s easy to navigate as you can choose a particular department or theme which then gives you a long list of gardens. The link here takes you directly there.
Talking of weekends, this was also to be the weekend that Nigel and I were to drive over the the Aquitaine for a spot of house hunting. After much discussion we both decided to give ourselves another year or two before moving. What changed our minds? It’s difficult to say but I felt a keen sense of loss and knew I’d regret leaving. For one thing there are still so many more discoveries to be made and articles to be written for AMB Cote d’Azur. Secondly, this land has become my home and I love its culture, people and quirky ways.
And besides, Archie would miss the fun of nicking all my fruit . . .
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While creating my cottage garden it was also very important to me that I make it bee and butterfly friendly. I thus paid special attention to growing their favourite plants as well as leaving a few nettles as caterpillar food. So now I have this wonderful hotchpotch of cottage garden plants such as forget-me-nots, foxgloves, ferns, buddleia, and campanula mixed in with runner beans, tomatoes, cucumbers, strawberries, peppers, lavender (of course) and snapdragons all interspersed with thyme, mint, chives, sage, rosemary and nasturtiums. Many are still young plants that will need time to grow and develop and while most are in the ground, others jostle side by side in big earthenware pots. Photographed here is a carpenter bee enjoying a restful moment on the petals of a mauve iris growing down by our pool house. These are Big Boys with Character. On more than one occasion I have found myself face to face with one of these guys and they do not give way, standing their ground or, more frightening, matching your every move so all you can do is back off slowly. Scary.
I also tend to squirrel away tubers, crowns or bulbs everywhere and then forget where I’ve put them or what they are when they finally poke through. Such was the case a couple of weeks ago when a rather smart looking plant surfaced. Wow I thought, this is great, believing it to be the peony I’d planted a year or so ago. Which of course I had but not there. In fact, much to my embarrassment (after showing off my green fingers to Nigel) this rather gorgeously leafed plant turned out to be a humble yellow buttercup. The real peony was round the front of the house lodged between my vines and honeysuckle and completely hidden from view - until it blossomed into pure pink magic.