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Monthly Archives: May 2023

Baby Plants, Wisteria and Evening Sunlight

We’ve been working in our own garden today and have planted all the baby lettuces in the trough ( just the edible flowers to add)  and the little brassicas in one of the raised beds at the back. The Sweetcorn will go in tomorrow if this lovely settled weather continues.

Our Wisteria is wonderful this year. It has taken five years to settle in, as the pundits say, and is now just glorious.

The evening sun is coming through the100+ year old etched glass in the front door and casting a lovely pattern on the wall.

 

Display, The Garden at The Ladder and A Sign

We love our local greengrocer/deli/butchers shop, The Grow Box. The display outside this morning was gorgeous!

We’ve been helping at the Ladder today, the project at Redruth’s old library, which is becoming a hub for lots of creative ventures, where the Bunker Cabaret was performed and where I did my writing course earlier in the Spring.  Today we have helped plant the garden which will back the outdoor stage. The gallery shows the before and after and all the baby veg plants which will be going into a separate plot later.

Stage clear and corner plants in

The new sign was being painted as we were potting on/planting.

Leonora painting the lovely new sign

 

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Leaves, Flowers and An Extraordinary Dance Show

We love the ruby acer leaves as they re-appear each Spring. The little tree was a present from our four for our Ruby wedding 16 years ago!

Our Choisya Ternata is wonderful both in how it looks and with its gorgeous honey scent that wafts around the garden.We went to this extraordinary show at The Hall for Cornwall on Wednesday evening and it was wonderful, utterly engrossing, full of energy and beautifully done. With a soundtrack of wonderful songs by Sting, the dancers move the story from joy to despair, and back to joy, through resilience and determination, made me cry several times and left the audience feeling exhilarated!
If it comes your way, do go to see it.  Read about it on the link below and listen to Sting and the amazing choreographer, Kate Prince,  talking about the show.

https://theatreroyal.com/whats-on/message-in-a-bottle/?fbclid=IwAR1H7OM2Eb1qjF9Bgudy1D6I4XH0TMUTuXKcLyeClllXnf4Fl3MajAlU9sw

 

Echium, Fountain and Clematis

These huge and wonderful Echium are just down the road. They are alive with bees.

Our fountain at the back of the shed pleases me.

The Nelly Moser has its first bloom.

 

Damselfly, Tremenheere and New Sculpture Angel

Large Red Damselfly

A beautifully sunny day beckoned us out so off we went to Tremenheere Sculpture Park where the first beautiful thing we saw on parking was the lovely red damselfly above.

We always enjoy stomping around the gardens, the planting is glorious and the sculpture always intriguing.

We love visiting the James Turrell piece where we like to sit quietly and watch the sky and the clouds.

Tewlwolow Kernow

Tewlwolow Kernow is “An underground elliptical domed chamber which James Turrell has designed as a space from which to view the sky, especially at twilight.”  Tewlwolow means half-light, i.e. twilight.

‘Michael’ by Reinhard Pontius

An Angel’s Journey – Since 2020, this wooden sculpture by #ReinhardPontius (@atelier_fuer_bildhauerei) has been making its way across Europe as a messenger of peace and reconciliation. Following visits to Leipzig, Bruges, Coventry, last month Michael arrived at #Tremenheere, where it is sited in view of St Michael’s Mount until mid October, before heading to its next destination. It is hoped that Michael will eventually travel to Kiev, Ukraine 🇺🇦
Speaking about the work Reinhard Pontius says:
“We know about the Archangel Michael as a fighter and as the patron Saint in wars and freedom fights. With my Sculpture I would like to invite a different understanding: Michael – the angel of peace. I have deliberately dispersed with the familiar attributes of spear, flaming sword and scales in order to allow a new, free approach to this angel. The Archangel Michael stands for a spiritual power that is universal and at the same time very personal and that wants to support us to live courageously and peacefully.”
That brilliant day just got even better with a visit to The Hall for Cornwall to see “Message in a Bottle.” which I’ll tell you more about tomorrow.
 

Community Roots

Bees, flowers, growing crops – lots of work, lots of laughs and a big sense of satisfaction!

 

Jugs and Clematis Flowers

I rearranged our collection of little jugs this morning, loved handling them and remembering where / when each was bought or given to us. Remembering all the people who gave us many of these brought up lots of lovely memories. .

We pruned the white Clematis Montana very hard last year and are pleased to see it flowering among the pink ones again this Spring.

 

 
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Posted by on May 15, 2023 in Postaday 2023, Uncategorized

 

Special Day, Squirrel and A Poem

Today is Mother’s Day in America and my sister, who lives in Hawaii, posted this photo of our beautiful Mum.

We’ve had another squirrel visit today.

14th May is International Dylan Thomas Day and here are just two verses of one of my favourite poems –

Fern Hill

Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs
About the lilting house and happy as the grass was green,
     The night above the dingle starry,
          Time let me hail and climb
     Golden in the heydays of his eyes,
And honoured among wagons I was prince of the apple towns
And once below a time I lordly had the trees and leaves
          Trail with daisies and barley
     Down the rivers of the windfall light.

And as I was green and carefree, famous among the barns
About the happy yard and singing as the farm was home,
     In the sun that is young once only,
          Time let me play and be
     Golden in the mercy of his means,
And green and golden I was huntsman and herdsman, the calves
Sang to my horn, the foxes on the hills barked clear and cold,
          And the sabbath rang slowly
     In the pebbles of the holy streams.

 

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Clematis, First Crop and Rook

Clematis florida sieboldii

First new potatoes from the allotment

Weighing down the top of the Amanagowa Cherry tree

 

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Carn Brea, Blue and White

Lovely view from town of Carn Brea castle and the Bassett Monument……

It’s Iris season and we have some beauties.