Posted by Sacha on February 15, 2006, 6:17 pm
...saw them today on our way back from some shopping at Riverford Farm.
These seems to be the earliest primroses in our area, every year. They're
at the foot of a steep drive to a house situated at the bottom of a very
narrow lane. So - they're well drained and thanks to the surrounding trees,
pretty well sheltered, too. The banks and hedges are still alive with
snowdrops doing their brazen thang and catkins are out in their thousands
but the primroses were a real and unexpected bonus, given the short but
nastily sharp cold spells we've had here. And last night we had 1.5" of
rain. Maybe that's the magic key! On the village green, daffodils are in
bud and clearly keen to flower so a very small dose of sunshine is going to
help them do that - and the birds are definitely 'at it'! ;-)
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
(sacha@garden506.fsnet.co.uk)
Posted by madgardener on February 16, 2006, 12:54 am
ahhhhh primroses...........I have one hardy clump of them I hope are happy
enough to seed themselves. And banks of snowdrops?
sigh...............................I can SEE them.......the little ones with
the little lampshade like flowers and the green dots up nearer the backs of
the blossoms instead of the galanthus variety with the green dots on the
ends of each petal, right? I can STILL see them.......thanks Sacha! My
neighbor's pussywillow is plumping up and my red leaves on the tree peonies
that Mary Emma had me dig up a couple of years are unfurling.....awesome
time.............
maddie
> ...saw them today on our way back from some shopping at Riverford Farm.
> These seems to be the earliest primroses in our area, every year. They're
> at the foot of a steep drive to a house situated at the bottom of a very
> narrow lane. So - they're well drained and thanks to the surrounding
> trees,
> pretty well sheltered, too. The banks and hedges are still alive with
> snowdrops doing their brazen thang and catkins are out in their thousands
> but the primroses were a real and unexpected bonus, given the short but
> nastily sharp cold spells we've had here. And last night we had 1.5" of
> rain. Maybe that's the magic key! On the village green, daffodils are in
> bud and clearly keen to flower so a very small dose of sunshine is going
> to
> help them do that - and the birds are definitely 'at it'! ;-)
> --
> Sacha
> www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
> South Devon
> (sacha@garden506.fsnet.co.uk)
>
Posted by Chris Hogg on February 18, 2006, 2:59 am
On Thu, 16 Feb 2006 18:11:55 -0000, "Charlie Pridham"
>Would have to be Buzzards in our case to cope with the 2 gal bucket fulls
>per week our dog seems to produce in winter/spring, slowing up a bit now
>thank goodness.
>At present the most noticeable birds are the Jackdaws (we have hundreds in
>the village) who will squabble for hours over a stick when there are dozens
>of others to be had without an argument! we get showered with sticks all
>spring until they have finished building.
>But the racket from all the birds has increased dramatically in the last few
>days, so lets hope spring progresses in an orderly fashion and doesn't knock
>us back after false hopes as last year :~)
In the field adjacent to our garden are three elderly horses grazing
out their days. One is a small shaggy cob with a ginger coat. When the
jackdaws and magpies are nest-building they perch on his back and pull
out the loose hair (I assume he's moulting by then), flying away with
bright ginger moustaches. He doesn't seem to mind, despite their
repeated trips!
And we've had primroses for a couple of weeks now (west Cornwall).
--
Chris
E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net
Posted by Sacha on February 18, 2006, 5:16 am
On 18/2/06 7:59, in article atkdv1dgfablkin1ppu1dmnqrujehin24h@4ax.com,
<snip>
>
> In the field adjacent to our garden are three elderly horses grazing
> out their days. One is a small shaggy cob with a ginger coat. When the
> jackdaws and magpies are nest-building they perch on his back and pull
> out the loose hair (I assume he's moulting by then), flying away with
> bright ginger moustaches. He doesn't seem to mind, despite their
> repeated trips!
That conjures up a delightful picture - gives a whole new meaning to 'being
in harmony with nature'!
>
> And we've had primroses for a couple of weeks now (west Cornwall).
>
That's the only problem with the Cornish - they're so boastful...... ;-)
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
(sacha@garden506.fsnet.co.uk)
Posted by Brian on February 18, 2006, 3:38 pm
> On 18/2/06 7:59, in article atkdv1dgfablkin1ppu1dmnqrujehin24h@4ax.com,
> <snip>
> >
> > In the field adjacent to our garden are three elderly horses grazing
> > out their days. One is a small shaggy cob with a ginger coat. When the
> > jackdaws and magpies are nest-building they perch on his back and pull
> > out the loose hair (I assume he's moulting by then), flying away with
> > bright ginger moustaches. He doesn't seem to mind, despite their
> > repeated trips!
> That conjures up a delightful picture - gives a whole new meaning to
'being
> in harmony with nature'!
> >
> > And we've had primroses for a couple of weeks now (west Cornwall).
> >
> That's the only problem with the Cornish - they're so boastful...... ;-)
> --
> Sacha
> www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
> South Devon
> (sacha@garden506.fsnet.co.uk)
~~~
Mine were quite good this year too!!
Best Wishes Brian.
> These seems to be the earliest primroses in our area, every year. They're
> at the foot of a steep drive to a house situated at the bottom of a very
> narrow lane. So - they're well drained and thanks to the surrounding
> trees,
> pretty well sheltered, too. The banks and hedges are still alive with
> snowdrops doing their brazen thang and catkins are out in their thousands
> but the primroses were a real and unexpected bonus, given the short but
> nastily sharp cold spells we've had here. And last night we had 1.5" of
> rain. Maybe that's the magic key! On the village green, daffodils are in
> bud and clearly keen to flower so a very small dose of sunshine is going
> to
> help them do that - and the birds are definitely 'at it'! ;-)
> --
> Sacha
> www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
> South Devon
> (sacha@garden506.fsnet.co.uk)
>