Showing posts with label insects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insects. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 September 2011

Daybreak to Sunset

Sunrise
It seems to me that the more tired Coco gets during the day the earlier she wakes up the next day.  We've tried an 8 o'clock bedtime a 7 o'clock bedtime and half past 6 as well.  The result?


We are still up at about 6.15 in the morning.  Even a trip to Banham Zoo with Auntie's Angela and Sarah didn't make a difference, up bright and early this morning.

Never mind, if I'm honest I do lay there waiting some mornings for her to rouse so its really no hardship at all.


Levelling the compost!
That, in it's own way was an explanation of how we came to start this post with a sunrise picture instead of a sunset.

Anyway, we have been adding to the structural stability of our poly tunnels ; and in doing so have started to incorporate some raised beds.

It didn't take us very long at all, we screwed 4 planks of left over decking together filled it with compost and dug it into the soil below.


Firming the compost!
Coco took on the levelling job with gusto and initiative.  Having started with her rake it quickly transpired that this was neither fast enough or hands on enough for my little assistant.

The only answer really is to launch yourself onto the bed and push the compost around with your hands and then walk up and down to firm it all.

It worked a treat!


Teamwork
As you are aware we always like to bring glimpses of some of the creatures we get visiting the garden and here on the caravan wheel are a couple spiders who seem quite happy sharing a web for their evenings hunting.

We also get numerous bats flying around  the property at dusk and we could sit and watch them for hours, (except it gets dark and we can't see them) as they remove countless mozzies for us.

Now I was told/read/or heard somewhere that if you stand very still and then clap your hands slowly and rhythmically above your head the bats will fly much closer to you and you will attract more of them.

So, having checked it was September not April, I found myself a quiet little spot in the corner of the paddock which was under their main flight path and not in view of the house (or Nanny Southwellski!) and away from prying eyes.

I stood very still then slowly raised my hands up and started to clap rhythmically (Nanny Southwellski will tell you my sense of rhythm is not great and in fact seldom has any rhythm of its own, its more a random selection of steps/claps/toe taps etc.)

I tried for about 5 minutes and only succeeded in attracting Blossom, who looked at me with pity in her eyes and then wandered off.

Did it work? Did it Charlie, I doubt they will ever return.

Yellow Winged Darter
Never mind, this little chap on the left is a Yellow Winged Darter, a member of the Dragonfly family who landed on the deck fence at lunchtime.

We have quite a few of these and other Dragonflies floating around and I do mean floating around, they are incredible exponents of flight!




Sunset
And finally, tonight's sunset.  It seems only right that as we started with sunrise we should finish with sunset.

Wednesday, 17 August 2011

All creatures great and small


14 Cabbage White caterpillars
Those stoic few of you who visit our blog will know that Coco and I love all things living that come to our garden be they welcome guests or otherwise. 

Some unwelcome visitors are the Cabbage White caterpillars that have stripped our Brussel sprouts almost back to the roots.

Mature Cabbage White caterpillar


But that said, we do enjoy watching the butterflies meandering through the garden and of course the butterflies and caterpillars are part of the food chain and they keep the birds coming to the garden.

Some other pesty critters are the wasps, although despite there being hundreds of them we have remained unstung so far. 

Jarvis
In a morbid kind of way the wasp is a fascinating creature and to those of you who ask 'what use are they?' we would answer, they are the waste disposal units of the insect world.

We have two cats who are prolific hunters of small rats, mice and voles and they regularly leave remnants of mice on the lawn. 

The wasps dissect the remains and take relatively large chunks away with them, they also indiscriminately nibble every apple on our trees!


Bee and Hover Fly
Spider at night
Welcome visitors include spiders and all insects that remove the blackfly, whitefly, and other unwanted guests and of course the bees and hover flies that pollinate our plants.


We've had a few other exciting happenings at the garden,  I mentioned before the very poor quality shed we had delivered and sent back the same day. 

Our Hallgate timber shed
Well our new shed arrived from Hallgate Timber in Long Sutton in Lincolnshire, their website is www.hallgate-timber.co.uk.

Some of you will know that I am a carpenter by trade and if I was going to build myself a shed I would build one just like the one from Hallgate Timber.  The service was brilliant, the quality excellent, the price was good and it feels and looks right.


Sweetcorn
On the harvesting side of the garden we have been eating our own carrots, onions, potatoes, runner beans, purple kale, swedes, radishes and salad leaves for some time now.  But the highlight to date has to be our sweetcorn they are DELICIOUS!!!!!!

Coco eats them straight from the husk having peeled it like a banana.


Plant wise we have now put out our spring greens, which are a special request of Great Nanny Mero.  She has pestered us for ages to get some sown and ready for spring.

We also have some more peppers and chillis growing in the potting shed and waiting for the new poly tunnel to be put up.  It's on my list of high priority jobs to do.  Sadly above High Priority I have an Extremely High Priority list and above that a Very Extremely High Priority list.

Above that is the 'Nanny Southwellski Job list' that Coco and I are working our way through at the moment.  The only trouble is that when we finish one job for Nanny Southwellski she adds 2 more!

On a lighter note Coco's walking is improving every day and she seldom sits down and shuffles anywhere now, this has brought a whole new awareness on us that means we have to move everything to higher ground.

I'm a Nanny! Get me out of here!
When we show Coco something for the first time, be it how to eat a different food, put her shoes on or how a new toy works we generally show her how and what to do. 

Nanny Southwellski thought it would be a good idea to show Coco how to go through the play tunnel. It has taken nearly a week for her shoulder to get better.


Monday, 25 July 2011

How to impress Ofsted.

Get off my sweetcorn!


As this is our gardening blog I need to start this with a topical gardening paragraph: don't my sweetcorn look lovely?

Anyhow, Declan the Ofsted Inspector is an incredibly nice and helpful guy; and 'No' he didn't say we were brilliant and that "everything is great" and "keep up the excellent work". He went through everything in minute detail during a six and a half hour marathon where he didn't stop for a break.all day.

He left us to go to see Roy Orbison, well not the actual Roy Orbison but an impersonator, and gave us homework to do. Sharon's has to be in by Wednesday, mine in by a bit later and I don't think he will wear 'the dog eating it'.

So, how do you impress an Ofsted Inspector, well here's a few don'ts:

     Don't turn up half an hour late at 9.30 when he was there at 9.00.

     Don't ask the neighbouring engineering company if you can borrow an angle grinder; extension lead and a length of stout wire because your keys are at home.

     Make sure that 'Rich is a King and Ray is a Queen' is wiped off the whiteboard, although some frantic rubbing removed most of it before he had a look round.

     Make sure that when the guys say yeah we've put that document in there for you that they really have and haven't cleared off to Blakeney and Cambodia sniggering!

Anyway it wasn't the harrowing experience we expected.  Thank you Declan.

We went to the Brandon House for a meal tonight just Nanny Southwellski and I.  Coco babysat Little Nanny Mero for us and Little Nanny Mero was asleep when we got home.  The food was quite good, the setting an bit too minimalist for me, and the staff unhappy - but it didn't spoil anything for us, we were just happy not to be cooking.


Plenty of room for another tunnel
See this is where I have been quite cunning in bringing the post round to food.  Food means plants means growing means I have another polytunnel on its way!  Yay!!!!!

And what about earwigs?  Are they really good parents?  Would Percy and Parsnip have turned out any different if we had been earwigs?
       

If you go out on the deck tonight you're sure of a big surprise

Sunday, 26 June 2011

All things bright and beautiful

Coco and I were up at 6.00am this morning and as always we did our chores, letting the chooks out, feeding the cats and letting the dogs out before we had our breakfast.  And, as I tell Coco each and every morning, we can get our own food but the animals can't so we have to look after them first.

Monty







Blossom















It's not all one sided though in return we get fresh eggs every day, the cats keep the mice and rats from our veggies and foodstuff and the dogs guard us and make us laugh.

Seeing to them first is a very small inconvenience in comparison to what we receive in return and all in all I think its pretty fair.

Mmmmmmmmm!
 Anyway, onto more things bright and beautiful.  We have a very old cherry tree in our garden.  I believe it was planted around the time that Broadlands was built about 60 years ago.  We missed the cherries last year as they were ready just before we moved in.

This year though we have a bumper crop of delicious bright red cherries.  We are busy picking, pitting and preserving them and I think a batch of cherry wine may be in order too.

Nanny Southwellski took a stunning picture of the cherries (not this one, Uncle Robin took this one) and this can be found on her Flickr page under 'Southwellski'.

Our veggies are doing very nicely thank you, and we may even have enough carrots for a meal.  Coco is very partial to a freshly pulled carrot first thing in the morning, rinsed under the hose with the top still on. She is also very partial to freshly picked cherries, gooseberries, peas and some of the herbs we are growing as well.

 Our flowers are doing brilliantly, this is a short stemmed lily (right) we grew this year. How vivid is that orange, it makes me smile every time I see it.

Our sunflowers are doing very well despite being uprooted twice by the mole, attacked by the chooks and getting hit by the frost.

Having done all thing bright and beautiful it seems only right to move onto all creature great and small and here is a bit of both.



The butterfly on the sunflower (left) is, I think the first one Coco has seen that she actually took notice of and it warranted a point with a chubby finger and an 'Oooooh!'



Coco seems to have a real interest in things that fly be they planes, birds, butterflies or bugs. She can pick a plane out of the sky long before I can.

Female Ghost Moth
We also had a visit from a Female Ghost Moth which I initially thought was a leaf.
It gets its name because it used to be associated with the grassy areas in churchyards and the male moths have a funny courtship flight where they flutter above the grass - looking like little white ghosts.
Impressed with my Moth knowledge?  I cannot take credit for this.  Tony Pritchard from the Suffolk Moth Group  identified this for me in a matter of seconds!

You can contact him at: Countyrecorder@suffolkmothgroup.org.uk

Another visitor was this little hairy legged chappie/chappette who appeared in the bathroom last night.  If he/she gets rid of the mossie that was buzzing round our bedroom last night them they are most welcome.

Finally I will leave you with the sunset we were blessed with two nights ago - enjoy





Sunset over Feltwell




Monday, 20 June 2011

Some like it hot!

Radishes
And that is exactly what these radishes are - HOT! As a child I remember sowing radishes in between the rows of cabbages and other crops that were slow growing and would eat them as soon as they had any hint of red on them.  Never gave the idea of using the leaves in salads any thought at all.

These little beauties are about 125mm long, that's 5 inches in real terms and all different shapes and sizes.  I'd like to see you package these in a neat little box Mr Tesco!

We've had a bit of help around the garden the past few days, in the shape of young Jack, the 17 year old son of a friend. He's been digging up Leylandii stumps, strimming and generally clearing the place for us and a great help its been too.  He's learnt invaluable lessons as well, such as turn the switch on the strimmer to 'ON' before trying to start it and don't let the strimmer get too close to the raspberry canes!

Nanny Southwellski bought me a new camera as an early birthday present, you may recall my old one got buried and never worked again.

Well, it's been out in the garden with me all day today and very busy its been too.

I was giving Coco a swing when I saw what I thought was a leaf in the grass.  On closer inspection I saw it was in fact a moth about 35mm long with a bark like pattern on it's wings.

It didn't seem to object to having its picture taken so we took a few and left it in peace.

It wasn't there a short time ago, hopefully it hasn't been on the lunch menu for some errant blackbird.

Well short and sweet is this blog today but who knows what's going to happen in Grandpa Southwellski's garden tomorrow.