My garden 2014 Early spring

Naturelover is back flirting with cultivated nature. Early spring means for me, above all, daffodils, and not just because I love Wordsworth and the Romantic poets. Who can resist the sight of a thousand smiling suns waving good morning at the start of each day? In the south of Italy, Goethe was fascinated by the profusion of nature, and also by the way that nature could manifest itself in so many different variations on a theme. Daffodils have a lot of alteration at the hands of humans in this matter, as we have experimented with different forms and colours, accentuating this or that feature of the flower.  Be that as it may (that is, they are hardly pure, unadulterated nature), I still can’t help loving them. Like Goethe, I love light, and I adore the way the light shines through the petals.

Here are some shots of my garden this year so far. We only have a few more weeks of daffies, and already other buds are thickening up. Soon I’ll be raving about cherry blossom and crab apples. Early roses are already greeting me, trying to eclipse the daffodils with their beauty, but my heart in September only has room for daffies.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Despite my dominating preference for daffodils, I do have a little room left for other early spring blooms as well …..

 

She claims to have aesthetic appreciation of the garden and view.

My garden 2014 Autumn

My garden, autumn 2014

Nyssa sylvatica

When Keats wrote his opening lines in the ode, To Autumn, namely: “Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness”, I wonder if he could have had any idea how many times he would be quoted; how many of us would look out on a misty moisty morning and think automatically of his wording that so lyrically expresses what we’re feeling. I am certainly one who thinks of his phrasing as I wander around my garden on a beautiful autumn morning with secretive mists brooding all around: a watery, silvery light amongst the golds and yellows of the trees.

Acer saccharum
My sobriquet is Naturelover, and I think of that name as it applies to who I am in the widest sense of the word – that is, I love all of nature, not just the nature that occurs in World Heritage areas or National Parks, although wild nature gives me the greatest pleasure. I adore trees of almost any kind …. and rocks, and flowers, and wide spaces. I love the foaming of raging sea, or a river in flood; I love to lie in my tent with thunder booming around me or light snow causing a deathly quiet.

Cotinus coggrygia
Because I love nature, like many others who feel the same way, I chose a house with space – five acres – on the edge of town in what was then the country, so that we could have room and peace, and so I could have the opportunity to plant one of every tree that I love – be it indigenous or introduced. We have a view of the beautiful Tamar River and its island, seen through the framing of our trees, and although I have planted several hundred trees, I have managed to retain a sense of unoccupied space that I seem to need. Alas, part of this vacant space is due to my lack of skills as a gardener: too many of these loved trees have died. A certain amount of natural selection is allowed to operate.

Eucalyptus perriniana

Returning from last week’s four day walk, I felt somehow distanced from this other kind of nature: cultivated, yet not illegitimate because of that. I was entranced by the mist swirling through the remaining autumn leaves in the garden, and the veiling and revealing of the river below. It was time I spent just a little longer with this beauty and put in some home time.

I also had to drive my debaters to Devonport during the week. I felt as if I’d had an overdose of driving, and the forecast was for rain. I had several mountains I wanted to climb, but none of them in the rain – not that I mind getting wet, but I was in the mood for seeing a view this week. So, we stayed at home and just ran in Launceston Gorge, where you can have as good a workout as you wish without the driving, and admire rocks and river, moss and forest as you go.

I read my book, pulled out onion weed, mowed the grass, tilled the soil with my trident, smelling it to make sure it was sweet enough, admired the beginnings of daffodils shooting through the ground already and the plumping of buds on the magnolias even before they’ve lost their leaves. We sawed off some unwanted small limbs to allow more light into other areas and mulched what we’d sawn to return the goodness straight back into the soil. The dogs were very happy about our decision, and now I’m ready to go bush again next week.

Tessa, evening light

Dawn this morning (Monday), just to finish off the tale