Some time has passed since my last blog post but
we have been very busy with the theatricals. This entailed preparing the stage
area and lots of mowing and edging. Now it’s all over for another year and we
can concentrate on the continuous jobs of weeding and watering. Also, happily,
on picking our produce from the veg garden. Sally and I were delighted to win
prizes at our local show for our broad beans, potatoes and peas. And now the
French and runner beans are starting to crop well.
I thought I ought to mention a bit about
the history of the garden and especially about the trees as they are not, in
the main part, anywhere near as old as the cottage. The garden only came into
existence in 1952 when Dick and his first wife, Freda, bought the cottage.
Prior to that, the area around the cottage had been used as a compound for
dogs. The first part to be cultivated was the vegetable gardens to the west of
the cottage on either side of the round garden. All the produce grown was a
great help to the family and one or two existing fruit trees added to the bounty.
The cottage got its name not from the
existing weeping willow at the front but from a row of huge willows that were
growing behind the ponds. These came down in the 1987 storm and none survived.
Luckily, the weeping willow had been planted as a sapling in 1973 so the name
of the cottage is still appropriate.
The conifers around the garden were either
purchased from Woolies for 6d or grown from seed collected by the family on
their travels. For example, the towering one by the front gate is from seed
collected in the south of France;
and the one next to it is from Corsica. Behind
the greenhouses and along behind the back of the ponds are several from seed
from the Welsh hills. The land must be very fertile as the trees have become
huge and we are having some taken down to give others room to thrive and to be
seen. But we are also planting many new ones for future generations. Behind the
ponds we have put in a Handkerchief tree, a Paulownia, a Himalayan birch and a
Cercidiphyllum and apple, plum and a medlar have gone into the orchard
area by the bee hives. So far they are all surviving despite being nibbled by
the deer and attacked by caterpillars.
If you come to visit the cottage over the next
few weeks I think you will agree that the dahlias and the vegetable garden,
festooned with nasturtiums and sweet peas, are looking fantastic. I think Dick
would approve.
Another warm day at Willow Cottage. The cottage itself
was beautifully cool inside – something we don’t appreciate so much in Winter!
But outside the sun burned and the ground baked. I was trying to finish
transferring the dahlias from their big pots to their site in the Hot Bed but
had to water the bare earth before I could manage to dig the holes.
Christine decided to start off by watering our
burgeoning collection of seedlings and plants in the greenhouses.
Unfortunately, it was so hot that she spent most of the afternoon as a hose
attachment watering one or another recently planted area. The heat has not
triggered a thunder storm so we may have to repeat the process on Thursday.
On the up side, the delphiniums are still looking
fantastic – all 8’ or more of them- and they have not been blown over. And the
clematis around the cottage are all flowering in shades of purple and maroon as
if we arranged it.
We shared our drinks breaks with some lovely visitors
– Mary and Stella from Chingford and Ann and Beryl from Chigwell.
Ann even helped with the watering. All volunteers are welcome!
The birds are not singing as much now but the blackcap
sang for long enough for Christine to identify. The robins have fledged from
their basket in the shed: they practiced manoeuvres in the shed for a few days
but now they’ve gone. However we’re enjoying spotting butterflies instead: we
had a comma and a red admiral today.
Although our gardeners are more at home with spades and trowels down with keyboards and mice, we are hoping they will find time at the end of their tiring but rewarding days to write a few words here on the continuing development of the garden...
If they resist my cajoling, then you'll see the evidence here (or rather, you won't!). To persuade them further, I might even threaten a few non-horticultural posts here myself!
Don't forget, your comments very welcome on any aspect of Willow Cottage Theatre or Garden matters, whether covered on this site or not. Please use the Guest Book facility to let us know your thoughts.