10 September 2013

Other peoples gardens .

This summer I've been away from my own garden so it's been badly negleted,. Mr France did the watering for the hanging baskets and the occasional grass cutting which wasn't needed very often due to the heat.
But I had the pleasure of seeing and enjoying other peoples gardens. Would you like to share them with me.

First my daughters garden,
 where I spend most of the summer when we let our property.



Her garden has very little attention and is a little on the wildside
but has great charm.
Each year the hollyhocks are always so pretty.





Entering the drive way the buddleia greets you, usually covered in a mass of butterflies.





When Mr France & I went to stay in  La Petite Maison. the buddleia I'd planted before I left had come into flower, so I picked a few blooms and put them in a lttle old bottle I'd found in the barn when we first bought this little house. I  took a photo so I could paint them at a later date.
So I thought now is  a good time to get back to doing my watercolour painting.
 Here's the scketch I did in my journal.






This is my first effort for over a year
 I'm still only a beginner, but hope that eventually I will improve.
I've only ever shared any of my sketching with my family.


Back to garden visiting.

This is my French friends garden near where I live.
This part has been created with the help her grandchildren, she has seven all under the age of ten.
I love to visit her and see what the little ones have added during their summer holiday.


A lot of watering has been needed
so every little helps.




Another friend I have I admire so much, she  & her husband had a house built not far from where I live. They live and work in England but divide their time between France & England. Gardening is her passion.
I always say, 'she could plant a stick and it would grow.'
It's not easy for her, but with the help of her husband they have made a  vegetable plot and  grow all sorts of vegetables, they always seem to survive whatever the weather, which gives them fresh veg, each time they come back.




Her first batch of haricot vert.




These pictures are from the garden of a dear English friend who has recently passed away.
Although she didn't live in France permanently she chose  her plants carefully.
 to be able to look after themselves, she loved her garden.

This year her hibiscus in white, pink & blue where spendid.





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As always her hydrangia was beautiful.
I'm sure she chose these because she loved to wear different shades of blue even if it was only a scarf.


Now this garden I've never actualy seen.
This lovely dahlia I've only seen from this photo,as it's  in the garden of my lovely English friends.They used to have a second home near to where I live in France. Her garden in France was planted for every season and always looked as if someone lived there permanently.
They sold their house 2yrs ago and the new owners do live there permanent and they have changed it completely, now when I pass I feel so sad as it doesn't look as pretty as when my friend was there.






Now to North Wales, where my family live.




These beautiful pink poppies are so delicate they are almost like tissue paper,
  are in my nieces garden and she has just been to visit us and brought me envelopes full of poppy heads.
So hopefully I'll have some flowering in my garden next year.




This is my sisters garden also in Wales.
This lovely clematis climbing up the wall to greet you at the front door.





Their garden at the rear of the property.has always been lovely.
Now it's planted mostly with shrubs for ease of maintenance.




This arbour is usually covered  in pale pink clematis flowers.
but due to their severe winter & late snow in spring it's suffered a bit.


My brothers house was an old Welsh farm.


He loves his garden.
When he was younger he was head gardener on the estate of Lord Sefton in Liverpool.




The wall surrounding the front of his house is covered in white alysum, red sauge & blue lobelia.
Then he has a tower of baskets, this had only just been planted when I went to visit him in late June, so I'm sure by the end of summer it was a beautiful mass of colour.


Now I'm back home we have a lot to do in the garden. 


I have plans to make a new area for some shrubs.
So some hard digging will be necessary. I'll show you that later when we get it started.


Before I leave you I must show you the gift my niece bought for me at the market just before she left.


This beautiful giant hibiscus






the flower is as big as a large dinner plate.




Hope you enjoyed seeing these gardens, all so different.

à bientôt

Barbara Lilian


6 comments:

  1. Thank you for the stroll through your family and friend's gardens. I do hope that you will be successful with with the pods from the pink poppies...they are indeed lovely.

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  2. These are lovely gardens. I admire gardeners so much. I don't devote much time to gardening in our desert climate because it's so challenging, but hollyhocks do grow easily here. They're one of my favorites! Your daughter's pink ones are wonderful! SO nice to have your feedback on my new room!

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  3. I am loving your photographs of the beautiful gardens that you visited Barbara - Lilian BUT ..... I have to say that I love your sketch of the buddleia the best. It is beautiful and, I don't think that you could improve on it. Keep sketching .... you are really good. XXXX

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  4. What a lovely sketch! I am so impressed!

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  5. Good Morning Barbara, What a treat I have had this morning, catching up on your blog. The photographs are filled with such beautiful flowers. I bet you can't wait to plant the pink poppies and to see the first little green shoots peeping through the soil next Spring.
    Your brother's garden is lovely and it is easy to imagine how the tower of baskets looked when they were in full bloom, they must have been a real feast for the eyes.
    I love hibiscus, but I am having real problems growing them here in the North of England. When I lived in Cyprus they grew like weeds as the conditions were perfect for them. I am persevering, so fingers crossed the plants will get a little larger next year.
    Barbara, I have to tell you, I love your water colour it would look beautiful in a frame. Do you frame your work or do you keep it in your art book?
    Enjoy your weekend, can you believe it, we have sunshine!! hoorah!!
    Best Wishes to you,
    Daphne

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  6. The gardens are beautiful! I love hollyhocks, one of my favorite flowers. I think it my be becuse it is an "old flower" and reminds me so much of my childhood.
    I love your "Mr. France" too cute a name!
    Lovely buddleia watercolor again! You're on a roll!
    Bises
    R

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