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Posts tagged ‘Gardens’

IPhriday Photo Challenge: IPhoto Bomb Cheshire Cat

 

My Woodland Garden

My Woodland Garden

 

Woodland Garden in Brushstroke App

Woodland Garden in Brushstroke App

 

The Cheshire Cat Sits in My Tree!

The Cheshire Cat Sits in My Tree!

It poured here this week on Wednesday and I mean poured! So I went to the window to take a picture of my Woodland Garden and the big fat drops of water on the tree limbs. Much to my surprise when I focused in on the drops and processed the picture for the blog, a Cheshire cat with a very big smile appeared in the tree! He is to the left, sitting on the limb!  Can you see his big smile? AWESOME! Just another fun IPhone IPhriday week!

Enjoy the IPhriday Photo Challenge! Post a photo taken with your Phone on Fridays!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Fern

My Fern

My Fern

Fern was added to the Crayola assortment in 1998. In the “State Crayon Collection” it is the color for South Carolina and known as Palmetto.

In 1908 Binney & Smith partnered with Littlefield Maps and made a special color assortment with special Biblical colors pasted on the back of the maps. The maps of the Old Testament teachings were sold to churches. I bet there were big ferns and palm trees to color on those maps with the color Fern!

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

IPhriday Photo Challenge: My Goat Fritz

My Goat Fritz

My Goat Fritz

 

 Fritz Painted in Waterlogue


Fritz Painted in Waterlogue

Fritz is trying to get in the Woodland Garden again. He is trying to sneak in under the Cameillas! Like I wouldn’t notice! I made a notecard of him in the Waterlogue App! Since I don’t paint, this is the best I can do, and it is so easy! I LOVE IT!

Enjoy the IPhriday Photo Challenge! Post a photo taken with your Phone on Fridays!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Blush

My Idea of Blush

My Idea of Blush

 

Crayola Blush

Crayola Blush

When I think of Blush, I am thinking of a light pink cheek. Crayola is thinking of a very, very, very, pink cheek! It must be the sun-kissed version of the standard Blush. Crayola’s version of Blush is more like a raspberry. Did you know that Crayola had eight multicultural crayons? Developed in 1992, the colors Apricot, Black, Burnt Sienna, Mahogany, Peach, Sepia, Tan, and White were colors that, “come in an assortment of skin hues that give a child a realistic palette for coloring their world.” No blush there!  Have you seen the Burnt Sienna color? It’s  a shade of orange! I have never seen an orange person, but what do I know? Wait, maybe I have. They are the people who spend too much time in a tanning booth!

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola: Blue Violet

The Blue Violet Flowers

The Blue Violet Flowers

 

A Beautiful Garden in West Hoathly, UK

A Beautiful Garden in West Hoathly, UK

I do not know what these flowers are. I think they are primroses. They were a beautiful iridescent Blue Violet! It was just one of thousands of beautiful plants that I saw in the English gardens on my English Garden Tour 2015! 

Just to let you know, I’ve been thinking of what I would do with the lottery money that now is up to over 1 billion. One of the things I would do is purchase a garden and lovely little cottage in the UK and hang out with gardening friends that know all the latin names of flowers. Perhaps they would have a class on such at the local Woman’s Institute meeting, for transplants like me, who would like to be in the know. I can only dream! Well, maybe I could start on one flower. If the flower shown is a primrose, it is called primula vulgaris. How could anything so beautiful be vulgar?

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

I Phriday Photo Challenge; The Scaly Bark Birch Tree

 

Scaly Bark Birch Tree

Scaly Bark Birch Tree

 

 

Painted in Waterlogue

Painted in Waterlogue

 

Painted in Brushstroke

Painted in Brushstroke

Out and about this week I took a photo of the Scaly Bark Birch Tree or the Betula Nigra River Birch. It is my favorite tree! It’s not too scaly in winter, but I will update it as the weather warms up! It peels like paper and looks so cool! Look HERE to see other trees that have lovely bark to enhance your garden! I used the IPhone Apps, Waterlogue and Brushstroke, to add the other two images! They would make lovely notecards, don’t you think? Enjoy the IPhriday Photo Challenge! Post a photo taken with your Phone on Fridays!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Asparagus

My Vegetable Garden

My Vegetable Garden

 

My Vegetable Garden

My Vegetable Garden

 

My Vegetable Garden

My Vegetable Garden

 

My Vegetable Garden

My Vegetable Garden

 

Fruits of My Labor

Fruits of My Labor

 

Fruits of My Labor

Fruits of My Labor

Asparagus is a tone of green that is named after the vegetable. Crayola created this color in 1993 as one of the 16 to be named in the Name the Color Contest.

Another name for this color is asparagus green. The first recorded use of “asparagus green” as a color name in English was in 1805.

It is also the color of a wild asparagus plant blowing in the wind of the 1949 classic film Sands of Iwo Jima.

My “Woodland Garden” is a postage-stamp sized back yard, that is fenced off from a forest of trees. My “Cottage Garden” is a strip of ground resembling the seal of an envelope. Long and very narrow. So my “garden” is a postage stamp and envelope!

One year, I decided to broaden my horizons and invest in an allotment that our neighborhood church provided. I rented my spot and set off. Mind you I didn’t know a thing about growing vegetables. I planted a lot of lettuce. Many varieties of lettuce, all planted at the same time. They came up very nicely. So did the onions, peppers, and herbs. The plants looked so beautiful, and every day I would hike up the hill to the church and cut my lettuce. And cut lettuce. And cut lettuce. The pictures represent the fruit of my labor.

I did not grow asparagus, but surely one of these nice greens should be the color of asparagus?

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola; Antique Brass

Jane Cowl Dahlia Sep 2009

Jane Cowl Dahlia Sep 2009

My Martha Stewart Dahlia, 2009

My Martha Stewart Dahlia, 2009

The most stunning flower EVER in my garden was the “Jane Cowl” dahlia! I bought the tuber for this flower in 2009, not knowing much about it, except that it was Martha Stewart’s favorite flower! I didn’t realize at the time how hard they were to come by! If it was good enough for Martha it was good enough for me! The Antique Brass color is on the tips of the second row of the middle petals!

This is a stunning informal, decorative, heirloom dahlia originally introduced in 1928, with luscious blooms held perfectly erect on sturdy stems. Deep peach centers open up to glowing bronze dusted with gold. It grows to more than six feet tall and the flowers reach 10 inches wide. I dug them up and gave them away when I thought they were too tall for my garden! What was I thinking? Now I miss them and can hardly find them!

More people ask to find “Jane Cowl” than any other lost dahlia! The beautiful petals look like the tresses of a goddess – or actress Jane Cowl (1883-1950), who was once “the most beautiful woman on the American stage,” who it was named after.

This post is just one of many in the Color Your World: 120 Days of Crayola Challenge! Enjoy!

Jane Cowl

Jane Cowl

Eat, Drink and Be Merry: Let’s Start with the Drink and Be Merry!

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden Kent, UK

During my English Garden Tour we based in the countryside outside of Tenterden, Kent. It was a wise decision, because it was near the beautiful and busy market town of Tenterden, but we still could enjoy the peace of the countryside. Some of our best finds were found on the small lane that took us out of Tenterden to the Bullein B&B. One find was the Smallhythe Place, country home of Ellen Terry, (see previous posts about that) and right up the lane from the cottage was the Chapel Down Vineyard. What a great surprise that was! It is rated the top vineyard in the UK for sparkling wines, Curious Beers and ciders! So one Sunday afternoon we took it upon ourselves to partake of the vineyard. Poor pitiful Us!  Ha Ha!

Chapel Down Winery is set in a charming and well kept garden surrounded by the vineyards. As the crow flies we could have walked there from the B&B. So, it really was a three fold visit, it had a lovely garden, and an inviting vineyard, wine and specialty food shop. Topping off the day we ate at the fantastic Swan Restaurant on the premises!  I will talk about the The Swan Restaurant in my next post!

First I had to visit the garden!

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

What a great place for a wedding! Everything you need right here!

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Chapel Down Winery, Tenterden, Kent, UK

There is the wine tasting  area in the large barn-like building, which features  the award- winning wine along with local cheeses, chutney, hand-made chocolates, and artisan biscuits.  The staff are very helpful and knowledgable. While we were there many people were stocking up with cases and cases of wine!

This is what I learned………..

The Curious Beer, made by the Kent winemaker, has been named one of the world’s best lager’s in the industry. The International Beer Challenge, which has judged the best beers in the world for the past sixteen years, awarded Chapel Down the Gold Medal for the Curious Brew! With over four hundred brew entries Chapel Down had the best of its class! Using East Anglian malt, saaz and cascade hops, they re-ferment the lager using champagne yeast to make a highly drinkable and refreshing lager beer.  The sparkling wines and beers have been served at Buckingham Palace and were featured during the wedding celebrations of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge. Curious Brew is currently served on draught at Jamie Oliver’s Union Jack restaurants and Jamie’s Italians, The Swan at London’s Globe Theatre, the Royal Opera House, as well as independent pubs in the south east. We were so lucky to stumble across this place! If it’s good enough for the queen it’s good enough for me!

We chose to eat at the Swan Restaurant, (a reservation is highly recommended) and try the different beverages with our meal!  What a lovely day out! Do not miss the Chapel Down Winery and Swan Restaurant in Tenterden!  Now let’s go in The Swan and check out the menu!

National Trust, Smallhythe Place: The Home of Ellen Terry

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, Home of Ellen Terry, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, Home of Ellen Terry, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, the home of Ellen Terry, is located on a rural road, near Tenterden, where we made our base during my English Garden Tour. Coming from a narrow, graveled, country lane from the Bullein Barn B&B, Smallhythe Place was at the end of it. Everyday we were amazed at all the cars parked here and the visitors going to the home. It was so convenient we thought we would save it to the end of our stay.  This is not a big estate like some of the other National Trust properties we toured. This was a smallish house sitting on a smallish property. When we did visit, what a delight it was! As with all the National Trust properties, the hosts of this property made you feel so very welcome and were so knowledgable! I did not know a thing about Ellen Terry!  First let’s look at her house, which is now a memorial to her.

This is what I learned………………….

One day, in 1899, Ellen Terry was out for a buggy ride in the country (this is well away from London) with Henry Irving, (the manager of the Lyceum Theatre in London’s Covent Garden), who was also her theatrical partner for twenty-four years. Upon seeing a cottage at the side of the small lane near Tenterden, she made up her mind this was where she wanted to live and die. So she bought the place. She lived there until her death in 1928. The half timbered house was built in the late 15th or early 16th century. The house was originally a “Priest House” and then called the “Port House,” because of it’s location on the River Rother, which is now just a trickle along the side of the house. At one time this place was a thriving shipyard, the Old English word “hythe” means “landing place.” It is far off the beaten tract, even now. She definitely wanted her peace and quiet, away from the crowds! When Terry died in 1929, her daughter, Edith Craig, opened the home as a memorial to her mother and then the National Trust took over the property when Craig died in 1947. Smallhythe Place is filled with mementoes  of Terry’s career in the theatre. In 1929, Craig set up a barn on the grounds, as a theater, where William Shakespeare plays were performed every year on the anniversary of her mother’s death. This is continued even today.   

The cottage sits near the road and every day as we passed by, on the way somewhere else, I wondered if it would still be standing when we returned.  It really leans!!!!!

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Lane across from Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Lane across from Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Lane to the Bullein B&B, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Lane to the Bullein B&B, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Garden Sign at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Garden Sign at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

I loved the acknowledgement of the unwelcome plant! Silverweed!!!!!

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Garden at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Garden at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Gardens at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Gardens at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Garden at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Garden at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Garden at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Garden at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Garden from the Window, Smallhythe Place, Kent, UK

The Garden from the Window, Smallhythe Place, Kent, UK

The window picture was my favorite of the garden! It gives an idea of how serene the place is! It is the perfect cottage garden!

The Shakespeare Barn, Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Thatched Shakespeare Barn, Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Shakespeare Barn, Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Thatched Shakespeare Barn, Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Multiple Barns at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Multiple Barns at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Multiple Barns at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Multiple Barns at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

 Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

There is a small refreshment center and outdoor seating at Smallhythe.

The Multiple Barns at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Multiple Barns at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Multiple Barns at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

The Outdoor Area of the Restaurant at Smallhythe Place, Tenterden, Kent, UK

It is just the cottage that you imagine in fairy tales! I can see why Ellen Terry chose to live here! So next time let’s take a peek inside Smallhythe Place! Who exactly is Ellen Terry? We’ll find out next time! See you soon!

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

Smallhythe Place, near Tenterden, Kent, UK

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