Concern shifts from wet to cold
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Throughout April our concern has been the lack of anything resembling a dry
spell of weather. However, the latter half of the month has been drier and
the ...
7 months ago
So much pretty! I love that hellebore in particular.
ReplyDeleteThe hellebores are coining to an end now Julieanne
DeleteBeautiful. I'm loving all of the magnolias out at the moment. Yours are the first tulips I've seen - very pretty.
ReplyDeleteThe magnolias are lovely this year CJ. The tulips are a miniature variety that flowers fairly early although the larger tulips are starting to flower on the allotment.
DeleteAah, so lovely to see more flowers appearing each week. Loving the magnolia this year
ReplyDeleteIt is Belinda. Usually we have strong winds just as the magnolia comes on flower but this year so far so good.
DeleteSo lovely! I'm patiently waiting for those first blooms - emphasis on "patiently"!
ReplyDeleteA virtue us gardeners need shedfuls of, Margaret
DeleteThere's a little bit of everything from quintessential English countryside to the utterly exotic.
ReplyDeleteI love them all, Deborah
DeleteGorgeous, especially the magnolia and hellebore...and the tulip...oh...all of them!xxx
ReplyDeleteIt’s hard to choose isn’t it, Dina.
DeleteGreat blooms you have there, Sue! What a beauty that magnolia is but the native primrose always melts my heart.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Shirley. At the moment a wood pigeon is bouncing about in the magnolia dislodging the petals. The native primrose evokes childhood.
DeleteSo lovely! Spring flowers are so wonderful.
ReplyDeleteThey really are Michelle
ReplyDeleteYes, yes, yes - I love magnolia, hellebores, tulips and primroses. And now the blue flower too :)
ReplyDeleteThe blue flower is chionodoxa, Carrie
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