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In an English country garden. 05:07 - Oct 30 with 2495 viewsBenters

As the song goes.

I have spent the last few weeks cutting back some of my hedges etc getting ready the winter months.

Yesterday I noticed one of my Hollyhocks I took from the beautiful village of Debenham,when they were tiny little seedlings is flowering again after I cut it back.

Some of my roses have buds on them too,and typically after a wet spring and a poor show in Butterflies šŸ¦‹ I seem to be seeing loads of them now.

Isn’t nature wonderful,there is always something to look at.

Gentlybentley
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In an English country garden. on 07:30 - Nov 2 with 195 viewsBenters

In an English country garden. on 08:56 - Nov 1 by BanksterDebtSlave

Looks like the grass might grow all Winter this year....cowslips are up and a clients camellia flowered 2 weeks ago.


One of my neighbours used to cut his grass all year round as long as it was dry enough,I cut mine Wednesday it looks like it could do with cutting again.

Gentlybentley
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In an English country garden. on 07:34 - Nov 2 with 191 viewsBenters

In an English country garden. on 09:17 - Nov 1 by ElephantintheRoom

Our Victorian gardening ancestors would call some pleasantly warm weather after yet another disappointing summer ā€˜~An Indian Summerā€. Which will enrage Guardian-reading TWTD readers on two levels….. a reminder of our colonial past and whilst hiding under their cot sheets awaiting the end of the world that whilst it is often rather pleasant in autumn, it always has been.


Them be the wrong injuns bor!

An Indian summer comes from the red sort who used to fight the cowboys etc.

Gentlybentley
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