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Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flowers. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 November 2009

in our landscape


When we were in Norfolk earlier this year, we went for a walk on Blakeney Point. It was there I was caught by a dandelion-coated landscape, like golden freckles on a gloomy day. It reminded me of the things that we consider a nuisance, or out of place, in our gardens (and our lives), but in the right setting have their own unique beauty.

We are all unique, with our own talents and abilities, positives and negatives, successes and shortcomings. Sometimes, we can feel out of place, where expectations of us do not tally with who we are, where our values seem alien, where we simply cannot really bloom. We start comparing ourselves with others, thinking if only we were the same size, shape, or personalities, if only we had their abilities, their confidence to do certain things, their beauty, their power. We feel limp and unsure. We feel like flowers in the wrong place.

But just because we do not match our current landscape does not mean we are not beautifully made. I always say that if God wanted you to be somebody else, he would have made you somebody else! Perhaps we don’t fit in the way we would like – or we feel at home in a different setting than the one paraded as perfect by our peers. But if we allow ourselves to be shaped in the way God wants, not the way other people think - or even we ourselves think – we can grow and glow, lighting up our corner of a difficult world.


Sunday, 15 March 2009

spring Sunday

According to my Dairy Diary (which my mum gets from the milkman each year!), spring officially starts on Friday (20th). But it's already here in our garden:




Thought I would share some of the photos I took in the garden during the week:


Chionodoxa flowering happily


Crocus peeping out the side of the strawberry pot (which I've never used for strawberries!)

First aubretia of the year to open out its little petals

and of course, the golden daffodil glowing in the sunshine

Am going to the evening service today as we had a church quiz last night and I don't cope well with an evening event followed by an event next morning. Spent most of yesterday afternoon agonising over whether to go or not. Was rather low yesterday (thanks for the encouraging comments on my last post, guys - much appreciated) and very tired, but in the end I did go. Was the right thing to do - despite physical exhaustion, I needed somewhere to go and be instead of being left at home feeling as I was.

Our team actually won. I'm not great at general knowledge and completely phased out during the sports section (miraculously, I did know one) and concentrated on the dingbats we'd been given. (Did get rather over-excited during the movie quotes, however!) Andy is very good at retaining facts and accessing them quickly. I learn things well but if I don't use the knowledge enough, it slips away.

Talking of facts, I'll try and post the answers to true or false? tomorrow or Tuesday. In the meantime, you can still join in!

In this stretch of Lent before Easter, I hope to post some more serious thoughts I've been having at this time. I should get a wriggle on; it's less than a month away...

Have a blessed Sunday.

"...the LORD, my God, lights up my darkness." ~ Psalm 18:28

Today: 4/10, medium



Wednesday, 4 March 2009

the springtime effect

There's something about opening your eyes in the morning and knowing from the colour of your world that the sun is out. It was a wet and windy night, so the sunlight feels even more precious. It lights me up on the inside, not just the outside. I find it soothes my weariness and any anxieties, causing a certain relaxation to flood through me; even as I go about my day working on this and that, I feel a kind of release.


The snowdrops are going over now. February is over and March has arrived! I made it through winter and here comes spring! The daffodils are budding in the front garden, brimming with promise, and the crocuses stretch gleefully towards the sun (like me!)



I was rather pleased with the crocus picture I posted on Monday; apart from the watermark and compressing the file size what you see is what was taken, the same with the images in this post - no later changes or tweaking to the images. I love the sight of these tiny flowers peppering the dull ground with the vibrant colour of hope; they awaken the tiny flowers of hope in my heart's garden, inspiring me to thankfulness and expectation of joy.


Mmm mmm (said appreciatively). Oh yes, spring is beginning and however I physically feel, my heart always rises to meet it...


Today: 4/10, medium

Friday, 10 October 2008

in the garden

We have so many garden spiders at the moment. Out front, while doing some deadheading, I counted 7 without even moving my head. I'm quite happy to have spiders in the garden, although there are, as you know, times when I accidentally walk into a web, which is not very pleasant. Was saved from this recently when I opened the back door - I paused to see how heavy the rain was - and in that pause noticed the huge face-height web which had formed overnight across the doorway.

So, yes, I was doing some deadheading, and re-staking cosmos. The cosmos have really taken off now, splaying about cheerfully, with my needing to rein them in frequently. A week or so back some stems partially broke off in the wind and rain, so I cut them back and then rescued the best looking flowers to display inside:



They looked so lovely and vibrant.




I had to compost them the day before yesterday; they still looked good but were spilling pollen everywhere, which wasn't so good. The bees are loving the late source of nectar outside however. Our front garden looks very colourful despite it being October - in fact I think it looks particularly good at this time of year. The cosmos in vibrant shades of pink and burgundy, frothy pink and white achillea swaying amid golden rudbeckias, and the deep pink of the sedum in between. The potentilla is having a second flush of flowers. All this on a very small scale of course, but I'm pleased with the effect.






The birds are beginning to be more active in the back garden now, visiting the topped up feeders.


Today: 5/10, high

Thursday, 21 August 2008

the water garden

On Sunday afternoon we took a trip out to Longstock Park Water Garden, which is only open a few times a year. I didn't immediately get round to uploading the photos, but thought I would post them here:




It's only open a few times a year, and was quite crowded, so I had to be quite creative with my shots as I don't like lots of people in them unless I want them to be!



Today: 4-5/10, high

Yesterday: 4/10, high

Tuesday: 5/10, medium high

Sunday, 29 June 2008

Thursday, 5 June 2008

everything's blooming

The philadelphus in our back garden is absolutely glorious this year. Huge masses of white blooms dangle over the flower bed and fill the air with a subtle sweet aroma.

I often pause on passing to take in a whiff - but have to be careful not to sniff up a bumble bee! Taking photos of bumblebees while buzzing around the philadelphus (which was blowing around in the breeze simultaneously) proved somewhat challenging with the camera I was using, but I caught this one having a rest on a geranium flower...


And this Red Admiral posed very nicely on the pieris. It had previously been basking in the sun on a tea-towel on the washing line, creating a perfect little silhouette when viewed from the other side. Alas, it didn't stay long enough for me to take a picture!


Meanwhile out front the achillea I sowed and planted last year is thriving...I've had to keep clipping it back so it doesn't smother the rudbeckia.

Monday, 2 June 2008

more in the garden

On trying to create a suitable picture for my anthology cover, I took a few more garden pics which I may as well share...





Woke up feeling all clenched up inside this morning. Tiredness can rob you of all kinds of energy - felt drained on all levels. I liken the clenched tightness to the effort it takes to keep your head above water when the levels have risen. Except the water, in this case, is fatigue. My mind makes a foolhardy attempt to overcome it and in doing so I end up feeling stressed for no reason. Never mind. Have a phone call from my Occupational Therapist this afternoon. I both dread and look forward to it. Hmm.
Energy rating: 4/10
Headache: medium

Saturday, 3 May 2008

in our garden

pretty in pink

purple haze

ivy


osteospernum


Can anyone tell me what this plant is?!


pieris


almost open


aglow


azaleas

bluebells


this time in white

casting shadows



forget-me-not

vacant


Energy levels: 4-5/10
Headache: medium high


Yesterday: 4/10, med-high
"The desperate need today is not for a greater number of intelligent people, or gifted people, but for deep people."- Richard Foster