Post Comment Love 18-20 March

Welcome to this week’s #PoCoLo - a friendly linky which I co-host with Suzanne, where you can link any blog post published in the last week. We know you’ll find some great posts to read, and maybe some new-to-you blogs too, so do pop over and visit some of the posts linked and share some of that love. If you were here last week it was great to have you along, if you’re new here this week we’re pleased you’re here.

This week we’ve had some of that Saharan dust and reddy brown rain, which as you can imagine wasn’t so welcome, and soon after my white car looked like I’d spent some time rallying. I hadn’t. The saving grace was that its scheduled clean was postponed until after the sandy-rain, and boy did he earn his money cleaning it.

I’m hoping the weather for the weekend remains favourable as our plan is to sort out our shed - spring cleaning at it’s very worst, or best depending on your viewpoint - but definitely not something for inclement weather. I’d love to claim the photo is from my garden, but it’s another from our visit last summer to Barnsdale Gardens, but isn’t it glorious?

A vibrant pink cone flower against greenery

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Be careful of the hidden pond

That’s not a sign you expect to see in a garden is it, but it’s one that greets you as you enter the Summer Wildlife Garden at Barnsdale Gardens. That’s garden 14 out of the 38 there, and is what I can only describe as the equivalent of a gardener’s theme park. It’s also the Gardeners’ World home of former presenter Geoff Hamilton, and where the programme was filmed at the time.

green signs on a post with greenery behind saying "Please be careful of the hidden pond" and "Mind the step"

The way the gardens are laid out make them easy to take inspiration for domestic gardens, it’s so easy to imagine how they might work and that you’ve just stepped out of a house and into the garden. I think this photo shows exactly what I mean.

a bench in the background with hedges/greenery behind.  A central lawn with square pavers as stepping stones forming a right angled path around the hidden pond

The hidden pond is in a corner of the grass and the paved stepping stones aim to lead you on a safe route, though I imagine with the planting the pond is easy to miss, so wouldn’t work for everyone. But it’s a great spot.

The hidden pond in a corner of the lawn with raised planters at the rear

The garden was created using principles outlined in the BBC’s Living Garden series and includes features to attract wildlife and safe places for them to live and hibernate. The plants too have been chosen to encourage wildlife and give them reasons to stay. The honeysuckle, hebe, rose and foxgloves, as well as the hostas all have their part to play, as does a spot to sit and enjoy the space and its inhabitants.

A rustic birdbath made out of stacked twisted tiles with a wooden garden bench in the background
A close up of the twisted stack of the birdbath

The other endearing feature in the garden is the bird bath - as well as providing a space for birds it gives a focus point for the lawn. I love its column and could imagine sitting in the garden, enjoying the space and letting my eyes wander and wander through every spot. A totally relaxing space, don’t you think?

I was featured on Blogger Showcase

Love This #96: Pencil art

We’re heading to the Derwent Pencil Museum in Kendal for today’s post, and yes, a museum for pencils. It was the most fascinating place, but it turns out that I’d been there before, many years before though I had no recollection of it. When our cottage host told us there was a pencil museum, it definitely piqued my interest and while it was a little further away from the trips we had planned, it was a great one to add into our itinerary.

I’ll share more about the museum, its stories and the vintage pencil sets on show another day but first something else that you’re probably not expecting - and that’s miniature sculptures on the tip of a pencil.

Yes.

They’re by sculptor and artist Jasenko Dordevic from Bosnia and Herzegovina. He’s self taught and tried many pencils before finding the right one - if you’re interested it’s the pencil with the highest ‘H’ grade. It definitely requires way more patience, and skill, than I have - but I’m very happy to admire them. The short stubs of the pencils below have the letters DERWENT on their tips, aren’t they amazing?

pencil stubs with carvings made out of the lead  - the letters here spell Derwent

And if letters weren’t enough, there are miniature sculptures too - I can’t quite work out the middle one though (I’m no good at those picture puzzles either), but the acorn and the weightlifter on the first and third pencils respectively, are more than amazing.

Tiny sculptures on the end of the pencil tip - including an acorn and a weightlifter

I can’t even imagine how he came up with the idea, let alone had the patience to perfect these. Truly a skill.

These alone would make a great ‘Love This’ post, but there’s more. I’ve decided that I must be a bit of a pencil geek, as I could have spent much longer in the museum and I already left with many photos - and it took me a fair while to choose which set I’d purchase too. It’s a shame that the cafe wasn’t open (because of Covid restrictions) as I think MOH would have happily have sat there with a coffee waiting for me!

I think he’s worried that I might try and replicate the display below - and he’s right, I like it, but I have no plans to do so (yet) - but I can admire it. I think I’d prefer to use my pencils, though I’ve not used the ones I bought a huge amount, but I’m hoping to make more time for that soon.

Coloured pencils laid into a wheel by shade and mounted on a black background in a frame and hung on the wall

The final pencil art I’m sharing is also from the museum, and this has an older feel to it - but is no less beautiful. While I like the rainbow circle above, this one really captured my imagination. To me it has a more prairie feel, and reminds me of many patchwork star designs too. Though to be honest I’m happy just looking and enjoying and not giving it much more thought.

Green, yellow, grey and blue pencils laid out to form a star and framed
A close up of the same display showing short yellow pencils in a 3/4 circle (with the lead facing outwards) - in the inner circle the string from the top of each pencil is entwined and twisted to form a knot and 'tail' for the shape

But then again, when I peered closer and saw the detail of the pencils pinned int its place I was smitten all over again.

I was featured on Blogger Showcase