Tulip fever

This spring no doubt you’ll have seen me share pictures of one or two tulips here and on my social channels, and I’m very grateful to organised me who last autumn, not only bought bulbs but also planted them. Or most of them anyway. I found another packet in the greenhouse last week which didn’t quite make it into a pot - well there’s always this year for those…

But the ones that did make it into pots, bloomed and bloomed and brought a very welcome pop of colour to our garden, so this post is sharing those, and celebrating them. I planted them in large plastic flowerpots, so that the plastic pots could be easily lifted out of the terracotta pots once they’d finished flowering - this worked out well and is something I’d do again and recommend.

Tulip bulbs starting to flower inside and outside the circular frame
The buds starting to show their yellow colour, with the lime green euphorbia and black metal pot behind
A single yellowy-peachy flower just starting to open
4 fully open fiery orange and yellow tulips with black stamen on display

From inside the house it was great to get the pops of colour and to watch them change colours, and then one day they were gone. Their petals dropped completely, but soon to be replaced by the alliums. Given my success with the tulips I had high hopes for the alliums, but it was not to be. My ‘old faithfuls’ - the alliums that flower on the patio flowered as they usually do, but the ones in pots were sadly disappointing. They flowered but were floppy small heads, rather than the brilliantly bold spheres I’d been hoping for - next year maybe!

A single yellow tulip tinged with orange, among vivid orange tulips

The tulips also worked out well as we put our house on the market at the end of March and so it was good to have some colour in the garden, and for it not to be “just green” which has been MOH’s observation in years gone by.

These pots were further up the garden, so not visible from the house, and every time without fail I walked past these the colour gave me a surprise - it shouldn’t have, but it did. So there really is something in that saying about not being able to see your whole garden from a single vantage point.

A single open tulip flower edited to show the detail on the petals, hence the blue tinged background

The detail on the petals was fantastic and I couldn’t resist playing with the contrast and colour editing tools a little, well quite a lot - the background foliage is a little on the purple side!

Hopefully I’ll remember to be just as organised this autumn!

Post Comment Love 10-12 June

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.

It’s been mixed weather here this week and I’ve learnt that planning gardening jobs needs some flexibility. We’ve had rain and brilliantly warm sunshine, and where I thought I’d wait for the sun to hit the patio in the afternoon before pottering around there, I quickly remembered it is quite a sun trap, so the last thing I wanted to be doing was gardening.

It’s been great though to spend time in the garden during the day, whether that’s pottering about or enjoying the sun. As ever though my list is longer than I have time for, but it’s good to see the strawberry plants around the garden doing their thing without too much intervention from me. I’m looking forward to seeing how many we actually get to eat this year - wish me luck!

strawberry flowers on a strawberry plant

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A new light

Last month at Grand Designs Live we found another light to admire and lust after. And this wasn’t any old light, though it probably is a pretty old one. It’s a style of light that we’ve looked at for a long time, and always put on the ‘one day’ list. Turns out the one day turned out to be last month, and I couldn’t be happier.

I’ve said before, and I stand by it - the Design Arcade is one of my favourite areas of the show. It’s a single walkway, a corridor through the show which is jam-packed of great stuff. There’s inspiration each side of you, and we often walk up and down here at least a couple of times, each time seeing something new.

Therefore at the show in May, it wasn’t unexpected for us to stop and admire the lights on the Albert & Edward stand, in fact I’d have been more surprised if we didn’t stop and linger for a while. Many of the customised lights caught our eye, and I’ve a feeling at some point we’ll be looking to buy a memory wall light, and actually it was that which got us talking to Duncan.

One of the memory wall lights included an old metal boxed puncture repair kit, similar to one that we’d come across whilst sorting through my FILs garage recently. I’ve a bit of a thing about tins, and knowing that MOH doesn’t share this, I’d slipped the old-fashioned tin into one of the boxes we brought home. He remembered the tin from his childhood and wished he’d kept it - ta dah - good news, I had. These memory boards won’t be for everyone, but when they can include your own memories, then that would make them even better.

Lights on the Albert & Edward stand at Grand Designs Live

But anyway, our new light. It’s the one on the right above. We admired it and carried on wandering around the show, but this time knowing that if we get the place we’re after it will fit perfectly. It’s dangerous to make purchases for properties you don’t yet own, so we needed a plan b - and with viewings on our own home continuing we needed somewhere for it to go that made sense.

We pondered it some more and realised with a bit of light rearrangement we could make this work, so headed back to the stand again and made the purchase. Duncan kindly agreed to drop the light off either on his way back or soon after, which MOH was very happy with as carrying it back on the Jubilee line didn’t really appeal.

It’s been in place in our conservatory for a few weeks now, and it looks great.

GEC industrial style light on a tripod stand in our conservatory
A view of the top part of the light standing from behind
Looking down at the chain and the central ring of the tripod legs
A close up of the detail where the 'strap' of the light meets the triangular top of the stand
The yellow lit filament of the bulb

Thanks Duncan, it was great to meet and chat with you. I’m pretty sure we’ll be down to the shop at Whitstable at some point, especially now we have a potential customised memory wall light vacancy on our ‘one day’ list!

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