My garden in July

Thankfully this month has been a lot kinder to my roses, they’ve continued to flower and just as the last (the fourth of the summer) arrived I was contemplating moving them back out from their shelter. Needless to say, that’s been postponed for a little bit - but it’s very different to the last few months where they’ve been a bit crispy and then bombarded with pests. They’re resilient plants aren’t they?

A pink rose flowering against the black trellis

July was all about flowering succulents, many tiny apples and ripening the tomatoes from the two plants we had. There’s been more flowers blooming too, but it’s the succulents that have really held my attention this month. I’m not sure I’ve ever had one that’s flowered before, but it has been a complete joy ever since I spotted the first signs that something might be happening…

The start of the succulent flowers
tiny pink flowers and more buds to follow on this succulent
A stem of pink flowers rising from the succulent

The flowers are dying off now, and I’m continuing to observe the plant to see what happens to it next - hopefully it won’t mean the end of my plant, but I suspect it won’t flower again next year though I’d be happy to be proven wrong. It has been a year of succulents, as I seem to have gained quite a few more at this year’s Gardener’s World Live - and more impressively have found pots for all of them.

Another three pots with succulents in on the patio
Looking down on a pink tipped leaf succulent

Finding pots for my new plants has been a bit of a challenge, and I’d completely forgotten about the painted pot that the aeonium is in, even though it was right in front of me in the garage. Luckily though the small crab apple tree doesn’t require any kind of pot, though it is fully laden with apples this year, and would no doubt be grateful for some help supporting its weight.

Plenty of green crab apples on this branch
Crab apple tree branches growing towards the brick wall

I did need to give some of the branches a quick trim as they were growing over the fence and into, then up the wall. As the month has progressed and the sun has shone they’re turning a delicate shade of blush. It’s currently looking like there’ll be plenty to make crab apple jelly, and I’m hoping that I’ll be able to use some of the fully laden branches in an autumn wreath, but we’ll see.

The blush of the ripening branches of crab apples

I bought two tomato plants from the garden centre this year and they’ve happily been growing away. I like to grow varieties that you generally don’t see in the shops, and this year I’ve had this black fruit and a smaller but very sweet red tomato. After picking the first of the black varieties we learnt they weren’t quite ready to eat, but they soon ripened indoors. The tops of the black tomatoes turn a vibrant red when they’re ripe, and they taste much better that way too.

a string of black tomatoes on the plant
A string of tiny tomatoes red nearest the plant and green waiting to ripen

They have found a new spot in the garden too, a slightly less salubrious location close to the bins and the sick bay inhabited by the bay trees (which by the way have made a remarkable recovery and are now green again and growing new leaves). It’s a sunny spot though and I think the plants there - both the bay trees and the tomatoes - have benefitted from this.

I’ve picked all our tomatoes and brought them indoors to fully ripen. The remaining plants have been composted and the soil has been reused in the new and rather large olive pot - more on that in another post, and of course this also means I’ve two more pots at my disposal for any new plants…

The daisies that I thought might not make it flowered, which was a relief, though they’re back to not looking too healthy at the moment, so I’ll continue to keep my fingers crossed for these longer term.

A single daisy flower in the pot
The pink astrantia in flower

My astrantias flowered for the first time - yay! - and the globe thistles which I bought earlier this year at the Newark Flower Show also flowered starting with the palest of blues. I’m hoping their colour will develop further, and they too, along with the roses, will move to somewhere where we can see and enjoy them!

a very pale blue globe thistle

In the borders by the garage the plants have continued to thrive, a little too much while we were away if I’m honest, and I’m still catching up with taming them. It’s a case of thinning and taking off some of the height as while the bushes would give us some privacy from the road, they also stop us seeing what’s going on!

the seedhead of the black leafed bush enjoying the sun
the fading flowers of the achillea complete with cobwebs

It was great to catch the sun on these two, and the bonus of a web on the achillea too.

Santolini in a terracotta pot in the foreground, with two peonies in David Austin roses pots behind

I’ve also added a santolini to my growing number of pots this year - we’ve seen this many times on holiday in both France and Italy, so it’s nice to have a tiny bit of that in our own garden. I brought home two peonies from my dad’s garden (he gave them to me, honest) and in my pot shortage I’ve needed to reuse some rose pots, but the peonies seem to be doing well which is a relief.

I’m joking about the pot shortage, but at times it’s been quite the thing. I know that the big way to solve this is to get on and get the garden design sorted, but the fear is real. I mean it’s great to have a blank canvas, and while I have quite a few plants to add to the new beds I suspect they won’t go as far as I think, there is the pressure (from myself mainly!) to get the layout right. It’s likely that we’ll get someone in to help transform my ideas into real plans, but that’s as tricky as getting started myself.

And in the meantime I’ll be keeping an eye out for the female stag beetle that wandered across the patio and onto the gravel for a bit of mountaineering to see if she, or anymore stag beetles make a return. So far this year there’s been 14,081 spotted in the UK, including ours. We used to see them in our last garden, usually earlier in the summer, but this is the first time we’ve seen one here though hopefully not the last.

Post Comment Love 15 - 17 August

Hello there, and welcome to this week’s #PoCoLo - a relaxed, 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, comment and share some of that love.

Please don’t link up posts which are older as they will be removed, and if you see older posts are linked then please don’t feel that it’s necessary to comment on those. If you were here last week it was great to have you along, if you’re new here we’re pleased you’ve joined us.

My impromptu and unplanned online break has continued, and I’m not sad about it. There’s definitely something about August where things are a bit more relaxed and laissez faire, isn’t there?

We’ve had a bit of a roadtrip this past week though visiting MOH’s family at the weekend and then straight onto Norfolk to visit my parents. It was great to see everyone as always, but both MOH and I think we’ve had two weekends, and so have been shocked to discover it’s actually two days later than we think!

My photo this week is the last of my tomatoes, which I thought looked great together and made for a rather striking photo. They taste pretty good too.

Have a great week.

red and black homegrown tomatoes in a white pasta bowl on a wooden chopping board

Making my Mystery Block of the Month: June 2025

You’ll have seen that I plan to complete Sherri’s mystery block a month quilt and in my last post I shared the test blocks which I made into my eighth charity quilt, today I’m sharing the centre block I made for my own quilt.

And yes, this is June’s block in August - I’m still catching up with myself and a more relaxed blogging approach this month is also contributing. But that’s life, hey.

We’re also back on the stars, this month’s is a Happy Friendship Star and the star also means we’re back on the navy blue fabrics, which I’m using for alternate blocks.

Learning from my test blocks

The purpose of my ‘stretch project’ is to up my skills, and this month that clearly also includes reading all of the instructions. Somehow I missed trimming my Half Square Triangles (HSTs) in the Raspberry Plus quilt which also probably explains why I wasn’t overly happy with my joins.

This time though I’ve learnt.

Trimming my HSTs - something I'd missed previously

And my points were much better, but still not perfect - though good enough!

Assembling the Happy Friendship star - and pressing those seams

I spent more time than I should have working out which borders were required for this month’s block - and that was even after many looks at and double checking my handy drawing. But I got there, and the right borders are in the right place.

The borders added to the central block - green on the upper corners, light florals on the lower corner

It’s turned out ok, hasn’t it?

The completed block hanging on my bookcase with the previous months blocks

I even spent some time ‘fussy cutting’ the centre square to get the pattern centred, and I think that was definitely worth the time it took. So that’s six months in on this mystery block quilt, six months of blocks left - and then there’s the assembling. I think it’s going to look really special, but there’s a while to go yet!