It's not for the faint hearted B3. There'll be much rending of teeth and gnashing of hair by all those wot think gardens are places of nature, beauty and tranquillity.
You cannot take a bad photo of your garden @Loxley in my opinion. I love how much green there is, no visible soil, and the blue/grey of the fence/gravel really set if all off. I think it balances out any worries you have about the orange/yellow.
My little offering. Going to move to more perennials over the next few years.
Put to many Dahlias in that front patch their a bit crowded.
The lawns a bit of a mess as I don't bother with it much. Hoping to do away with it as I'm sick of mowing and edging the damn thing. Expand the borders methinks
The impatients picked up after a lacklustre start . Early on I thought I would give them a miss in future but they've turned out quite nice after all.
'The power of accurate observation .... is commonly called cynicism by those that have not got it.
Some pictures of my teeny courtyard. The roses have mostly finished their first flush so it’s a bit in between until they come back. I took a panoramic photo but it’s too large unfortunately… a bee enjoying the geranium which I think is Johnson’s blue and a bloom from Claire Marshall, a harkness rose.
Posts
I think it looks a mess but things with wings disagree.
Not sure about orange and yellow so close together, otherwise happy with the current garden scene
Put to many Dahlias in that front patch their a bit crowded.
The lawns a bit of a mess as I don't bother with it much. Hoping to do away with it as I'm sick of mowing and edging the damn thing. Expand the borders methinks
The impatients picked up after a lacklustre start . Early on I thought I would give them a miss in future but they've turned out quite nice after all.
'The power of accurate observation .... is commonly called cynicism by those that have not got it.
George Bernard Shaw'
a bee enjoying the geranium which I think is Johnson’s blue and a bloom from Claire Marshall, a harkness rose.