Sunday, May 26, 2013

Book Review: Merry Hall by Beverley Nichols

     I'm so happy to have discovered the book Merry Hall by the British writer Beverley Nichols.  It's a wonderful, funny book published in 1951 about Nichols' attempts to create a garden at his newly-purchased Georgian manor house by the same name.  I was also excited to learn that this is the first in a trilogy about Merry Hall, followed by Laughter on the Stairs (1953) and Sunlight on the Lawn (1956).  And even though he passed away in 1983, Nichols was quite prolific, leaving us with a slew of other gardening books, novels, mysteries, children's books, plays, and memoirs to read and enjoy.
     "Some fall in love with women; some fall in love with art; some fall in love with death.  I fall in love with gardens, which is much the same as falling in love with all three at once."  So begins Merry Hall, a book that introduces us to a cast of endearing characters such as Oldfield, the gardener; "Our Rose", who is always trying to get her hands on some of the fruits of Nichols' exuberant kitchen garden which produces "battalions of leeks and cauliflowers and sprouts, and enough lettuces to supply a rabbit warren;" Gaskin, the butler; and Nichols' two beloved (and very spoiled) cats, One and Four.  The book is a delightful romp through Nichols' gardening endeavors, told with biting wit and great emotion, an unusual combination in a writer.  As Nichols himself says, "When I begin to write about flowers I lose all sense of restraint, and it is far, far too late to do anything about it."
      There are lots of great stories in this book, such as the one describing how a huge ugly hedge came to be burned down (which of course involves good friends and a bottle of great champagne), but the thing I like best about it is the author's voice, and his gardening philosophies as he frequently spells them out in no uncertain terms. For example, he states that, "begonias are not flowers, they are a state of mind, and a regrettable one at that."  He also announces that he loves geraniums and "anybody who does not love geraniums must obviously be a depraved and loathsome person."  About a previous owner who had planted elms on the estate, he says, "For this alone, he should have been cursed, and so should anybody else who ever plants an elm.  They are useless, hulking brutes of trees, and as soon as Constable had finished painting them they should have been rooted out of the British Isles."
     But Nichols is a romantic in spite of his acerbic wit.  Of the combination of plants blooming in his urn (clematis Jackmanii and apple-blossom geraniums), he says, "It is an enchanting marriage of colour, a sort of floral love-affair, and if you walk down the lane so that you see this exquisite duel against the sombre background of the copper beech, you will feel that life is very much worth living, and that you really had a very bright idea when you decided to be born."  On sharing the joys of a garden, he observes, "There is a great deal of truth in the old saying that in a garden the best fertilizer is 'the shadow of the owner;' it is equally true of the shadow of the owner's friends.  Even flowers need love."  One of my favorite passages is when Nichols descibes the truly important things in life "such as the dew on a spider's web, or the first fragrance of a freesia on a shelf."
    Nichols sums up Merry Hall near the end when he says, "This book - as you may by now have gathered - is not really a book at all; it is only a long walk round a garden, in winter and summer, in rain and in sunshine; and if it bores you to walk round gardens you will long ago have chucked it aside."  What a wonderful walk it is, though; I was actually sad when I finished the book, as though I had to say goodbye to a world I would prefer to visit every day.  I guess I have to console myself with the sequels, as well as his other books on gardens, including Down the Garden Path (1932) and Green Grows the City (1939).

Wishing you happiness in spades,

M.R.S.


     

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Bloomin' Things: May 18, 2013

There are so many things blooming in the yard right now that it might be easier to list what's not blooming this week.  The wiegela is still blooming; the hummingbirds have been enjoying it all week.  There's an azalea that's still going strong even though the others have been finished for a while now.  The strawberries and blackberries are still blooming, and there are starting to be some small, green strawberries on the plants too.  The blueberry bushes now have lots of yummy blueberries forming.  The cheerful yellow snapdragons are full of bloom in front of the dining room window.  A red asiatic lily on the back hill is gorgeous.  The yarrow is blooming (white in the back yard and pink in front).  Swamp milkweed, a newcomer to the garden this year, has already started to bloom.  This is a native that acts as a host plant for butterflies.  And depsite its name, it's actually pretty drought-tolerant once it's established and isn't weedy at all.  The red amaryllis is still blooming and a white and red one has started blooming as well.  A purple ice plant in the rock garden has started blooming.  The pomegranate trees are forming their lovely orange buds, and the cherries are ripening.  And, of course, the roses are just hitting their stride.

Swamp milkweed 

White yarrow; I love it for its ferny leaves.

The sempervivum in the goat pot is "growing long arms" as my yoga instructor used to say.

The snapdragon may have been the first flower I recognized in the garden as a child.  It was one of my grandmother's favorite plants, and I remember her showing me how the "dragon" would bite your finger if you put it in its mouth.  When she passed away, we decided to forego the traditional roses and instead put a huge spray of snapdragons on her casket.  Everyone at the funeral commented how beautiful they were and how my grandmother would have loved them.

Happy snapdragons

An interesting iris

Red asiatic lilies with raindrops. Yes, it's raining again!

A hardy ice plant, or Delosperma cooperi in the rock garden

Amaryllis 

Ripening cherries 

I'll have to keep an eye on the cherries to make sure the birds don't eat them all before I get any.  These are the tart, or pie cherries (it's hard to grow sweet cherries in Georgia). My grandmother cooked them in pies, but I've always preferred to eat them straight off the tree.

An old-fashioned rose of my father's is blooming.  

Speaking of roses, I took a walk last week in a lovely rose garden, stopping to smell all the wonderful blooms, especially enjoying the antique roses.  My favorite that day was a huge old bourbon rose, the rosa 'Zephirine drouhin.'  Introduced in France in 1868, this sweetly-perfumed rose has cerise-colored blooms and thornless climbing canes.  Its scent seemed to evoke a particularly peaceful and happy mood for me.  A few hours after finishing my walk, I was presented with a wonderful offer, which I have since accepted.  To celebrate, I found the rose online that night at The Antique Rose Emporium in Brenham, Texas, and ordered one for myself.  It's already arrived and been planted next to the back garden's gate where I can smell it as I come and go from the garden.  I will post updates as it grows and blooms.  At the moment, it's a scraggly little thing who lost some leaves in transit (which is to be expected), but it will soon recover and become a beautiful, fragrant reminder of that day for me.  I think the moral of the story is that you should always take time to stop and smell the roses.

Wishing you happiness in spades,

M.R.S. 

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Bloomin' Things: May 5, 2013

I can't believe it's already May.  I'm in a state of panic just thinking about all the things that need to get done before it gets too hot.  I definitely need to finish the sod in the next couple of weeks, as well as any transplanting that needs to take place.  I also should probably complete the digging portion for any new flower beds soon, because once it gets hot, I won't feel like doing that kind of exhausting work anymore.

Some of my favorite things are blooming this week.  Still blooming from last week are the irises, some of the azaleas, and the wiegela which is becoming full of hummingbird-attracting blooms now.  Newly blooming are the peonies, blackberries, belladonna lilies (which aren't real lilies; they belong to the amaryllis family instead), and the petunias I used to replace the pansies in the front bed.  The pansies are still blooming, but I know the heat will cause them to become leggy soon.  Instead of throwing them away as most southern gardeners do, I moved them to the back garden to see if I can cut them back this summer and keep them healthy until the fall when they'll be in their element once again.  They have such happy little faces that I can't stand to just toss them into the yard waste.

A lovely peony blossom; they always seem to bloom right before a heavy rain, so I'm very glad I put peony rings around them.

A red belladonna lily (amaryllis) growing in front of the kitchen windows

I planted scabious in front of the lilies last year to give them a blue contrast.  For some reason, this blue doesn't show up well in my photos.  

The shrub roses are continuing their slow and long-lasting show of blossoms; I cut one back in March as an experiment; so far it has the most beautiful red leaves and full, bushy shape, but no sign of flowers yet.  The old-fashioned climbing roses on the back fence are growing long arms which I'll try to weave horizontally across the fence tops once they're long enough; when these canes grow horizontally, you get many more blooms than if they were growing straight up.

A new shrub rose for this year; he's going to live in the front yard next to the bench.  I'll surround it with the rue seedlings I grew indoors this winter.


The foxgloves (digitalis) are also starting to bloom on the back hill; I transplanted a few to grow at the base of the bird feeder earlier this year.  This is the same plant that the heart medicine, Digitalis, is extracted from.  But don't try to make your own rememdy from it; all parts of the plant are toxic, including the roots and seeds.  Some think that the common name, foxgloves, comes from "folk's gloves" as in the gloves of the wee folk, or fairies.  To me, the tubular blossoms look as though they might make perfect little hats for fairies, but I guess they could be gloves too.  Anyway, I love these flowers for their fantastical qualities; they're perfect for a magical woodland fairy garden.

Foxglove (digitalis)


I know his flowers aren't blooming, but I love the goat pot full of hens and chicks; they become beautifully red-tipped in the sun.  For the past several years, a red wasp of some sort has lived inside the goat's head; you can sometimes see him coming and going from one of the eyeballs.   

In bird news, I've discovered a nest of little wren chicks in a holly shrub at the dining room window.  The parents have been very busy popping food into their open mouths.  I don't want to disturb them, but I will try to get a photo soon.  The chickadees in the back yard may also have hatchlings; Sunny keeps standing up, trying to look inside the birdhouse.  If the parents catch her doing this, she'll most likely be chased across the yard (and believe me, the poodle will run; she ran from a moth once).

Of course it's been raining all weekend with temperatures in the forties and fifties, so I haven't been able to do much in the garden.  Instead I've been indoors having tea and biscuits and plotting and scheming for when the rain finally stops.  And it has to stop at some point, right?  Right?

Wishing you happiness in spades,

M.R.S.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

May Day, May Day!

Happy May Day everyone!  Today is one of the Grand Sabbats for Wiccans known as Beltane (aka May Day, Rood Day, Rudemas, and Walpurgisnacht in Germany).  This Sabbat is derived from an ancient Gaelic festival that involved circling a bonfire and decorating doors, windows, and cattle with yellow flowers.  In parts of Ireland, they would also construct a May Bush by decorating a thorn bush with flowers, ribbons, and bright shells.  This may have been a precursor to the Maypole.


The ancient Romans celebrated this day as well, worshipping the spring goddess Maia, who encourages crops to grow.  On this day, the flamen (priests) of Vulcan sacrificed a pregnant sow to Maia.  This month gets its name from this goddess who is also identified with Terra (Earth) and Bona Dea (the Good Goddess).  May 1 is also the day that the Romans honored the Lares, protectors of the city, hanging wreaths on their altars and burning incense.  This connection with May 1 may come via Maia's son Mercury who fathered the mute twin Lares with the former nymph Lara. Non-Christian cults were banned from the 4th century onwards, but unofficial worship of the Lares continued until at least the 5th century.

Maia with Vulcan

One May Day tradition is that of gathering dew from the grass and wildflowers to use in good luck potions.  A Wiccan Beltane ritual is to bathe with a penny wrapped in the washcloth for good luck.  The Celts also had a myth associated with dew gathered on May 1; they believed that Beltane dew promoted beauty and youthfulness.

Even more special than May Day, May 1 is the poodle's birthday.  Happy birthday, Little Miss Sunshine!

I don't think I'll be sacrificing any pigs (pregnant or otherwise) to Maia, but I think it might be a nice gesture to honor her somehow as the growing season gets under way.  If she can help make my flowers, veggies, and newly-placed sod grow, I'll at least think about frying up some bacon to celebrate.

Wishing you happiness in spades,

M.R.S.