The Garden June 2020: The Year Of The Courgette #garden #june2020

It’s rained this month which has been good for the garden even if the month ended with the lawn looking stressed again. Ah me… my ideas to capture the rain off the roof are moving forward, though. The top lawn, more stressed than your average relegation threatened manager will be replaced this autumn by a dry garden. In digging out the grass and creating the new hard base we will lay a pipe from the down-pipes and capture up to 20,000 litres of rain water which we can use on the garden including my lawn without the guilt of a sprinkler using perfectly good potable water (the Textiliste who has camel blood, refuses point blank to countenance such a waste).

Meanwhile the long bed that looked like this in February

and this in March

now looks like this (pictures show how it has developed over the whole month)

It’s a true potager bed with veg – the courgettes of the title mingling with chard, onions, beetroot, mange tout, french beans, tomatoes and corn, next to calendulas, cornflowers and sunflowers. I’ve also harvested the gooseberries – 2.7 kg!

Around the rest of the garden, the abundance of tulips, poppies, daffs and geraniums are now being replaced by lilies, sweetpeas, dahlias and the aforementioned calendulas and cornflowers plus many other staples such as loosestrife and roses.

We also had a mini Glast-no-bury for the Vet who, with her girlfriends couldn’t go this year so I knocked up a rustic bar and the Textiliste a tee-pee and they decorated the garden, had a noisy, socially distanced (sort of) few hours imagining a pyramid stage and a headliner.

And of course, Dog was ever present…

About TanGental

My name is Geoff Le Pard. Once I was a lawyer; now I am a writer. I've published several books: a four book series following Harry Spittle as he grows from hapless student to hapless partner in a London law firm; four others in different genres; a book of poetry; four anthologies of short fiction; and a memoir of my mother. I have several more in the pipeline. I have been blogging regularly since 2014, on topic as diverse as: poetry based on famous poems; memories from my life; my garden; my dog; a whole variety of short fiction; my attempts at baking and food; travel and the consequent disasters; theatre, film and book reviews; and the occasional thought piece. Mostly it is whatever takes my fancy. I avoid politics, mostly, and religion, always. I don't mean to upset anyone but if I do, well, sorry and I suggest you go elsewhere. These are my thoughts and no one else is to blame. If you want to nab anything I post, please acknowledge where it came from.
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33 Responses to The Garden June 2020: The Year Of The Courgette #garden #june2020

  1. Ritu says:

    It’s looking glorious!

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Darlene says:

    Many folks would pay good money to visit a garden as fine as this one! Well done. Also, nice to see the handsome dog there too. xo

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Charli Mills says:

    Ah, gardens and Dog. You inspired me to start my own potager. I see I didn’t plant enough peas! But I’m learning from study your yard and watching Monty Don. My courgettes are beautiful, my perennials are first-year and yet working on getting established and my lemon queen sunflowers are going to be bigger than I thought. And I have watermelon radishes coming on with the happiest nasturtiums on earth. They are smiling, I tell ya!

    Like

    • TanGental says:

      I love a smiling nasturtium… my brother and I had seed wars after they’d flowered as small children. I can still recall those ferocious battles

      Like

  4. What a lovely garden!!! Obsessed with the flowers in the shoes. Congrats on a beautiful bountiful harvest of veggies.

    Liked by 2 people

  5. Wow! The new potager bed is very impressive Geoff. You will be very healthy with all that lovely homegrown crop. I also love your poppies – beautiful.

    Liked by 2 people

  6. A splendid garden tour with impressive produce. The irrigation project looks awesome. I wondered a couple of times whether you might be considering a “Where’s Dog?” series.

    Liked by 2 people

  7. Mary Smith says:

    At a lot of work goes into making your garden looking so lovely, Geoff. Our sweetpeas are still only about 18 inches high and quite a while away from flowering so you are well ahead. It’s amazing the difference.

    Liked by 2 people

  8. Erika says:

    It is stunning what you made of this “little” part of your garden and I am amazed how it all grew! Such a lot of work!
    We remodeled the whole garden, beginning last fall. More flower beds, plants which grew to big removed and put to a different spot, a herbal garden, and even a little brook with waterfall. As soon as I have some time (maybe I even make it his lifetime) I will post some photos. Looking forward! Thanks for sharing your beautiful pictures. So inspiring!

    Liked by 1 person

  9. V.M.Sang says:

    Beautiful. Your potager looks good.

    Liked by 2 people

  10. trifflepudling says:

    C’est magnifique! Many days of labour and much skill.
    The veggie area is particularly wonderful to me.

    Liked by 2 people

  11. Isn’t nature wonderful! With a lot of help from you two, of course, and I’m sure Dog did his bit. Simply stunning,

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Widdershins says:

    Are those be-geraniumed boots real? 🙂 … glorious, as is Dog, of course! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  13. Jennie says:

    Your hard work is paying off! Lovely.

    Liked by 1 person

  14. Chel Owens says:

    May I visit your house, and never leave?

    Liked by 1 person

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