...but progress nevertheless 😊 Beverly came over on Saturday and we of course put her to work, despite the photo above seemingly showing her just taking life easy 😄
I'm afraid that once again not only am I somewhat behind with my garden posts, I've also been a tad remiss with taking photos of our progress ~ oh well, I'm sure you are used to that by now 😉
In my last garden post, we had got the old strawberry bed moved into its new position and the stone chippings paths started. Since then we've filled what is now the new pond bed with soil and Beverly helped us to get the pond in position. Unsurprisingly it wasn't easy to get level, despite setting it on a good layer of sand, as I'm sure you can tell! In the end we decided that it was just going to have to be "good enough" Hopefully when it's got the aquatic plants in it (which should be arriving by the end of next week) and the plants around the edge have filled out it won't be quite as noticeable 😏
I somehow managed to bruise my right thumb at some point. I really don't recall doing anything dramatic and can only think that perhaps it was when I was digging out the chunky wooden log that the windchime hook is set into, as it was harder to get out that I was expecting!
I finished planting around the pond, "shopping" from elsewhere in the garden. I also hunted around in the wilderness on the other side of the garden to find the little frog house that I'd put there a few years back. It had a fair few snails inside and I don't think any of the frogs that visit/live in our garden have ever used it to be honest, but it looks quite cute set out beside the pond 😊
Adrian filled the second bed with soil from the other two old kitchen garden beds on this side. There wasn't quite enough of the "good" soil to completely fill it up, so I moved the three rhubarb plants into very large pots so we could start to empty the bed they were in. The rhubarb will be found permanent positions in the back garden in due course.
You may recall that way back-in-the-mists-of-time we had a soil mountain that had to be sifted to get out all the pieces of rubble that was mixed in with it. We did make use of some of that rubbly soil though as a base layer in all the old kitchen garden beds, except for the ones where we relocated the strawberries and the rhubarb bed (pictured above), as an added layer of drainage. We've used some of the rubbly soil in the base of the second new bed but what is left will simply be spread over the ground to level the areas out.
It's not a very good photo, I know, but I thought you'd like to see the flower on my pink ornamental dandelion (taraxacum pseudoroseum) ~ it's very pretty and I'm hoping that the white one I have in the same tub will flower this year, too 😊


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