I'm not a gardener. And this blog is mainly for hedgerow plants (with a bit of seaweed thrown in).
HOWEVER . . . when I went out with my camera to advertise the up-coming stuck-foot post . . the wind was blowing and everything was waggling about: branches, leaves, grass - and me!
I'd taken only about fifteen steps before I gave up and scurried home.
So I borrowed a garden and stuck my foot there - there where walls gave some protection from the wind.
Then I plonked myself in the only available pool of sunlight and set myself to see what I could see.
I saw beautiful red cotoneaster leaves on the branches of a bush that had been grown as a standard.
I saw beautiful red cotoneaster berries in an empty terracotta flower pot.
I saw a red chrysalis (or something along those lines) in the pot-bound roots of a box bush stood in water before being untangled. And I saw a ripple of light in the water.
I saw heart shaped leaves and dead leaves.
And I saw an old vine branch with the dried out twiddly bit that would have fixed it to something if it had found something to fix itself to.
And all this time - I didn't move a foot. Not the slightest slither. A stuck foot post.
This is the idea.
There's more about it on the Stuck Foot Post Page.
Are you a Stuck Footer? If so - there will be a link box for Stuck Foot Posts on next week's Loose and Leafy. (21st - 25th January 2015)
* * *
And now for the present. Well, it's not exactly a present. It's a 'You can have this book if you review it on your blog' situation.
It's the Royal Horticultural Society's 'Companion to Scented Plants'. It arrived before Christmas and I really have been too busy to give it proper attention. Do you have time to give it yours?
I also have a problem with this book. It's probably to do with not being a gardener. It's ever so thick. (And heavy!) It has masses of pictures and loads of information. There are chapters about
Planning Your Garden
Planting With Trees and Shrubs
Walls and Vertical Planting
Roses
Herb Gardens . . .
those sorts of things.
And each chapter has a list of plants with descriptions.
Which is all good.
So what's my problem? I like honeysuckle to be called 'Honeysuckle' and have 'Lonicera' in brackets. I like jasmine to be called Jasmine and hyssop to be under 'Hyssop' not 'Hyssopus'. I'm a heathen. A barbarian. A street urchin. Latin is useful. Latin is important. Latin should be there. But me? If I see Latin coming first my prejudices run riot and I get cross. Which is not fair to the book.
So . . .
as many of you are gardeners, there's bound to be one who can give this book its proper credit. Volunteer to review it by saying so in the comments (by the end of February) and I'll pick a person at random and post it to you. How's that?
(I'm really sorry but the offer has to apply to Europe only - (including whatever we're called - UK? GB? something along those lines!) - postage costs!)
(I'm really sorry but the offer has to apply to Europe only - (including whatever we're called - UK? GB? something along those lines!) - postage costs!)





