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Bumble Bee (Buff-Tailed Bumble Bee (Bombus (Bombus) terrestris?) on Hellebore flowers in a garden centre. |
I've been to a garden centre.
Garden centres aren't the usual haunt for posts on Loose and Leafy but it's often struck me some trees along an old railway line not far from where I live mark a border between the domestic and the wild. Perhaps I should trace their modern origins?
Some have their roots - literally - in gardens below the embankment. What seem to be bushes turn out to be the tops of quite hefty trees, with their trunks disappearing down through the undergrowth into a world of mown lawns and washing lines. There are what seem to be vestiges of cottage and station gardens too - like apple trees with crocosmia at the foot of one of them. And there are damsons which are good to pick and turn into jam as well as sloes.
So I went to the garden centre to visit their cousins.
Garden centres are prim places compared with the brambled acres and nettlebeds I usually feature in this blog; and much better regulated than the little street plants which feature in my urban posts. But they are handy if you want to examine a twig.
There's an apple tree whose windfalls I collect in the autumn - but its branches are high.
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Apple tree bud. (Spartan) |
At this time of year it's hard to distinguish the rail-side damson trees from others crowded around them.
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Damson (Merryweather) |
But, at the garden centre, they are clearly labelled.
I've not come across pears growing wild. That doesn't stop me admiring them when I come across them standing close in a garden centre row.
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Pears (Commice) |
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The top of one of the pear trees close up |
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I'm Following a Tree |
You don't need to write anything down to follow a tree. It's all in the noticing. However, if you would like to share what you see why not think about starting a blog if you haven't one already? (If you'd appreciate a little help, do email. I can advise about setting up one like this (the format is supplied free by blogger)). Or you might like another kind - click on some of the links on the Tree Following page and be inspired! (Wordpress is popular too.)
Maybe you are on Twitter? Use #treefollowing.
On YouTube - document your tree there. If you are planting a new fruit tree in your garden - star in your own movie about digging the hole for its roots! (I recorded birds from below an elderberry tree I followed. (April 2012))
Bloggers - on Friday March 7th and on the 7th of every month from thenTree Following motif on your blog - please feel free to do so.
on, there'll be an opportunity to leave a link to your tree following posts on a linky box. (If you have not come across one before, don't worry, it's perfectly straightforward to use.) And if you'd like to use the
on, there'll be an opportunity to leave a link to your tree following posts on a linky box. (If you have not come across one before, don't worry, it's perfectly straightforward to use.) And if you'd like to use the
For more about tree following - and a growing list of tree followers - click HERE.