Thread: Rod's Garden
View Single Post
  #5   Report Post  
Old 14-04-2011, 07:05 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Rod[_5_] Rod[_5_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Sep 2010
Posts: 254
Default Rod's Garden

On Apr 13, 11:10*pm, "Bob Hobden" wrote:
"Rod" *wrote ...

Just uploaded some photos taken yesterday.
It's very much a work in progress - none of it is more than 18 months
old.
After 40 odd years as a pro this is the first real garden of my very
own.
The brief from my wife was simple - Flowers, then more flowers and
more again.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/sylvan4

----------------------

After decades of putting up with my passion for the unusual in our garden my
wife also said could we please have pretty now. So I have to be more careful
about where I put the un-pretty. *:-)

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
W.of London. UK


Thanks for all the kind comments everyone. I'm just basking
nicely :-))
I paricularly wanted Bob to see I haven't killed his orchids.
The auriculas are a new passion along with a few alpines (the rockery
isn't in any of those photos) During my working life I had to be
content on the whole with growing stuff more tolerant of rough and
ready care given the scale of the garden I was working on.
Janet - if they get big enough to divide, you'll be welcome to some.
(Have you seen how many varieties there are in the specialist
catalogues? and I want them all ;~))
I'd forgotten the earlier photos of the workshop were there, that
replaces the rotten old damp cold workshop at our former cottage that
we had to leave for major repairs and for new tenants to struggle
with. We are now in a more modern (1960s semi) with this garden
designed to decline gracefully with us.
Judith, don't get too envious of that sideboard - my wife had to wait
40 years for that and she's still waiting for her dressing table.
This woodworking arose from running woodburning stoves and constantly
finding pieces of wood that were too nice to burn. Also at work I was
running a range of Victorian greenhouses by Messengers of
Loughboroughand couldn't bear to watch them falling down so I spent
several winters working on those and learning some joinery along the
way.

Rod