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The Lure of Cluny Gardens
Davidia involucrata with its large creamy white bracts aptly giving the tree its common name of ‘The Handkerchief Tree’, flowered profusely throughout June for the third year in succession while Candelabra Primulas enjoyed the spring rain with the various species flowering from early May through to the middle of July. To the delight of many visitors, along with our neighbours, we continue to feed a good population of Red Squirrels at a number of feeding stations. They constantly bury peanuts particularly in freshly potted plant pots resulting in some odd germinations! One, blind in its right eye, has been regularly spotted over the last year in a number of different areas of the garden. Dead tree trunks and branches have been noticeably stripped of bark which the squirrels have used to line their dreys, and they have been seen raiding the compost heaps for a softer inner lining. The best time to view the squirrels is in the morning and late afternoon but, with shortening day length, they will be active for much of the day. Autumn Other attractive autumn species include Aralia or the Devil’s Walking Stick, Enkianthus, Berberis, Betula and Euonymous. This is not a prolific year for cones after an excellent one last year but there are plenty of Cotoneaster, Sorbus and Euonymous berries to provide seed and to feed the winter migrants throughout the autumn. Even in autumn there are scents within the garden and one of particular note is the burnt sugar smell of the fallen leaves of the Katsura Tree from China and Japan, aptly named in Germany as The Pudding Tree. Do come along and have a sniff! Wendy Mattingley |
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