Bee Positive

So as some of you may be aware, Kate has wanted bees for a long, long time and constantly goes on about it. We have many bee books on the shelves, a beehive shaped composter, bee jewellery, and the list goes on. However, I have not been a strong advocate, as I think we’re probably a little too busy at the moment and whilst making our own honey sounds like a nice idea, I suspect that it would be a lot more work that it seems and it would probably annoy a lot of our neighbours too.

In the meantime, we always try and plant lots of bee (and butterfly) friendly plants that will hopefully help them prosper and attract them to the area. And we’ve put up a little bee house, to help them out (as mentioned in some earlier posts, 1, 2)

Well it looks as if our efforts have started to really pay off, becasue we noticed today that we now have have our own colony of bees!

The dance

I was looking out of our kitchen window after breakfast and noticed the shadow of something swarming around. I assumed it was going to be flies or mosquitoes or something, but didn’t think they would be big enough to really make a shadow. So I thought I better go and see what it was and what they were attraced to. Turns out, we had a load of bees (or at that time, I thought possibly wasps) attracted to our stack vent!

Bee butt

As it turns out, the tiling around the pipe hasn’t been fixed properly and the tiles have slipped down, leaving a gap around the pipe, which the bees have decided is the best place in town to stay for the summer.

Excuse the mess

So this is going to be something we’ll have to add on the the list of jobs that need doing. It probably explains why the bathroom ceiling has mould around that area. The roof tiles have a few missing bits and pieces, so it might be worth doing a proper job on it all.

Anyway, I tried getting a few close up shots (easier said than done), and I am fairly sure that they are Tree Bumblebees (Bombus hypnorum) which are a relatively new species to the UK.

Photoshopped

Importantly, they tend to only stay for the summer before moving on and don’t cause any damage. So we are going to try and see if we can cohabit with them for a little while and see how things go.

Whilst I was clambering on the utility room roof, I also noticed that the bird box I mounted last year actually fell off.

What a mess

I will see if I can find some replacement slate and fix it up, as apparently this is the type of place that Tree Bumblebees actually like to nest, even if the birds continue to ignore it.

If there are any updates, we’ll keep you posted here.

In Bloom

Following the snow, the garden was really looking pretty rough and there was a time when it looked like it wasn’t going to ever grow back. Even when it wasn’t snowing, we had a lot of rain over the winter and most of the ground had been saturated for months. Fortunately we had quite a good spring and some really hot sunny weather so things did start to improve. So we finally decided to get the tools out and start improving the garden. Although we had to pop to the garden centre first and see what we could put in the gaps that had been left.

This also meant that we finally got around to trying some of the compost we had made, for the first time. This was easier said than done as the flap at the bottom had never been opened and it turns out that a couple of years of grass and weed growth (and maybe some wonky craftmanship) made it almsot impossible to open the damn thing.

No beehive

Once we did get it open, there wasn’t much to go with, as the cardboard we used hadn’t really mulched down. But what we could get was good. It stank quite a bit, but I think that means it’s good.

Stank

We only had a little bit of bought compost so tried to fill it out with ours to make it go as far as possible. We just about did it.

First up was the rhubarb. This is one that had actually started to grow before the snow hit, so got completely covered. It seemed to be pretty hardy though, which we were thankful for. Although, as you can see from all of the slug pellets in the background, we have other problems at the moment.

Eaten but not gone

One things we decided to do (mostly because nature had decided to start doing it for us) was plant some stuff in the small boarder around the path beside the house. Previously, we tried to keep it tidy and clean, but weeds love it. I think originally the previous owner had put bark chips over it all, but they soon broke down and left nothing but mud. And after the mint we planted last year went crazy, we thought we’d just stick a load of it down there and see how it does.

Although one of the problems with that bit, is the fact that it soil is very clay-y, so digging there involves big chunks of orange mud coming out, whcih have now baked in the sun, leaving big chucks of orange rock.

Shitty soil

Whilst at the garden centre we did see some nice hanging baskets, and there is a bracket right next to the front door that we’ve never used, so we thought we’d give it a try. We even bought special moss and something called ‘biscuits’ that are both supposed to help retain moisture. It’s only simple but we thought we’d see how it goes.

We’re old people now

And we also saw a load of nice alpine plants, which we’ve always liked, but never had anywhere to really put them. Fortunately we do have an old strawberry pot that never really worked for strawberrys and we saw the garden center have used them for alpines instead, so thought we’d try that too.

Dwarf plants

It looks quite good, and cerainly makes good  use of an empty pot that’s been sitting around for years.

No strawberries allowed

One funny things we kept noticing was the number of bees flying into the front room window over and over again, and in the same place. And whilst we were doing in the garden we realised why. It was right next to the the bee and insect house we bought years ago, that apparently was becoming popular. So popualr that some are even fighting over the spaces.

If you build it, they will come.

After just a few weeks of yet more glorious sunshine, the garden really started to kick into action (and I got a new camera lens so spent some time taking lot more photos).

Straw-brary

I can’t even remember what all of these flowers actually are

Not orange

Last year’s strawberries are even doing pretty well.

Also eaten

And the blackberries are even doing good too. Last year they didn’t do much, but the bees have been loving it this year, and I can see a few fruits coming through. This variety seems to be a climber more than a bush, like our last one, so we’ve probably planted it in the wrong place, but we will see what we can do.

At least the bees find it pretty

The lupins are trying

Although these lupics are way ahead.doing really well.

Even the hanging basket was doing really well (although we do have to water it quite a lot, even when it rains cos it’s undercover)

Not hanging around

Too many flowers ruin the pot

Last year’s new flowers have come back this year too, and most of them fuller than before, especially the thistles. We always try to plant bee and butterfly friendly plants, and the thistles seem to be doing the job.

Rub pollen on me

The lavender is back

And the kitchen garden is doing really well again. We really had no reason to worry about the rhubarb at all. A few bits didn’t really survive, like the rosemary (because of the freezing rain) and some of the smaller plants were being overgrown by the mint. We replaced the dead bits and pruned the mint as much as we could.

No stopping

In fact, the kitchen garden was going so well that we were able to take quite a few bits out and pot them up for other people. Not that we have many people to give them to, but we’re still getting more strawberries off them and the chamomile is going good enough for me to plant somewhere. Maybe it will grow in a terrarium.

Cuttings

I must admit that it’s not just the glorious Devon weather that has helped the garden grow. We have still been making the plant feed from our bokashi bins over the winter and using that on our plants. Weirdly, we stored the feed in an old fizzy drinks bottle cos that’s what we had lying around, and after sitting on the side for a few months, we realised the bottle was completely solid, and after opening it, it actaully fizz-ed up. Some how it had started to ferment in the bottle and became carbonated. Thankfully there are no kids around to confuse it with bottle of cola, so we’re good.

It stopped doing that after a while (thankfully), and we put it in an old washing up liquid bottle that had a pump on it, for a perfect way to deliver a tiny bit of feed in the water. As you can see, we’ve barely used any of it and probably won’t need to use much more.

Special Sauce

 

 

Living on a prayer – part 3

[Check out part 1 and part 2, if you haven’t read them already.]

With the carpet down, it meant that we could finally move a few things back into the front room (which we did later that afternoon).

We also brought down some boxes from the loft, which contained a load of flat packed bookcases that we had ordered back in January (cos it was my birthday and Ikea hadn’t opened yet). It took a while to actually build them all, but it was so much nicer than the random book cases and shelves we had there before.

At the same time, we also ordered in some blinds. We did the blinds ourselves in the two bedrooms we decorated, so this should be fine. Although bay windows are a bit awkrard as you have to the know the size of the blinds, to know how big the blinds need to be. Fortunately the company provides you with a guide on how to fake it with some cardboard. And it basically worked.

As well as my birthday, we also had Kate’s birthday whilst we were decorating, and we got a couple of terrariums to put around the house.

This enclosed one came from a shop in Exeter called Hutch, that we really like, and it’s doing really well.

It took a while but we got all of the shelves up and drilled them all together, and pleasingly found that we had some space left of some of the shelves (partly because the book case is bigger, and aortly becasue we have kept some of our junk of the old book cases that are now upstairs). A perfect excuse to buy more book (and more Lego).

Nice organised book cases means we finally got all of our books together, inludin the many garden/planting/growing/foraging books.

Oh, and we finally got rid of the horrible table that the previous occupant left behind. It was nice to see the back of it partly cos it was old and skanky, but also because we had no dining room whilst decorating, so we had to resort to eating breakfast, lunch and dinner in the kitchen with a couple of the old chairs. Not only was this difficult, but it took up what little room we have in the kitchen anyway, so when we finally got the new table in, and the old chairs got taken to the recycling centre, the kitchen felt massive! (It didn’t last long, it feels tiny again now).

The table was nice and simple and the wood and differnt coloured chairs all matched in with the decor of the new rooms. And despite trawling around all of the furniture shops over the May Day bank holiday weekend, we ended up going with John Lewis, as it was the only one we saw that wasn’t completely awful.

It still needs a few finishing touches, maybe a few more pictures and definitely a clock, but it’s 1000x better than it was before.

Much tidier (except for the charger cable)

When we get a few more things added in, we’ll post another update.