2024 – CHW (images to follow)
Another dead Snakebark maple near George’s Hut.
Lomatia tinctoria was only planted in 2020. It is developing into a bushy, vigorous, shrub.
Acer palmatum ‘Linearilobum’ normally has exceptional autumn colour but not this year.
Camellia sasanqua ‘Plantation Pink’ gets better and better.
I had hoped to see a flower on Camellia trichocarpa but the buds are still tight.
Plenty of colour on one of Dad’s unnamed Camellia x williamsii seedlings above Crinodendron Hedge.
Rhododendron nobleanum now full out on the Drive.
First two flowers on Camellia japonica ‘Debutante’.
Loropetalum chinense var. rubrum ‘Pearl’ now full out.
Next year’s crop of herbaceous plants all looking good.
The leaves Euonymus hamiltonianus ‘Popcorn’ turn white before they drop.
Loropetalum ‘Daybreak Flame’ also well into flower.
Good colour on a Hamamelis by the till.
A large dead sweet chestnut felled yesterday at the back of Burncoose House.
A good clump of Rhododendron lutescens in Burncoose Stable Yard in full flower today down from the Top Lodge.
2023 – CHW
Something approaching autumn colour on Nyssa sinensis.
2022 – CHW
At last a bit of colder weather and a hint of near frost.
A large number of huge ripe seeds dropping under a Camellia reticulata. Almost like wind blown apples on the ground. The squirrels have already found them as you can see.
2021 – CHW
A fine crop of self-sown Dicksonia antarctica, Picea and Betula seedlings on the hot dry bank above the fernery.
We planted this Metasequoia glyptostroboides ‘Amber Glow’ deliberately in a main drain overflow from the drive. These trees delight in growing in boggy waterlogged situations as here.
Magnolia (Manglietia) sapiensis which was so superb in its first flowering this year is growing strongly. A few cuttings or scions for grafting appear to have been taken! Note the rusty brown indumentum on the new growth shoots for next year.
2018 – CHW Metasequoia glyptostroboides showing its wonderful coppery autumn tints in Penvergate.
A pheasant has hit the best bathroom window! Plenty of glass in the bath and it seems to have survived its mistake.
Two great seed discoveries today in Forty Acres by Jaimie:Schefflera macrophylla has produced flowers and a huge now ripe set of seeds unseen until now. The seed head stalks are covered in reddish-brown hairs. The seed head is about 4ft across when fully extended.
Jaimie and his team successfully felled the tree which brought down the phone lines this weekend.
2015 – CHW
Sunny but severe hail storms impede my plans today or rather force me to complete the fucking Christmas cards in time to post on 1st December. Lizzie goes ‘hunting’ near St Columb and stays dry. Typical of weather differences between north and south Cornwall.
The Camellia x williamsii hedge on the drive is just coming out about a fortnight after Camellia ‘November Pink’. This lot have never been named and have a much more upright habit than ‘November Pink’. Clearly the cross dates from the late 1920s and they have been pruned more than once with great success.
The pictures are poor but they do show blue or great tit damage where the flowers have been partially dismembered to get at the nectar at the base of the flower. Since they have no scent there cannot be much nectar! Pre the first World War bullfinches did the same and several gardeners deliberately carried foldable 4.10 shotguns to deal with the problem. JCW records a tally of 40 shot on one day in his diary entries which will shortly be online. Some of these poachers’ guns can still be found here today though I will not say where. They fired bullets not cartridges and can hardly have been accurate at over 15 feet. I tried one on the lawn on a tin can a few years ago with staggeringly inaccurate results. No wonder bullfinches are so wary of people! I believe in Kent you could get a licence to shoot them in orchards for the same reason until the 1960s.
1991 – FJW
First proper ice of the winter.
1934 – JCW
Gerald Loder has had a very bad stroke but has held out for some days.
1926 – JCW
The Sasanquas are very pretty, also the Stransvaesias. Several blooms on Lutescens and the two Decorums have flowers.
1916 – JCW
An Rho thomsonii shows flower, some R fastigiatum and that is about all. C sasanquas are nice.
1914 – JCW
Some of the lapagerias are very good. Camellia sasanqua is good. Solanum nice. A cold east wind has come.