Sunday 2 April 2017

Spring in the Garden

 This year the flowers seem taller, brighter, and more full blown than previous years
especially the Fritillaria meleagris - snakeshead fritillary 
May be it was the milder winter minus snow or hard frosts
I love my Fritillaries and always look forward to their Spring arrival
Charles Rennie Mackintosh admired them too 
It was when he spent a year living in Walberswick, Suffolk that he first saw them growing and where he did his painting





Snakeshead fritallaries are classic hay meadow flowers which have suffered as a result of modern agricultural methods and no longer survive in the quantities that they did. However, there is a meadow close to us that is occupied by 80% of the wild fritillaries in this country, a meadow which has always been treated traditionally. The meadow is in C9th Saxon town Cricklade lying beside the infant river Thames. Although my fritillaries are nearly over, the meadow ones tend to flower much later and will be coming into bloom in a couple of weeks until the end of the month. 
If you are travelling in southern Oxfordshire and would like to see them you can find more information here.

37 comments:

  1. Hello Rosemary, Congratulations on your beautiful fritillaries, which are thriving so well. I used to watch the wildflowers in the U.S., but have never seen a pattern like this, although the white ones also have their own special quality.
    --Jim

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hello Jim - every year they are a pleasure to see

      Delete
  2. Your spring flowers look so happy! I have only seen photos of Fritillaries. They are the perfect material for fairy skirts. ;-)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree Catherine - they would make pretty skirts for girl fairies, and also cute little hats for boy fairies.

      Delete
  3. What a lovely flower and one I'm not familiar with at all.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They are picky little flowers as to where they will and will not flourish, but luckily they like our Cotswold garden.

      Delete
  4. Wauu... all these flowers make the spring. Your photos are always so beautiful.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Your comments are always extremely generous - thank you very much♡

      Delete
  5. These are so beautiful Rosemary - I'm familiar with them but have never seen them growing in local gardens.
    Glad your milder winter helped bring an amazingly pretty Springtime to the always lovely Cotswolds.

    Hugs - Mary

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dear Mary - I don't think that they grow in the States - mainly parts of Europe that have similar conditions as we have here - they are particularly happy growing in the Cotswolds which I am happy about. Take care dear Mary♡

      Delete
  6. So beautiful, Rosemary! I love your Fritillaries and I can understand well, why you love them. Happy gardening and new week! We still have a little snow.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dear Satu - hope that your snow soon goes on its way for you - is it unusual for you to still have snow at this time of year?

      Delete
  7. They thrive for me but get eaten before they even manage to open a bloom. Pheasants adore them. A few years ago I bought a tray of plants from the local nursery, about £20 worth as I recall, and left the tray outside the kitchen door whilst I went to change into gardening gear. When I returned just a few minutes later only the stalks remained.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh dear! I have mine inside a circle of box hedging which probably helps to protect them but makes it difficult for me to photograph them. I have to watch out for the red lily beetle who likes to eat the blooms and also any stray snails are partial to the flowers too.

      Delete
  8. Wonderful, Rosemary. Your fritillaries look beautiful - I am merely a garden labourer and had never heard of them until Mrs B introduced us; they are so delicate and graceful. Rusty Duck's right about pheasants - the little tinkers decimated ours the year before last. I saw a bunch (if that's the right collective noun) of ritillaries at Nymans, a NT gardfen in Sussex, just last week. Gorgeous. they had been planted amongst daffodils in grass, between trees - looked super.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That is the way to grow them they like the companion of grasses around them.

      Delete
  9. What a lovely introduction to spring-those fritillaries really lift the spirits. The snakeshead is not indigenous to Canada but we have others, one of which has seeds heads used like wild rice. I'm a fan of the design work of CRM. I had no idea about his year in Walberswick which is a village very close to my home town. On my next trip home I'll do a little investigating.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was a sad period of CRM's life - he had left Scotland because he could not make enough money there and then things did not improve in Walberwick so he moved to southern France where he died in Port-Vendres.

      Delete
  10. Such dainty flowers. I can imagine how much you look forward to them and the beautiful daffodils, each Spring.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Because they look like grasses first of all you don't notice them and then suddenly one morning you become aware that they are blooming once again - lovely

      Delete
  11. Hi Rosemary, how nice that the spring bloomer are doing so well this year in your neck of the woods. I love Fritillarias as well, but have never seen them in reality only on photos. Yours are totally stunning like pieces of art.
    Wishing you a wonderful week with nice spring weather to enjoy the outdoors!
    Warm regards,
    Christina

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can still remember the first time that I first saw them growing and was charmed by them

      Delete
  12. Marvelous your bulbs are doing much better than previous year.
    Ever so pretty.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think that the flowers have enjoyed having a mild winter Margaret

      Delete
  13. Those snakeshead fritillaries remind me of a pair of trousers I had in the 80s.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Such a wonderful quantity of this beautiful Spring flower , gorgeous sight !

    ReplyDelete
  15. Stunning plant I've always admired but not so common up here.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think that the very first one that I ever saw was CRM's fritillary painting when we lived in Glasgow.

      Delete
  16. Your garden must be beautiful to wander round! The fritillaries are incredible aren't they, how does nature come up with a plant that has checks! Amazing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree Amy - they are unbelieveable little flowers - love them

      Delete
  17. I have enjoyed seeing your Fritillarias every spring, you have had a wonderful display this year. Sarah x

    ReplyDelete
  18. Hi Rosemary, I've just been catching up with some of your posts. I love your blog so much, I know I don't comment often but you share so many interesting things and your photos are beautiful. I have a set of Mackintosh Flowers note cards and the fritillaries is one of the designs in the set. I was so glad to see the artwork here. I have had the cards for many years and I use them sparingly because I've never seen another set as nice as this, the cards are printed on heavy, glossy paper and they're really large. I hope you have a lovely Easter!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lovely to hear from you Jennifer - delighted that you know Mackintosh's lovely paintings which are not so well known as his furniture and architecture designs. I fell in love with his work when we were first married and lived in Glasgow.
      Why don't you keep the cards you have left, have them framed and hang them on your own walls?

      Delete
  19. Salve a primavera, uma bela e alegre estação. Por aqui, no Brasil, estamos no outono, estação que acho muito bonita, pela cores que enfeitam a natureza.

    ReplyDelete

❖PLEASE NOTE❖ Comments made by those who hide their identity will be deleted


“You can't stay in your corner of the forest waiting for others to come to you - you have to go to them sometimes”

― A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh