Monday, 6 April 2020

Our todays and our tomorrows.

Good morning.

We are being very lucky with the weather just now and the weekend was beautiful, very bright and sunny but the wind dropped later in the evenings. Yesterday, after getting a few jobs done inside and having lunch, we headed outside to enjoy the weather as well as do some work, well I say work but we don't see it that way more like carrying on with our life what ever the circumstances may be just now.

Over the last couple of days I've been thinking about how all the financial help being offered by the government will have to be repaid. In a way a lot of it is a loan not a grant;
it is wonderful that both employed and self-employed people, families, businesses etc are being given holidays from mortgages and overdrafts and that there are increases in benefits etc. 

However, once the social distancing is over, people begin to return to their places of work and travel is again allowed for domestic, national and international reasons I really do feel there will be austerity plans which will need to be in place for some time. Unfortunately I feel the people who were still enjoying their time in Richmond Park on Saturday (the park was closed yesterday) are some of those who will not understand that, although life will return to some semblance of normality, things will be some time before we have the freedom to be as we want and do as we choose.

With all of this to consider we, on our little homestead, intend to continue with our routine which has changed to something a bit different in the last 4 weeks or so; they say if you change a habit it only takes 22 days for it to become permanent. Our aim is to provide for ourselves as much as possible; this spurred me on over the weekend as I just wanted to be sowing some hope and positivity in all of this so I spent some time getting seeds in the garden. I have parsnips and turnips in the garden and in the conservatory things are looking good to which I have added today more dwarf beans, spring onions and leeks using the multi sow system. It simply felt great to be outside.

This morning I've walked around the garden after we had rain last evening; not much to share but new life is there. The fruit bushes we have are all looking great. The blueberries continue to look really healthy and I am hopeful for even a half decent harvest this year.


The large crate which has strawberry plants in it has been weeded a little, too. 


I need to take some of the plants out as they were too close last year but I'm waiting for the poly tunnel then I'll move them.

I weeded the herb sink, put fresh compost in and sowed some lemon balm.


Something I just love just standing and looking at is the Magnolia Strellata. I feel so lucky that it was in the garden when we moved here, but sad it only lasts a short time when the flowers finally appear. It'll get a good pruning this year as didn't get round to it last year.


The veg bed in the corner of the garden has been a little bit of a pain; the left hand side of it has been sorted. I've properly filled it with compost and garden manure after getting roots, which I seemed to get hold of when I was spreading the first lot of compost, that turned out to be those of last year's unsuccessful spud plants. I hope what I've done works out on that end and I need to do the same at the near end, too. Not sure what I'm going to plant there yet, to my mind it needs to be something which hasn't got too long roots as I don't want the spud ones to take over.


Sorry if the start of my post was a bit of a rant but I feel happy in that we have a good idea of how we would like life to be after all of this but realise things will be different for some time yet.

The garden is a wonderful place to be to just forget for a while and to clear my mind. It lets me know that the things I sow today will, hopefully, grow in the future and sustain us just as we have to work now to sustain a different life by focusing on those tomorrows.

Bye for now, Lou.xx








4 comments:

  1. You're right things won't go back to normal straight away. Businesses will need to crawl back the money lost and the country will have a lot of loans. We can only concentrate on the now. I've been planting some things too. My lemon balm didn't grow last year and I've tried again but nothing yet. Tried spring onions again but last year they were tiny. I have a lot i want to do with my garden, we moved in over a year ago but everything takes time. I love herbs i seem to have a lot of parsley and my thyme has gone wild it's funny because I don't cook with either of them much. I enjoy your post and wish you a good harvest and all the best

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    1. Hi Jen. Thanks for bothering to comment. Hope you find a way to enjoy cooking with your herbs. Stay safe.x

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  2. Whether we like it or not, life goes on, new life will appear and old ones will die off. I do hope that people look at what we have learnt over this time and take it in to consideration when the lockdown is lifted and beyond. We have adapted when we didn't think we would need to, I hope to stick with our new little ways in the future and learn to be less reliant on things we do not produce ourselves. The garden is a great source of the reliance for us and I love to be there, especially at this time of the year. Yours is looking very healthy and raring to go x

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    1. Hey chic. I know we're on the same wavelength and love sharing and talking stuff over with you.xx

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Thank you so much for finding the time to comment. I really appreciate it and will always try to reply.xx