Spring half-term in the Beth Chatto Gardens, and time for kids’ activities. A day of bug walks was planned, but the weather thought otherwise – persistent drizzle, sometimes heavy and a cool , blustery north wind lending a very unseasonable feel to the day.
So, no kids (indeed, few visitors of any age)…
Lots of dripping flowers, growing with a lushness fuelled by the damp preceding months…
Foliage bejewelled with mercurial magic…
A few (some very soggy) insects, the bumblebees especially on Salvia, Veronicastrum and Knautia …
… while the Mullein Moth larvae keep munching on, safe in our hands from the bane of pesticide sprays!
And one happy intern on their final day at the garden who had a personalised tour, the gloom lifted by a singing Goldcrest competing for earspace with several Chiffchaffs and Blackcaps, foraging Robins and Song Thrushes, and a low, flyover Red Kite.
But best of all, a call from one of the gardeners to say that one of their rescued Elephant Hawk-moths had emerged! Let’s take this as a portent for a June filled with colour and life,. And some summery weather please…