Ipsden altar frontal: Wood Anemone and getting into a new routine

Ipsden altar frontal: Wood anemone (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

As the family have returned, our little house mysteriously appears much smaller – rather like a familiar woollen jumper which in the aftermath of Christmas no longer seems quite so comfy and roomy. But it is fun to have the small person and parents back – even if there is a period round about 6pm when fun it is not.

Ipsden altar frontal: Wood anemone (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

The small person is now 3 and we are all enjoying the birthday Duplo and the cache of Christmas present books. We now have a round-the-world tablescape of animal habitats (set out on a useful self heal cutting mat) which twice a day makes the perilous journey from table dining table to ottoman and back again. These multi piece play sets are all very well but we’re (well, yes, I’m) still on the look out for more basic 8 pimple bricks for making good solid buildings. Before Christmas towers of the 4 pimpled bricks and a few arches made a passable copy of Decimus Burton’s Giraffe House in London zoo (and if you caught sight of it from another perspective, there was definitely a hint of the Alhambra) but when I’m asked to help build a house, I feel held back by the lack of the right sort of materials and long for a few more ordinary bricks. Ebay is probably the answer.

Anemone blanda

With morning nursery of nearly 3 hours – and delivery being undertaken by the parents – I have more sewing time. This week I made the little one’s Christmas present (a brushed cotton duvet cover and pillowcase in Japanese penguin fabric from Ray Stitch on the Essex Road which delight of all delights is all of 15 minutes away on foot) and I am making headway on his birthday sweater about which I feel particularly virtuous as I undid a three quarters made child’s coat with moth holes (having treated the wool first of course).  More knitting is planned as it works rather well with child care.

Anemone blanda

There’s a lot I don’t miss about the beech trees in the vicarage garden (no season goes by without self shedding (from leaf cases through flower fluff and culminating in uncompostable leaves) but I will miss some of the plants that carpet the floors beneath them, especially the hellebores, wood anemones and the bluebells.  The little creamy white flowers, Anemone nemorosa (Anemone from the Greek anemos meaning wind and nemorosa “of the woodland” from Latin), are delightful and so too are less sophisticated blue Anemone blanda of which just a few appeared in the vicarge garden (see pics of my poor specimens). The nemorosa variety are interesting for being slow spreading (6 ft in 100 years) so extensive coverage is a good indicator of ancient woodland. As suburban London spread outwards in the last hundred plus years, little pockets of old woodland survived and it is here that the wood anemone often flourishes. Appropriately the  wood anemone is the flower of Middlesex and just as the county itself is now almost invisible, so too do you have to look hard for the best expression of the county flower – beneath the trees in a beech wood is a good place to start.

Interesting article from The Telegraph by Sarah Raven on these flowers here.

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Ipsden altar frontal: a fern

I’m conscious of it having been more than a week since I last blogged, so this is rather cheeky as today I’m blogging just this little fern.

Ipsden altar frontal: fern (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

I love ferns and always make sure to have them in my garden. The vicarage garden in the Chilterns had a couple of lovely ones which gracefully accepted life in the shade of the enormous beech trees towering above the house and back garden.

Ipsden altar frontal: fern (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

In fact I so love ferns I stencilled gold ferns on a black chest of drawers – perhaps you remember the post from August 2012 which can be read here. Since I wrote that piece I have visited Highgrove House, the prince of Wales’s house and garden whose fernery and stumpery I mention – the stumpery I can take or leave but the fernery I thought was one of the best bits of an impressive garden. Must grow more – especially the ones that don’t loose leaves in winter.

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