As I write, we are gearing up to be away,. It’s never simple. Besides the prepping of the van, which takes longer than it used to and especially after longer intervals- there’s the house and garden to consider, which has all to be left in a reasonable state ready for return. I always experience a frisson of anxiety over the garden, in particular.
This year, our part of the UK has received an unprecedented amount of rainfall. During the eight years we’ve lived in this house, which overlooks a river called The Avon [yes I know- Avon means river, too!] and a watermeadow, the field has never been inundated for such a long time in the winter- six months. Six months and we didn’t see a single blade of grass from November until the end of April.
Flooding is very bad news for many and the world needs to wake up to the fact that the climate is wreaking havoc.
In our garden, however, the early deluges have been beneficial. The steep bank under the trees that was a tangle of ivy and brambles when we came has never looked better, with all the ferns, geraniums, grasses etc thriving. The new flowerbed we installed after a visit to wonderful Hidcote Garden in the Cotswolds has become lush and colourful, with my 70th birthday rose having pride of place and throwing out deliciously scented blooms.
It hasn’t been an easy garden. Options on planting are limited with so much dry shade. A dry shade bank must be one of the trickiest places to plant. Perseverance and trial and error have yielded so-so results until this year- this wettest of years.
Opposite the dry shade bank is a fence- still shady, still dry. A vigorous jasmine likes it. Some clematis like it and some don’t. This year I’m trying a rambling rose.
At the top of the bank, accessed by a cute path that Husband installed is a wildish space. Here he also put in a pond which has remained stubbornly devoid of life since its arrival [so much for ponds being a magnet, and all that…]. The pond is flanked by more ferns and a lot of weeds. Opposite, on the other end of the decking is a small house that we placed here for small people, although visiting grandchildren have, thus far, studiously ignored it. This may be due to the spider population which enjoys the accommodation.
The few sunny parts of the garden are occupied by pots of annuals and by tomato plants, which I had to buy this year, as my seedlings succumbed to the cold.
All this, then, must look after itself while we take a wander off to foreign parts. Fingers crossed!
For fiction by me, Jane Deans, search for novels: The Conways at Earthsend [an eco-thriller] and The Year of Familiar Strangers [mystery drama]. Visit my website: janedeans.com























