Monday, August 31, 2009

Painted green floral round table






High up in the Cordillera mountains are many beautiful sceneries with a combination of tropical vegetation and high altitude mountains up to 2800 meters above sea level. One such beautiful mountain region are the Banaue rice terraces very near the location of this photo.
In album Most beautiful

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flower - -.jpg


Asim Shah posted a photo:

pretty




Yellow, flower with bug around...




When showing and take a while look to this photo, then one name comes up, peacock !!!, yes you right :) except this fanlike with yellow colour. Actually a little flower, but when take to macro mode, it's becomes more fun, and showing totally different.



Robert Nyman
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Fruit is always a big thing at Tatton, more so than at other shows because, of course, now is the time when the berries are ripening and looking luscious and tempting. So I was looking forward to meeting Sharon Hockenhull on her garden, 'Be Fruitful'.

It's a back to back designed to show how a small space can be productive and child friendly yet still look modern and stylish. As Sharon points out, a fruit garden was the obvious choice - growing veg is hard work if you are a working mother. Her children are three and five and she runs her own gardening business.

For children, having things like strawberries and apples ready to pick and eat in their own garden is wonderful. No boring digging and cooking involved, it's instant food. Sharon has some great ideas for fun ways to grow fruit ( www.theplantswoman.co.uk). I particularly like the idea of making a wigwam of poles and growing thornless raspberries and/or blackberries over it, a few strawberry plants round the outside and the kids have a fruity den.

Fruit growing involves much less day to day management than most vegetables and the rewards are high. You plant the trees or bushes and they will crop year after year, with increasing yields.

It's these increasing yields that bother Sharon, so much goes to waste, particularly apples and pears. She has had the bright idea to initiate Fruitshare the aim being, to make surplus fruit available to others.

She has nominated the 24th/25th October as Fruitshare weekend. People who want to take part can register their address and those who want fruit can come round and get it. You could either put your excess fruit in bags outside your house or have an open day and have a bit of a party. Sounds like a fruity date for the diary!


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Silk sweet pea





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Flowers white - 100_1396.jpg



Lupine at Quail Hollow Ranch, CA USA

High jungle never is dry - only the low bush areas and grass land turns brown during dry season. The high tropical jungle trees prevent the sun from drying the soil, hence jungle always is humid inside. The low bushland outside Cambodian jungle however may completely dry and turn brown during ongoing dry season.
In album Nature pictures

Robert Nyman
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Sweet colors from Baguio's mountain roses. Every country has it's special rose varieties. I love the beautiful small tropical roses from the Philippines with a heavenly fragrance originating from clean mountain climate of the rose farms in Benguet province. There are many most beautiful roses I love and I will introduce all of them her e. My favorite rose colors are sweet colors such as in this picture.
In album Most beautiful

Robert Nyman
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This Orange little Flower, taken when i walking around, then a look at for this little flowe r, and their so rich colour, this really make me feel so comfort to see for a while, fortunately i carried my only one camera, and take this picture, and the result... still beauty to display on my wallpaper monitor.




Small simple house of a Cambodian family - better small but own a house than large and owned by a bank! Most Houses in Cambodia are small but functional for an entire family. In tropical climate most of the life is outdoor anyway, hence a house serves but to sleep or rest and as shelter during rainy season.
In album Kingdom of Cambodia Pictures
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Gardening 1895





pollen-flowers posted a photo

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centrepiece with menus, frosted tealights and petals - gallery4027.jpg




White colour flower... And It's Full Moon...



Robert Nyman
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Nice violete flowers

Nice violete flowers


NAYMA.jpg
flowers - NAYMA.jpg




Flower With White Color, Around...




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Robert Nyman
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Flowers24_682KAMR1.jpg
Flower - Flowers24_682KAMR1.jpg


Sphenopsids

beetography
Naustitum flower.

Naustitum flower.



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Flower - z199408693.jpg


< img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjsjjR45Vx7bJ5khYC-VekoKFPZvpKGiqxZHCAlcVURUENOMa1ZWJxc0-iDtZVJccfpvrlbd5x5T0qfyDwPTs5Zs1F4Mq0wvdjJkIcfem_fBfxLGE3VKO7vx51WzSIF34Q53-vCs6YhvP4/s320/flo-012-glowingpink.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5296613823817299714" border="0" />A little pink color flower, look like glowing neon.
With surrounded by a tiny elements.



A few years ago if someone had mentioned gabions I wouldn't have known what they were talking about. They were something that was used in civil engineering, large scale industrial landscaping - a million miles away from domestic gardens. Now it seems they are becoming the cool thing to have.

edible_trends.jpgAt Tatton there are gabions in the show gardens, in the back to backs and on the trade stands - people are taking home DIY versions!

Basically a gabion is a metal - usually steel, cage filled with stones/rocks or various heavy materials. They are usually used to retain soil in banks and terraces or as barriers. I've seen taller, slim ones used as a wall and smaller, cubed ones made into seats - the permutations are endless, as demonstrated by the two young designers of the Visionary garden, Cubed3, at this year's Tatton.

gabions_on_a_place_for_wast.jpgThis gold medal winning design is a modular scheme, gabions are linked together like building blocks and used in different ways - some are filled with rocks as foundations, some are filled with soil and planted and some are placed in the pond, allowing you to walk over the water's surface. Larger cages have been left empty and plants are able to grow up through them - it's very effective.

On the Edible Trends garden the Reaseheath College team have filled their gabions with carefully placed layers of stones and wood in decreasing sizes, creating a very pleasing pattern and a haven for wildlife. Apparently it took them ages to do but it looks fantastic.

A very 'green' way to fill your gabions is with odd bits of bricks, slates and tiles left over from building jobs, plus any empty bottles you may have accumulated. This is what they have used on A Place for Waste, another gold medal winning garden.

As you look around the show you will see all sorts of shapes and fillings and gabions used in many ways. I am feeling quite inspired and am planning to try something with sempervivums and I rather like the idea of turf cubes.


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