I have injured my “bad” (ie, stroke-affected) leg and have spent the past week “resting” (groan) while performing physio-sanctioned exercises. I’ve been really missing my long beach walks, and am feeling rather irritable and frustrated, but on the plus side, I’ve graded and knitted up a new design, read several Julian Symons novels (a mid-century British crime writer whose interesting work is new to me), and have been able to spend every day outside during a spell of beautiful spring weather. None of these things are to be argued with, especially the last.

Willow warblers have arrived, along with the first swallows, and the landscape is now alive with birdsong and busy nest building. Each morning, the garden looks a little different, and it really is marvellous seeing it come to life again. I spent last spring carefully watching what was happening in each area, so I could understand what had been planted where (and why), and several of the perennials popping up already feel to me like old friends.

such as this bleeding heart

or this candelabra primula. It’s also rewarding seeing some of the areas I’ve planted now starting to do well.

Like my alpine area . . .

or my “magic bells”, now flowering alongside the tall stems of pheasants’ eye narcissus.

We previously lived in a rather high, exposed location with a very heavy clay soil: a place which, as a neighbour lamented to me on more than one occasion, was not really suitable for growing tulips.

Last year I was delighted to discover several beautiful tulips growing happily in the mill garden: in one sunny bed, with a distinctive dark red colour scheme, there is tulip “queen of night”

. . . elsewhere there are white tulips, including this one, (which must be a “white parrot” ?)

. . . and this somewhat simpler white variety, whose name I do not know.

Meanwhile, the front of the long, shady bed that sits behind the house is punctuated with the gorgeous bright pink pops of species tulip “little beauty”.

. . .whose elegant cups, opening with the sunlight every morning, seem to be particularly loved by pollinators

These tiny pink blooms have been planted alongside blue flowers of similarly small stature . . .

. . .like forget me nots

and bluebells.

I find the combination of these cerise pinks and purpley blues completely delightful.

Having discovered I could actually grow tulips here, I just might have gone a bit tulip mad during the bulb sales towards the end of last autumn. And I have to say that my tulip madness seems to have grown rather than diminished now that the ones I planted myself are actually beginning to flower.

This is “Wild Romance” (above) and “Francoise” (below), which I planted in blue pots outside the mill’s front door.

and in another pot around the back, here is the first bloom of the very striking and streaky “Prinses Irene”

The majority of the (gulp) several hundred tulip bulbs I planted last November are of the viridiflora type. These are often described as reliable perennials, so I have planted them in groups of 50, in grass, hoping they will settle in. All of these are looking good: the “Spring Green” and “Groenland” group are now in bud, and “Mistress Mystic” is just about to flower. What excitement!

The tulips I’ve shown here are only the first to have appeared, and I think in a few weeks I might well have quite a show. I do hope you won’t mind more photographs of my new floral obsession then.

Writing about the garden has definietly made me bit less grumpy about my currently immobile state. This can only be a good thing.
Enjoy your Sunday!

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I have Queen of The Night tulips as well, they are almost black but haven’t come through yet in spite of all the hot weather we’ve had. I love reading the emails/blog and I hope it isn’t long before you are mobile once more Kate.
Warmest regards, Norma
Brilliant and heartwarming photographs. Keep up this wonderful work. You are very talented in eliciting those warm and comfortable feelings with your photographs.
Thank you for lightening up my day.
Fredrick Fowler.
Ooooh your garden is stunning. I’m envious of your alpine section and your ability to plant pots with bulbs. Ours freeze so we turn all perennial pots and annual pots too, on their sides so they don’t crack while frozen.
FYI I love the Shirley variety for their lovely soft pinks and Angelique is a huge must have tulip for fragrance and a bloom that is so like a peony…certainly worth a look for tulip lovers.
Hope you heal soon. And thank you for sharing your inspiring garden.
Thank you – those are both beautiful varieties – I will look out for them this year!
Thank you for sharing. I love tulips too. I will look forward to seeing how the others grow.
Kate Wishing you a speedy recovery. Your Garden photos are achingly beautiful. We don’t even have green grass yet. In fact, it snowed again over the weekend.
I am very glad you have a new home. Smart move.
Cynthia rav. un: knitinmylaine
Very much enjoyed seeing your beautiful tulips and especially the forget me knots which I love (they grow in a boggy ditch alongside the main road freely near the croft).
Bran is an adorable companion. So good to find the positive side of your predicament with your leg.
Hopefully you will be back to your beach walks soon!
Emily
So sorry to hear you injured your bad leg but can’t believe how productive you have been in your convalescence. I was also so taken by your photos of all your beautiful flowers and just loved your whole article.
Take care and heal quickly. You are quite amazing.
Your spring flowers lift up my heart. As a child I loved the bleeding hearts in our family garden. Fifty years ago I moved into an older home and was delighted in the spring when a marvellous old tulip garden sprang up in the spring. The tulips had hybridized to myriad colours and colour combinations. On Mother’s Day, in early May, I picked big bouquets for my grandmother, mother-in-law and me and couldn’t tell, from the mass left, where any were missing.
Being incapacitated is the pits. I’m so glad you have your beautiful garden and your four-legged family members to keep you smiling.
your abundant tulip garden, with its bountiful bouquets, sounds so lovey!
Oh dear Kate,
How I enjoy all your writings, always. Thank you so much for sharing your moments with us. Sometimes the delicate blossoming, others furry companion adventures, walks, geography and your own personal times. I feel close from across the Universe, being the same age as you and I relate to many of your postings. Please receive healing vibes and warm regards from Argentina. Be well, Alejandra
Thank you Alejandra! Waving from Scotland
Love your flowers!! Your “simpler white variety” of tulip might be Tulipa clusiana – perhaps White Emperor or some variation thereof?
Thank you!
dear kate oooh yesyesyes please more photos of your garden i love th
Tulips!Nola
I’m so glad for you that you have all these beauties – floral and canine – to keep you company while you mend your mobility. Sending you best wishes from California, where the weeds in my yard are flourishing. ;)
Your post, Kate, has reminded me of my success a decade ago with Tulipa “Queen of the night” (for me almost black) and a pure white tulip, planted deeply, with lavender, in a Buxus hedge enclosure around a big sculptural ball of variegated Rhamnus.
Sadly I am leaving that garden now…
Your post has helped to support and ease the slow grief of letting go of having “a garden of my own” and to rejoice in your abundance at your developing place of sanctuary and convalescence!
Blessings to you (and the photogenic Bran)!
So sieht der Frühling aus !! Wunderschön. Gerne mehr.
Und alles Gute für Sie.
Yes please all the tulips. We like tulips in Canada a lot – a Dutch princess was sheltered in Canada during WWII and so the Dutch have sent many tulips as a thank you. There’s a big tulip park in Ottawa and a tulip fest in May that we attended once. We got to see the special breed of tulip developed for Canadas 150th. All the tulips!
I’m sorry your walks have been put on hiatus. Your yard is glorious and I’m glad you have both your yard buddies to keep you company.
Dear Katie,Thank you so much for your uplifting emails and wonderful photos! I
I will enjoy all flower and garden – and dog – photos! 😁 your gardens are quite a bit ahead of mine here in Colorado ‘s Front Range – area just to the east of the Rocky Mountains on the plains at about 5000 feet elevation. I do have very fragrant hyacinths, and a few native bushes like golden current and choke cherry in bloom. Get well soon!
Beautiful colour combos for the tulips mixed with the other flowers Kate. If our squirrels weren’t so destructive I’d grow more here! Please keep sharing your lovely pictures.
Please more tulips! It is still snowing where I live in northern New England and these pics give me hope for spring!
All those flowers blooming at the same time. What a climate it must be. It has snowed every night this past week in Vermont, USA. My daffodils are still buds thankfully. The rest of it is still buds.
Oh yes please Kate, bring on the tulips … I love them!
Hope you feel better soon!
V x