Saturday, March 29, 2008

A Larger Garden

From my Twitter feed Neil h selected the following Tweet and asked:
 
If I won the lottery, I'd definitely have to have a bigger garden

Go on then - what would you put in your bigger garden?
 
This was prompted by having spent the day in the garden, doing all those little jobs as you do, just trying to keep things up together.  We've been spending quite a bit of time planting seeds and potting things on with a variety of different vegetables, we're trying to grow more of our own this year, rather than buy from supermarkets where the produce has been shipped or flown miles from overseas.  Part of the plan is to grow our own and then supplement that with locally grown produce.  We do however seem to have rapidly run out of room, and so first on the bigger garden list would be more room for veg!
 
Following that, I've always been one for structures and sculptures in gardens.  Now that's probably not everyones cup of tea, but given our climate you have to have a shed or two to escape to when the rain comes down, and sculptures add variety to the plants.  I've always had some kind of artwork in the garden, but I hasten to add I am NOT a fan of gnomes.  We do have seven dwarfs in our garden, although I fear one has drowned himself in the pond because I can only find six at the moment. 
 
That brings me nicely to the third thing, water.  A pond.  Or in the case of a big garden a lake.  It would have to support wildlife though, so it wouldn't be a boating lake, no sir, no pedalos in my pond!  We currently have a small pond, which is home for an amazing collection of different species, including the resident fish and frogs.  I find myself actually loosing time when I'm out feeding the fish, because I just like to watch them.  My GF has named them all and we have seven orange goldfish (goldies 1 thro' 7), two white goldfish (whitey one and whitey two), and two shubunkins (Tom and Clancy).  I guess the beauty of a small pond is you can actually see the fish, so maybe I'd have to keep something smaller for therapy value to!
 
The final thing I would have to have in my large garden is time.  Time to look after it and time to enjoy it.
 
Thanks for asking Neil, hope that explains the logic behind the tweet?

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Another veggie growing person, excellent :)

However big your garden is, it's never big enough.

thermalsatsuma said...

Thanks Alan - very interesting! If we had a pond, the cats would treat it as an alfresco fish restaurant and empty it in a week ...