As Autumn arrives and the nights become cooler September always feels like a new beginning to me more than New Year. I always have that start of a new school year, new pencil case feeling, although its a long time since our daughters were at school.
On that note we decided to close The Cob for three days early in September for some maintenance work and an "Autumn Clean". New steps have been put in and outside windows and fascias painted, along with a good old wash and clean ready for the winter months ahead.
We are just about fully booked right through till the end of November so wanted to make sure all is clean and maintained before the nights start drawing in.
Despite the shortening of the days the garden continues to be filled with plants that are still at their best - helianthus and asters bring a mass of colour to the bottom of the perennial garden, while the many grasses create a dreamy ambiance, waving in the breeze and slowly changing colour from greens to golds and bronze.
The meadows have been mown and we will be raking back the debris in the wild meadow and hoping for a few days of dry weather when we can put it in piles and burn it. The key to a good wild meadow is poor soil so we do not want to leave the cut vegetation to mulch back into the soil. The meadows have been full of amazing wild flowers this year - much more than in our previous two years here so we are encouraged that we are doing something right.
At the end of August with the help of Gareth, our local farmer we planted over thirty Devil's bit scabious plants which we are hoping will attract the marsh fritillary, one of our endangered butterflies. We did plant about twelve Devil's bit scabious last year but unfortunately they didn't take. This year we have chosen three different sites in the meadows and Gareth has done similar on his land close by. He is planning on releasing marsh fritillary larvae next year.
We are so thrilled to be part of this re-wilding experiment and hopeful that the marsh
fritillary will thrive and feed on our Devil's bit scabious within the next couple of years.