I love March, it's one of my favourite
months of the year, there's so much anticipation in the garden and as
the level of light is rising life is responding to it. Bright and
cheery daffodils shine out from borders, dainty little violets and
primroses nestle into grassy banks and under trees where the first of
the year's new fern leaves are preparing to unfurl are the glamorous
flowers of hellebores.
There are so many exciting cultivars of
Hellebore, cups of pristine white, frilly pale pink, deep and dusky
shades of sultry purple, some are spotted and streaked and others the
most delicate picotees, the edges of their petals washed with the
lightest brush stroke of colour.
Where happily established they will
promiscuously interbreed, their progeny adding yet more variety year
after year.
One sunny days the first of the
season's bees will be busily bumbling about foraging for food from
early dandelions spangling the lawn underfoot and higher up from
pussy willow catkins, gleaming silver against a blue sky and later in
the month fat and golden with pollen. The first of the Prunus, the
cherry family, are coming into flower, sloe are usually
the first with plum following close behind. With flowers
much smaller than the deservedly popular Japanese cherries sloe
flowers form a haze of white so that the whole tree looks like a
cloud, a lot like hawthorn from a distance but easy to differentiate,
sloe flower on dark bare and leafless branches, hawthorn flower after
the leaves have emerged.
In the pond the frogs are back, mild
damp nights have them croaking noisily and the mornings bring shining
blobs of black dotted jelly, usually in the shallows where the water
will warm up more quickly in the sun and encourage algae to form,
we're not so keen to see it but for growing tadpoles it will be a
feast. As the birds turn up the volume the resident robin's
beautiful melody warns others to keep away, this is his patch, while
more sociable sparrows chatter in the hedge and the blackbirds sing
out from their lookouts higher up in the trees.
This is a month to savour in the
garden, despite the chill there's so much to enjoy, whatever the
weather throws at us now spring has sprung, lets get out there and be
part of the action.