The rain still continues and everything in the garden is wet.
It does not stop the bees and other insects flying in between the downpours.
The low light makes it difficult to take sharp photographs.
Everything is getting sodden. Luckily, I have already gathered plenty of Cosmos and other seeds. These are French Marigold (Tagetes erecta), that are late in setting seed and have stated germinating still attached to the flower heads.
I grew these flowers near my tomatoes this year. They provided lots of colour in the vegetable garden and are reputed to attract beneficial insect such as hoverflies and at the same time the roots secrete a substance to repel certain nematodes. I cannot affirm that they make a considerable difference but they are held in high esteem in this area.
There is still plenty of Borage left in the vegetable garden, and elsewhere, and that is a magnet for all pollinators. It is also so handy for decoration of salads and drinks.
We always have a clutter of pots at our front coffee spot. This allows us to keep an eye on the fragile and admire our favourite flowers of the moment.
The Salvias are in their glory at the moment, especially the Salvia leucantha. We have one in a pot on the patio and another in the garden but they do not photograph well and you need to see a close up photograph to see what the eye actually sees. The flowers look as if they have been fashioned from velvet. They are constantly visited by the bees. This carder bumble bee is piercing a hole in the flower to “steal” the nectar.
Another flower we are monitoring in a pot on the patio is the Ajania. This is new to us this year and I am waiting impatiently to see if the flowers will open fully. It has grown well and I am thinking of trying it as ground cover next year as it has grown well in the pot.
Some flowers get attention and care yet this Alyssum grows on its own every year, seeding into the cracks in the front path and the base of the wall. It completely looks after itself and releases its own special honey scent in the warm evenings and is still flowering.
Perhaps tough love can work as I have succeeded in keeping two Abutilon plants. They die completely from the surface in winter and reappear in late spring. They are not too tall yet, but I have my hopes, and it is nice to have their flowers so late in the year.
The bees still manage to get out to forage for nectar and pollen despite the rain. They have to “faire avec” as we all have to during these rainy days.
Thus saying, I was surprised to see a cricket perched on top of my pink rose in the front garden. It does not seem a good place to be camouflaged from hungry birds. In addition, it is not very far away from our bird feeder.
More surprisingly it was still there the next day! Is it the same one or is it cricket time?