Saturday, 1 June 2024

Gardens

We all love gardens, don't we? Whether that's designing, cultivating and spending time in our own or visiting some of the beautiful creations of others in public spaces or on country estates. One thing is for sure, though, the cultivating and tending part is a tough gig when you arrive at your eighth decade!

Monet in his garden at Giverny
Claude Monet (1840-1926), rightly celebrated as one of the foremost Impressionist painters, acquired a house with land at Giverny, fifty miles north-west of Paris, when he was in his mid-forties, after his first wife had died. It was to be a stable home for Monet, his children and eventually his second wife. He lived there  for the next forty years. As well as renovating the house and building his studio, he also spent decades with the help of family and friends transforming the garden into a botanical paradise in which to live and to paint. He bought more strips of land when he could afford to, and this horticultural project became a lifelong passion.

He is quoted as saying: "I am only good at two things, and those are painting and gardening. Everything I have earned has gone into this garden. Colour is my day-long obsession, joy and torment. I perhaps owe having become a painter to flowers. The more I live, the more I realise that the colours at Giverny are the most beautiful colours in the world. My garden is my most beautiful masterpiece."

If you've seen Monet's paintings you're probably familiar with his depictions of agapanthus, geraniums, irises, peonies, roses, water-lilies, willows, wisteria, garden paths, picnics under his trees, brilliant vistas. He painted the same views many times, trying to capture his impressions of the beauty around him. Of course the views were never actually the same, for the colours and light were different on each occasion. Ironically, for all his mastery of his craft, he burned many of his canvasses. Maybe that's how one preserves one's reputation for excellence! 

As he grew old, his sight began to fail him, a cruel affliction for one whose life had been all about experiencing and responding to what he saw around him. He still planned enhancements to his garden but now employed a team of gardeners to do the spadework for him. He loved nothing more than to walk around his garden, to share it with friends and visitors, to continue being inspired by its beauty. And he continued to paint under its spell, despite his failing eyesight, even enlarging his studio to accommodate the expansive canvases that he worked on during his final few fading years.

Monet's house and gardens were painstakingly restored after fifty years of neglect and became classified as a 'monument historique' in 1976.Nowadays Giverny is one of the most visited sites in France, outside of Paris. 

My own Blackpool back garden is due for a major make-over in the next few months. Out will go rotten old decking and concrete paving slabs. I want more nature, more greenery, flowers, herbs, bees and butterflies, terracotta pots, a tree  I'm trying to grow olive saplings from seed but I don't know if the climate is sufficiently conducive - that wintry west wind for instance. Like Monet in his seventies, it will have to be something I can tend to without overmuch back-breaking effort. Design is key, as is the budget. Wish me luck.

geraniums at Kythira in Greece
One thing's for sure, there will be lots of geraniums, as well as irises, lilies and roses. I'll sign off with the latest piece I've been working on.  I'm not sure if this is the poem's final flowering or not. Time will tell.

Geranium-365
Primordial and perennial, in a sun-kissed Kythira garden
from white-washed, rust-streaked tins watered at dusk,
Aphrodite's progeny branches and buds, then explodes
in profusion, red like blood, pink as passion. Incandescent

she comes once again, apparition more dazzling than flame 
from a time before earth was formed, hovering between 
the impossible and the inevitable, a fissile isotope fixing
to blow the world apart anew, shatter your flowering heart.

On a simple iron bedstead among twisted sheets we lie
savouring consummate peace, with the departing day framed
through blue shutters. By a trick of inverted light, a flush
of geranium red shafts itself across peeling walls and ceiling.

Lucretius, forefather of atomic thought, captured the effect
of her florid alchemy thus: "the heavens are all assuaged 
and pour forth torrents of light; the waves of the sea smile."  
In blue jeans you slip out to the yard, watering-can in hand.









Thanks for reading, S ;-)

115 comments:

  1. Beautiful. ❤️

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  2. Grant Trescothick3 June 2024 at 20:10

    A delightful read. Well done with the poem and good luck with your garden project.

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  3. Lizzie Fentiman4 June 2024 at 05:20

    Thanks for this. I love Monet's paintings. That photograph if him in his garden is beautiful. I wish now we'd visited Giverny when we were over in Europe but you can't do everything, can you? I love your latest poem.

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  4. I know mythology says the island of Kythira was the birthplace of Aphrodite but did you know my home town of Paphos (on Cyprus) also makes that claim? I enjoyed reading about Monet's garden. Good luck with transforming your own.

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  5. What a wonderful blog. Thank you for the Monet back-story. His garden looks amazing. Also I loved your poem though I'm nit sure I understood all of it. Is that a reference to Venus (Roman name for Aphrodite) in blue jeans at the end? Very clever.

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  6. Another terrific post.

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  7. Nicci Haralambous5 June 2024 at 11:04

    Yes, loved the blog and latest poem. Thank you. 💙

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  8. Oh my god Steve. Your poem got me wondering if geraniums have aphrodisiac properties. I wasn't really expecting the answer to be yes but it turns out they do! There's a whole range of geranium-based aphrodisiac and essential oils out there for use as anti-depressants, massages, mood-enhancing and just getting jiggy. I thought you might be making the whole thing up! It's a wonderful poem, by the way. ❤️

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  9. Very interesting round up of Monet and gardens. Learnt a lot from that.

    Best of luck with your garden. Maybe you'll get a few rain free days.

    Love the title of the poem. There's quite a lot going on in poem I think.

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  10. A great blog and a great poem. Monet's love of his garden and colour in Giverny shines through in this. The image of geraniums in Kythira is brilliant. Good luck with the garden.




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  11. A most enjoyable read and I loved the illustrations and the complex poem.

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  12. A fascinating insight into Monet, left me wanting to know more. His garden looks sumptuous. Your geranium poem is certainly intriguing.

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  13. A fabulous read. I love Monet's paintings. That picture of him in his garden is wonderful. I loved your Geranium poem as well (and the photo). I've never heard of Kythira before. I must look it up.

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  14. I'd never made the connection between aphrodisiacs and the goddess Aphrodite until now. Alight has gone on (LOL). This was a most enjoyable blog and poem.

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  15. A great read. My own garden is a bit of a mess. I only cut the grass for the first time last week on account of so much rain. It was an effort I can tell you. I really enjoyed Geranium-365, read it a few times, such a lot to think about. 👏

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  16. Most enjoyable Steve. Best of luck with transforming your own garden. If you're looking for inspiration I can recommend Vivian Russell's book 'Monet's Garden: Through the Seasons'. I thought your Geranium/Aphrodite poem excellent and I love the Kythira photograph. One of yours I assume.

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  17. Noragh Montgomerie7 June 2024 at 14:23

    Splendid. You write so well.

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  18. Bella Jane Barclay7 June 2024 at 18:13

    What a fascinating post. Do we assume Monet went to bigger canvases because his eyesight was failing? Are you getting one of these hit squads in to do your garden make-over or is it all down to you? Some undertaking, regardless. I love your geranium poem.

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  19. Martin Brewster8 June 2024 at 09:36

    I sat here drinking coffee and reading your blog then took a look out into my garden. It needs a bit of attention, so thanks for the prompt. I agree about geraniums, great for a spot of colour. Mine never seem to last from one year to the next though. I think our winters are too cold and wet.

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  20. Caroline Asher8 June 2024 at 16:05

    I love geraniums. I grow mine in pots so they can be moved into the shed when the winter comes. They remind me of happy holidays in France, Italy, Croatia and of course Greece, a little hint of the Mediterranean in Britain.

    The background to Monet, his passion for gardening and painting, was fascinating, but that photograph of Kythira (not exactly sure where it is) stole my heart along with your super poem.

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  21. What a delightful and informative read. The photographs are beautiful too. Your latest poem (clever title) is excellent. I will look at geraniums in a different way from now on.

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  22. Germaine Monroe10 June 2024 at 14:40

    Beautifully crafted. 👏

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  23. I agree with what you say about modern gardens, too much decking and paving, not enough greenery and trees. So good for you. I hope the make-over goes well. It's a lovely mythologising poem. I seem to recall you've written one about geraniums before. They must hold a special significance for you.

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  24. Helen Maitland11 June 2024 at 15:04

    What a lovely blog. I didn't know all of that about Monet. I just thought Giverny was somewhere he visited and painted. It's a delightful and clever poem as well. Even the smallest space looks better for a pot or two of fiery geraniums as your delightful photo of Kythira shows.

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  25. Genius poetry, la! 👍

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  26. Very good. That might shame me into trying to do something more creative with my rather boring back garden. It IS hard work though! As for your poem, tremendous.

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  27. Linda Trautmann13 June 2024 at 15:13

    Very interesting about Monet and his garden. He sounds a lovely man. And your poem, wow, you make geraniums sound sexy.

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  28. Kate Eggleston-Wirtz14 June 2024 at 07:50

    Enjoyed this Steve. Love Monet. First experience was going to the Art Institute of Chicago’s Paintings by Claude Monet exhibition in 1975. My dad took me out of school for the day and we went for a day out. Pivotal really as he must of been very perceptive in my interest in art. Enjoyed the poem - vivid imagery :)

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  29. loved the monet/gardening piece and those fab photos and the clever poem - you make aphrodite sound like an atomic kitten!

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  30. Yes Rod, I have written another poem titled 'Neon Geranium'. It's in my blog 'Aphids & Aphorisms' and is linked here: https://deadgoodpoets.blogspot.com/2016/08/aphids-aphorisms.html
    It's also in my new poetry collection, unlike 'Geranium-365' which will have to wait until the follow-up ;-)

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  31. Fabulous. An uplifting read. Loved Geranium-365. 👏

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  32. Kyra Maragopoulou15 June 2024 at 18:35

    Great writing. I love your poem. My grandparents live at Kythira. ❤️

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  33. Sobering, the thought that we are in our eighth decade. Thanks for that, Steve (lol)! Still, onwards and upwards, as you used to say. Another excellent blog and poem. Looking forward to your book. Enjoy the late flowering.

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  34. Annie Walthorn17 June 2024 at 13:33

    I loved this post and poem Steve! Provoked many personal memories regarding my Mum. She was a wonderful gardener and especially loved and cultivated Roses. She loved Geraniums in terracotta pots too.

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  35. Annie Walthorn17 June 2024 at 13:36

    A few weeks ago we stayed in South Wales....glorious place despite the weather. Trish photographed The Lily pond at Bosherston unfortunately the heavens opened and the lily pads didn't! My daughter told us to visit for when she did a while back all the lily pads were in bloom and she said it was like stepping into a Monet painting! x

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  36. yes the passion for all things beautiful are evident nature has so much to offer and inspire. I was in Birkenhead park with the Wirral poets on Sunday very nice

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  37. Saw the Lily pond paintings in Paris and the misty effect his eyesight probs caused enhanced his work. A truly marvellous artist. Good blog Steve.

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  38. A really lovely read about Monet. And I've always liked the Mediterranean custom of recycling large tins as flower pots.

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  39. Peter Fountain19 June 2024 at 07:11

    That's a top blog and a dazzling poem.

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  40. The thing about a beautiful garden is that it's never just 'still life'. It's constantly growing and needs constant hard work to keep it beautiful. That means patience and time, in short supply in many people's busy lives these days. So good for you for committing to a greener garden. May your olive trees and geraniums thrive. I really enjoyed the poem, such an audacious concept.

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  41. A wonderful read Steve. I really enjoyed the blog, the photos and the delightful poem. Good luck with your BGP.

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  42. Zoe Nikolopoulou19 June 2024 at 22:26

    I was blown away by this. Absolutely love the poem. ❤️🩷💙

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  43. Deke, thanks for the recommendation. Vivian Russell's book 'Monet's Garden' arrived today and it is fabulous.

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  44. Stella Patterson20 June 2024 at 20:57

    I don't have a garden as I love in an apartment but I do love watching gardening programmes on TV, anything from Monty Don to those makeover shows. And I have houseplants - spider plants, Swiss cheese, begonias, various cacti. Maybe I'll give geraniums a go, though I've always been a bit put off by the smell of their leaves (a bit like cats).I loved the poem though. You are to be congratulated.

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  45. Tim Devonshire21 June 2024 at 07:25

    An excellent read. I think it's a great poem. Why change a thing?

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  46. Inspired writing. Almost makes me want to go to France - or Greece - but maybe a local National Trust garden at the week-end will do. It's a splendid poem, bursting with ideas and imagery.👏

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  47. A most enjoyable read. My respect for Monet has gone up several notches. And I love your Aphrodite/Geraniums poem. Very well done.

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  48. Fabulous! ❤️

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  49. A lovely blog. I didn't know any of that about Monet. I just know he painted waterlilies! I really like your poem. Is it in the book? The sun has really brought my geraniums on this week. They look glorious. Happy days.

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  50. Praise the life force. What a fab read. Thanks for sharing.

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  51. Marianne Gevers24 June 2024 at 09:49

    What a great read. I love that quote about Monet's garden being his masterpiece. Also your splendid Geranium poem. And the sun is shining. A lovely way to begin the day.

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  52. Great writing, lovely photos, engaging poetry. 🩷

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  53. Splendid stuff. More than once I've said of your poems 'I wish I could have written that'. Geranium-365 is one of those.

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  54. Nothing grander than the sight of some bright red geraniums on a sunny day. 👍

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  55. HM Laxmiben Hirani. Just Beautiful Steve!

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  56. Caroline Murphy24 June 2024 at 23:59

    Thanks I loved reading this and your poem was wonderful. x

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  57. Mindblown! 😉

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  58. One of your best that. The geranium poem is terrific.

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  59. Kimberley Clark26 June 2024 at 15:46

    Thanks for a fascinating and informative post. I love geraniums, the way their color blazes against whitewashed walls. Your poem is a treat for the senses. ❤️

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  60. Niamh O'Donnell27 June 2024 at 11:08

    A magical read. What a fabulous poem.

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  61. I always read your blogs but haven't commented for ages. This one however gave me such pleasure I just had to say thank you. The information about Monet is fascinating. I'd love to go to Giverny. I enjoyed the poem of course. I hope your gardening project goes well.

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  62. Top blogging. More greenery and plants and less paving in gardens is such an obvious plus for wildlife and the planet. Your poem wowed me. I love geraniums.

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  63. Diane Maartens30 June 2024 at 17:59

    Beautiful Steve.

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  64. That was a treat. Monet as gardener was new to me and what a great quote about Giverny being his most beautiful masterpiece. I thought your geranium poem (brilliant title btw) quite superb.

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  65. I find Monet inspirational in his love of nature, of flowers, of colour and the way he sought to respond to and share that love in his work. I also thought your Geranium-365 poem was tremendous, so cleverly conceived and beautifully expressed.

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  66. We recently visited Shrewsbury, whose Dingle Garden is magnificent. More formal perhaps than Monet's, but beautifully laid out and a riot of colour. Really like your marvellous Geranium poem.

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  67. What a lovely read. The photo of Kythira and your poem about geraniums/Aphrodite so evocative. Thank you.

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  68. What a great blog. Geranium-365 is a beautiful and intriguing poem. Is it in your new collection (that I will order soon)? I hope so.

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  69. "savouring consummate peace" - what a brilliant phrase in a lovely poem.

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  70. Fabulous blogging. I love Monet's paintings and his dedication to gardening. If you've not seen it, there is a 7 minute video on Youtube about Giverny village, Monet's garden and house there: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZvi7K32qGw
    Yes there are geraniums and so much more.

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  71. A treat read this with a coffee and cheese and pickle sandwich after a hard morning on the allotment. It's bee so wet lately that your photo of geraniums on a Greek island has really cheered me up. I loved reading about Monet and your poem is beautiful.

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  72. Monika Spengler14 July 2024 at 14:25

    A tough gig - you're not kidding. I have to limit myself to an hour or so when gardening these days and then take a long soak afterwards. It's worth the effort though, or would be if the weather was better this summer! That said, this was a lovely blog and poem. I feel inspired.

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  73. Such a lovely blog. It's really lifted my mood in the middle of our damp squib of a summer. Your poem is splendid and the photographs are beautiful. Thank you. 🩷

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  74. I really enjoyed this. Fascinating background to Monet and his works. The poem is complex but pleasing, Aphrodite as geranium. It's a clever idea and a brilliant title, with beautiful imagery, love as life force if I understand you correctly.

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  75. A lovely blog and opportune too. We're heading to Paris to watch some of the Olympics and now we'll try and fit in a trip to Giverny as well.

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  76. Juliet De Santos20 July 2024 at 12:11

    Article in The Times today about getting the best from your geraniums (wretched summer notwithstanding). Loved this blog Steve and the fab poem.

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  77. I really enjoyed this, reading about Monet, his love of gardening, his passion for painting. The illustrations are beautiful and I'm sure your poem is very profound even though I don't understand all of it.

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  78. Intrigued to read Monet thought he was only good at two things. Most of us would be delighted to be good at one! (LOL) This was a great read. I loved the Geranium poem.

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  79. What a terrific blog. Fascinating about Claude Monet. Loved the color photo. And your poem, aphrodite/geraniums as metaphor or symbol for the universal life force? It's one hell of a poem.

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  80. Such a lovely blog and poem. Thank you. 👏

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  81. A splendid antidote to all the horrible events of the last few days. The world can be a beautiful place and we can help make it so. I was most impressed by Geranium-365 which I read as a love for life poem.

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  82. Even as a kid I used to listen to Gardener's Question Time on the radio because my parents did. I enjoy watching gardening programmes on TV even though, or maybe because, I don't have a garden of my own. I also enjoy visiting the spectacular gardens that are open to the public. I was delighted to discover your blog quite by chance. And what an intriguing poem. I will male a point of reading more of these Deadgood blogs. George Marshall.

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  83. Crystal Shelley3 August 2024 at 08:41

    I just read this and think Oh, to be that good at something!

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  84. Finally we've had a decent run of weather. Summer's here. I've spent the afternoon in the garden tidying things up and the geraniums are looking stunning. I'm siting with a cup of tea and a fruit bun and thought I'd re-read your garden blog and leave you a comment this time. I had to scroll a long way down! It's a delightful post and an amazing poem. Well done and thank you.

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  85. What a fabulous read and stunning poetry. 🩷

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  86. I love your way with words. The information about Monet and his garden was fascinating. I should dearly like to go to Giverny. And your Geranium poem, not just clever but fabulous.

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  87. Fotini Spanoudis10 August 2024 at 15:22

    Wonderful writing. I love your poem ❤️

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  88. An excellent read. Enjoyed a visit to Giverny a few years back. Really well done with your intriguing Geranium-365 poem.

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  89. Camille Fontaine13 August 2024 at 09:55

    C'est beau!

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  90. An absolute pleasure to read, and I was very impressed with Geranium-365. 👏

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  91. A wonderful blog and a lovely poem.

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  92. Everything in the Garden is a delight.

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  93. I loved this blog and just had to leave a comment about the poem, which I think is tremendous as a celebration of the elemental drive to love and life.

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  94. Gardening certainly gets more physically taxing once you're in your sixties. I find it's all about doing an hour or so here and there. I can't tell you how much I enjoyed reading this blog. Thank you.

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  95. I love it. 💙

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  96. A wonderful post. I loved it, and the photographs and the terrific poem.

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  97. Your words span a spell. I love the poem, so clever, so sensual.

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  98. Such an inspiring read. I'd love to go to Giverny and Greece but would need to renew my passport first, so will just enjoy your word and pictures for now.

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  99. Fascinating about Monet, his art and his garden. I loved your poem as well (what a title, what splendid imagery). I have pots of geraniums on my patio for the intense spots of colour.

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  100. This was a joy to read. Intelligent, informative, written with style and a touch of humor. I loved the poetry and the colored photograph of Monet in his garden.

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  101. Excellent post and a wonderfully evocative poem. FYI there is a lovely book Monet's Garden Through The Seasons by Vivian Russell, if you don't know it.

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  102. Fabulous. The only time I had heard of Kythira was in connection with the Antikythira Mechanism (world's first 'computer') which was recovered from a shipwreck just off the island. The time-keeping element on the mechanism was stopped at 5th May 59 BC (presumably the date of the shipwreck).

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  103. Monet always a favorite and what an imaginative poem.

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  104. Georgia Xalazonitou1 October 2024 at 09:01

    Love the poem. 🩷

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  105. What an inspiring post. As an observation, it's such a shame that so many front gardens are being paved over as car-parking spaces nowadays. It used to be such a delight to walk down any street and see small lawns, bird baths, flowerbeds with roses, irises and of course geraniums. Sad not just for us but for the bees as well.

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  106. A lovely blog. I've always liked Monet without knowing much of his background. That quote: "My garden is my most beautiful masterpiece" is revelatory. I love geraniums too, so your intriguing poem really appealed. Thank you.

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  107. Great blog. The awesome power of nature. I love your clever poem.

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  108. Fabulous writing, beautiful illustrations, sexy poetry. 🩷🩷🩷

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  109. I share your obvious love of geraniums. This was an interesting and inspiring read and I loved the poetry. I hope your garden project went well.

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  110. What a simply lovely read.

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  111. Roxy Bellingham6 March 2025 at 23:05

    Fabulous. I loved this. What a wonderful poem.

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  112. A lovely read and an inspiration of gardeners. If it wasn't thundering down right now I might be moved to go and do something in my garden! I love the poem.

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  113. You have to scroll a long way down to write comments on your blogs! But I just had to say what wonderful prose about Monet/Giverny and what a clever and thrilling Geranium poem. 🩷

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  114. I absolutely loved this. Fabulous about Monet and his garden, and thrilling poetry which made me long to revisit Greece. Thank you.

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