Showing posts with label Narcissus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Narcissus. Show all posts

Sunday, March 10, 2019

Time Marches On and Instagram Beckons

Chronica Domus
Drenched narcissus Thalia in the front garden this morning
Photo: Chronica Domus


It's been an age since I posted anything on this blog so I thought I'd stop by (in case anyone is still reading) to say hello.  I suppose with the clocks going forward by an hour today, I am reminded that time marches on and this is my first post of 2019.  Egads!

The world of blogging is something I became familiar with when I wrote my first comment on a favorite blog many years ago.  Back then, I enjoyed doing the daily rounds of blogs and reading the interesting, enlightening, funny, and sometimes touching things other bloggers wrote about.  Bucking up the courage to begin my own blog in January 2014, I had no idea how rewarding the experience would become.  I've made many blogging friends over the past five years through the comments section of this blog, and have even had the privilege and pleasure of meeting several of them in real life.  Along with being a rewarding pastime blogging is, of course, a time consuming one.  Time, as you might already know, is a valuable commodity and over the past year or so, I've had a difficult time setting aside adequate amounts of it to dedicate to writing and photographing this blog.

So, today I'm here not to say "good bye" just yet, but to tell you all that the posts will continue, albeit at a slower than usual pace.  I'm not quite ready to throw in the towel!  Also, as I do enjoy the interaction that social media can provide, I've finally joined that merry bandwagon known as Instagram.  I know Instagram may be old news to some of you who have been posting for years, but to me it's an exciting new world waiting to be discovered.  I can no longer resist.  If you'd care to join me there, please do so.  Just search for chronicadomus and hopefully you'll find me there.

To use IG talk, #resistanceisfutile

CD



Saturday, March 31, 2018

Norton Helps Prepare Some Easter Flowers

Although we won't be home for Easter Sunday this year, I am still compelled to add a few festive touches to the house to mark the holiday.  So, bright and early this morning, Norton and I trotted down to the garden to snip away at some of the narcissi I had planted in mid-February. Anticipating, with a bit of luck, that most of them would have bloomed for Easter, it turns out, most of them had.

Chronica Domus
Planted on February 19, narcissus Cragford, an award-winning heirloom, 
is ready for picking
Photo: Chronica Domus


Chronica Domus
Another heirloom variety that bloomed vigorously this year is the aptly named 
narcissus Cheerfulness 
Photo: Chronica Domus


It did not take long to fill my trug but I must admit, I did receive a little help from Norton.

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Norton supervising in the cutting garden
Photo: Chronica Domus


As you can see below, the effort of picking a few narcissi was all a tad too much for dear Norton. Declaring he'd had quite enough of it all, he proceeded to plonk himself smack dab in the middle of the vegetable patch, exhausted it seems.

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Gardening is so overrated!
Photo: Chronica Domus


Coming into the house via the back stairwell, Norton was obviously still very tired from his gardening escapades so I left him there, with the trug, while I nipped downstairs and around to the front garden to clip a few more blooms.

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Norton takes a well-earned break
Photo: Chronica Domus


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Narcissus Thalia, my favorite of the whites, has been reliably blooming and multiplying in 
my front garden for several years
Photo: Chronica Domus


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Just a few Thalia to complete the morning's pickings
Photo: Chronica Domus

I had adequate blooms to make two cheery arrangements to place in the drawing room, with a handful left over for a third smaller arrangement that I placed in the kitchen.

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Photo: Chronica Domus


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Here they are in situ
Photo: Chronica Domus


And, what would Easter be without a few chocolate treats to nibble upon?  Here are some chocolate eggs corralled in a favorite English Regency era teapot stand painted in a pleasing shade of orange to match the centers of narcissus Cragford.

Chronica Domus
Please, help yourself to a chocolate egg or two
Photo: Chronica Domus


My collection of various bird eggs round out the decorations in the drawing room.  Eggs are, after all, symbols of rebirth and renewal at Easter time.  A glass vessel below holds quail, araucana chicken, and partridge eggs ...

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Photo: Chronica Domus

... and another holds a turkey egg, the egg of a scrub jay, and more delicately-shaded araucana chicken eggs.

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Photo: Chronica Domus


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A simple but pleasing Easter arrangement in the drawing room
Photo: Chronica Domus


Oh, and I almost forgot the funnest, and smallest, decoration in the house, a charming vintage hen and her chicks.  They grace a porcelain stand on the kitchen counter.  Don't you think Mrs. Hen and her brood look quite at home surrounded by ... more eggs!

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Happy Easter Everyone!
Photo: Chronica Domus

Norton and I wish you all a very Happy Easter!


Monday, February 19, 2018

Life's Little (Long) Weekend Pleasures

Nota bene: I was able to sneak the highly-fragrant posy you see below into the marital bedroom because my husband happened to be away on a business trip the day I snapped the photograph below; such a transgression would be unthinkable otherwise and near grounds for divorce - you can read why, here.

Chronica Domus
An engaging book and a bedside posy of home-grown narcissus Avalanche helps to ease one comfortably into a relaxing Sunday morning
Photo: Chronica Domus


Several days ago I received a nice comment from one of my loyal readers.  "CD, CD, wherefore art thou?  I miss you!".  Reading it made me realize that I have not been particularly punctual with my posts here at Chronica Domus lately.  Had it really been an entire month since I last published anything or, for that matter, have had the luxury of visiting my favorite blogs?  I am afraid it really has been.

Since the beginning of January, my days have held an almost elastic quality to them.  My real-world professional obligations have stretched too far into my waking hours which, sadly, has left little time to pursue the more pleasurable aspects of life, including the upkeep of this blog.  I won't even mention the alarming state of my garden.  Shudder.  As you can imagine, the long President's Day weekend could not have arrived soon enough.  Three entire days to revel in the little things in life that provide the greatest of pleasure.  I consider one of those pleasures to be sleep.

I don't know about you but a few extra hours of sleep on a weekend morning has become a luxurious indulgance the older I get.   If I can make it to 8 a.m. in the comfort of my bed, I just know it's going to be a good day.  It pains me to admit that, try as I might, I am not a natural early riser.  I admire those of you that are up and about enjoying the crepuscular light of dawn, catching sight of colorful skies painted by the first shafts of light.  That said, on most weekday mornings I do tumble out of bed before dawn, heavy-eyed and yawning.  This is done not out of choice, mind you, but to fulfill my familial and workday obligations.  I am also charged with serving breakfast to Norton and the hungry clowder of neighborhood ferals.  They have certainly trained me well.  As I hurriedly dart about, I barely notice when daylight eventually does break.  In another life, I would be found snoozing well into the morning which is why I do so enjoy the luxury of a slower start to a weekend morning.  Those precious few restorative hours of slumber truly rejuvenate my body and soul.  Only then am I able to focus on a full weekend of running errands, visiting the farmers' market, gardening, social obligations, and general good old-fashioned fun.  

Sunday mornings are also when I am able to loll about in bed, enjoying a good read. I have only just cracked open a book that I purchased two years ago when I visited the charming collegiate city of Cambridge, England.  Titled Below Stairs In The Great Country Houses, Adeline Hartcup's fascinating book recalls with delicious detail several real-life accounts of how many of Britain's most famous country houses were run.  If you are a fellow devotee of the much-missed television series Downton Abbey, you too will enjoy reading about the strict hierarchy adhered to - and the minefield of social blunders to be avoided - by the many characters that lurked both above and below stairs.

How about you, which of life's little (long) weekend pleasures give you the most satisfaction?

Monday, April 3, 2017

Relics Reimagined: A Black Basalt Pastille Burner

Chronica Domus
Photo: Chronica Domus


We are in the midst of daffodil season here in the garden, the most glorious time of the horticultural year.  At least I consider it so, for I regard the humble daffodil to be my favorite flower above all others, followed closely by summer's sweet pea.

Last evening, after a long day of blustery winds, I noticed that a clump of narcissus Albatross was in peril of being toppled over.

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It was rather a challenge to photograph these daffodils as they whipped about in the wind
Photo: Chronica Domus


Chronica Domus
Curious Norton proved himself  to be a further challenge, albeit a pleasant one
Photo: Chronica Domus


Chronica Domus
Narcissus Albatross in full bloom or would that be in full flight?
Photo: Chronica Domus


Having endured losses to winds in years past, I thought it prudent to gather up the flowers already in bloom and enjoy those indoors.  There are plenty still remaining, in bud, to be savored in the weeks ahead as garden ornament.

Chronica Domus
Into the garden trug go a dozen blooming Albatross daffodils
Photo: Chronica Domus


Seeking a suitable container in which to display these dainty heirlooms, I looked no further than my mantelshelf where an early nineteenth century black basalt Wedgwood pastille burner takes pride of place.  Removing its lid, I placed a small circular metal flower frog within it before adding water.

Chronica Domus
My chosen flower container for the heirloom daffodils, an early nineteenth century Wedgwood black basalt pastille burner
Photo: Chronica Domus


Then came the flowers.

Chronica Domus
Photo: Chronica Domus


As I stepped back to admire my handy work, I was reminded why it wasn't always such a bright idea to repurpose certain objects as flower receptacles.  A slow dribble of water from three previously unnoticed tiny holes in the base of its bowl rendered this particular vessel wholly unsuitable as a vase. I suspect the trio of holes were intended to provide oxygen to the aromatic pastille while lit.  A further hole in the lid allowed a wisp of white smoke to escape and saturate the air with its perfume.

Ah well, I thought the basalt burner made for a very pretty little vase, if only for a brief moment.  I hope you think so too.

If you are interested in learning more about pastille burners, the air fresheners of yesteryear, I would encourage you to read the excellent post written by the author of The Regency Redingote, which can be found here.

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

An Avalanche of Joy (for some!)

Chronica Domus
Photo: Chronica Domus


Two years ago when I first started this blog, I wrote about the warm winter we were experiencing, and the effects on the local fauna and flora.  Well, a lot has changed since then. El Niño's recent soggy downpours have transformed our parched brown lawns into verdant pools of emerald green. Not only that, but many spring flowering bulbs have already appeared to put on their annual show. Narcissus Avalanche, an heirloom variety I planted several years ago, has lit up the front garden path with its gaggle of flowers.  I think it's going to be a bumper year for the garden (thank you,  El Niño!).

Photo: Chronica Domus


Chronica Domus
Photo: Chronica Domus


Relishing the opportunity to bring the outdoors in, I excitedly plucked six fat stalks to fill my little trumpet-shaped Davenport pearlware vase.  Placing the impromptu posy upon the drawing room's secretary bookcase, I could not help but to step back in admiration.  How cheery this all looked I thought to myself.

Chronica Domus
Bathed in the weak late-afternoon February sun, narcissus Avalanche
 still manages to glow
Photo: Chronica Domum


What absolute joy these little flowers bring, brightening the room with their ivory tinted glow. The warmth of the indoors soon infused the house with Avalanche's pungent sweet aroma. Heaven! I believe their scent is carried furthest of any flower I have had the pleasure of displaying indoors. Their reach is really quite extraordinary, especially when considering their diminutive size.

Alas, I was soon reminded that not everyone in the household was as enthralled as I to see these dainty flowers tucked so prettily in a corner.  Well, to be more precise, it wasn't their appearance that offended my dear husband, but their stench aroma.  It took about an hour for him to react, but when he did, this is what I heard.  "I've got a ghastly headache", followed swiftly with "It reeks of death in here, what is that smell?".

I soon fessed up, for the sake of marital harmony, and reluctantly removed the offending posy from range of my husband's olfactory senses.  They now sit atop the table on our balcony... outdoors... sigh!

If any of my readers are aware of how to "dampen" their odor, or perhaps know of a cultivar that is less pungent but equally pretty, I would very much appreciate you sharing that information with me. My husband, no doubt, will thank you for it too.

Tell me, do you enjoy the scent of fragrant narcissi, or paperwhites for that matter, or do you, like my dear heart, take offence at their pungent stench aroma?

Thursday, April 30, 2015

An Enduring Affair With The Humble Daffodil

Chronica Domus
A jaunty grouping of daffodils and ranunculus to brighten my kitchen
Photo: Chronica Domus


I have a particular weakness for daffodils, or narcissi as they are frequently called. These humble blooms have captivated my imagination with their beauty since childhood. They are, in fact, my favorite of all flowers.  I am simply mad about them. My excitement each spring upon spotting the first alluring bunches at the flower market, or as they slowly emerge from the damp garden soil in clumps, never wanes. There are no words vivid enough to express how much joy these cheery little flowers bring to my soul.  They are, quite simply, my happy pill.

Chronica Domus
Narcissus Thalia, my favorite of the whites and as pure as the driven snow
Photo: Chronica Domus


One of my earliest memories is of my father and I buying bunches of sunny daffs to present to my mother as a gift on Mothering Sunday. I could not have been more than six or seven years old at the time but those bright yellow trumpets captured and delighted my young mind. 

Once my family and I moved away from London to live in Kent, a county known throughout the nation as "The Garden of England", something new revealed itself to tickle my fancy.  It was a sight I had not previously seen within the confines of the country's capital city.  Great naturalized drifts of golden daffodils buried in the grassy banks of roadsides and around the fruit orchards and church yards reared their bright heads year upon year.  They shone like beacons among the misty light so synonymous with winter and early spring in that part of the world.  How lucky I was to have witnessed this annual show, a cherished memory that will endure always.

Years later, I recall daffodils cropping up again, during Miss Bottle's English Literature class where we studied the poem of William Wordsworth and his evocative prose on the humble flower.  Is there any more beautifully haunting opening line in poetry than the imagery conjured up by Wordsworth's "I wander'd lonely as a cloud"? 

It seems that the yellow daffodil of my youth, namely Narcissus pseudonarcissus, has been eclipsed by the ubiquitous King Alfred, typically found for sale in every big box chain gardening center for pennies, alongside other overly-hybridized and overly-stiff specimens on offer.  These too are what one sees for sale (mostly) by the bucket load at supermarket florists and the like at this time of year.  

Make no mistake, when I write that daffodils are my favorite of all flowers, I am championing their daintier fairer kin in gentle shades of buttery yellow, cream, or white, often with hints of pink or fiery orange, or even green to elevate their beauty. These are what I crave and what I gently strongly encourage you too to seek out for your own garden or vase.

I am particularly fond of the older varieties and cultivate a number of them in my garden.  Thalia (circa 1916), Avalanche (circa 1906), and Albatross (circa 1891), are three that grow reliably well for me.  I look forward to cutting bunches of them as they come into bloom in succession if, of course, the eternal army of nocturnal snails, slugs, and earwigs have not munched upon their tender heads under the cover of darkness.  I shy away from chemical warfare on my soil, and on the creatures that live within it, so enduring a little loss each season is a natural consequence of my philosophy.  I just make sure to plant ample bulbs to be enjoyed in the flower beds and by some for my daffodil foes.  

My interest in growing older varieties of daffodil began, strangely enough, with a visit to the quirky Welsh market town of Hay-on-Wye during the early 1990's. The place is a treasure trove of fascinating second-hand booksellers and shops that litter the town. Bibliophiles flock here from around the world in search of obscure publications to add to their personal libraries. No one leaves empty handed; it really is that good.  Once I had recovered from the mind-numbing effects of visiting more bookshops in a single day than one could possibly imagine exhausting in a lifetime, I happily left town clutching three little volumes to add to my gardening library.

Even the castle walls of Hay-on-Wye are recruited to hold the overflow of books which burst from the seams of local shops

The Culture of Bulbs by Sir J.L. Cotter was one of them, and it was this volume that led me down the garden path to seeking out, and subsequently cultivating, one of the rarer daffodils illustrated within the black and white plates of the book. What, I wondered, as I gazed upon the illustration of the antique poeticus narcissus Albatross, did this bloom look like in living color, and why on earth would someone name a flower after a seabird?  Sadly, Sir James had failed to provide his readers with even a line or two about this particular daffodil's charms.  My inquisitive mind had found a botanical mission and I would not rest until I had my answers.

Chronica Domus
The Culture of Bulbs, the book that led to my "daffodilmania"
Photo: Chronica Domus


It took me over a decade and a half to finally lay my green fingers on this rare beauty. Flipping through my copy of Old House Gardens' charmingly written and illustrated catalog several years ago, I finally spotted it. Narcissus Albatross was waiting in the wings and all I had to do was place my order.

Chronica Domus
My well-thumbed copy of Old House Gardens' delightful catalog of heirloom bulbs
Photo: Chronica Domus


I was chuffed to finally get an opportunity to plant a few bulbs and see how they might perform in my garden. A handwritten note on my packing invoice tucked within my order made reference to the fact that the vendor had no idea if the flowers were scented, an aspect of their nature which I had not previously considered. 

Chronica Domus
The sought after (at least by me) narcissus Albatross photographed alongside the black and white plate that inspired my desire to cultivate this heirloom jewel
Photograph: Chronica Domus


Registered in 1891 by Reverend Engleheart and named, interestingly, for his fondness of seabirds (as was narcissus Seagull, another of his creations), this beguiling dainty daffodil was everything I had wished it to be. Emerging from grayish green foliage so late in my garden as to take the prize for best latecomer to the party, it is sublime. It peaks just as my tulips fade.  

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The first of the blooms beginning to unfurl
Photo: Chronica Domus


The luminous graceful creamy petals are almost propeller like in form, whitening as they mature. Their frilly cups are painted a gentle shade of orange which intensifies towards the edge. The scent you ask? Well, yes, if one were to bury one's nose deep within the cup, a barely perceivable whiff is certainly present. The old reverend had obviously studied the albatross in flight enough to have seen a passing resemblance in this graceful bloom's nodding habit.

Chronica Domus
As though captured in flight, narcissus Albatross spreads its wings in the flower bed
Photo: Chronica Domus


Won't you join me in discovering the joys of growing older variants of the humble daffodil the next time you find your garden in need of a few cheery spring blooms? You will be amazed and delighted at the host of subtle colors and graceful shapes lacking in the larger steroid-pumped, modern varieties, as you rediscover what our grandparents once purchased as cut flowers or grew in their gardens.

Chronica Domus
Photo: Chronica Domus


Nota bene: I am neither paid nor do I receive recompense in exchange for applauding products or services within my blog.  I do so because I enjoy them.  If you are a kindred spirit, you too enjoy recommending nice things to fellow good eggs.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

What Is (was) Blooming Inside

Spring blooming flowers arranged in a black basalt sugar basin
Photo: Chronica Domus


Nota bene: I had intended to publish this post back in February but it somehow got buried within the other posts I was working on.  I hope you enjoy it despite the fact that these little flowers are long gone and remain but a pleasant memory.

As you will learn over time on this blog, I love flowers and other natural elements that I am able to bring into my home to enjoy.  I feel that no matter how fine the contents, or how beautiful one's home is, it becomes even more so with the addition of seasonal gifts from the natural world.   Take, for example, the diminutive arrangement pictured in the preceding photograph.  I picked the last of the blue grape hyacinth stragglers and the sunny Avalanche narcissi that were blooming around my home (seen here), and added some cheery yellow and white tulips I had purchased at the San Francisco Flower Market.  The arrangement sits on our drawing room's mantel and brightens the room no end.  Don't you agree?

A close up view of the cheery arrangement on our mantel
Photo: Chronica Domus


Any surface or corner of your home will be enhanced greatly by any size arrangement, no matter how small or large,  in a vessel of your choosing.  For this arrangement, I utilized a black basalt sugar basin for my little corner of cheerfulness.  As I gaze upon it, I cannot fail but to smile and gain a sunny disposition.

Tell me, do you make a point of enjoying fresh cut flowers, branches, seed pods, leaves, fruit or other such offerings from nature around your home throughout the year? 


Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Spring In Winter

Avalanche Narcissi
Photo: Chronica Domus


I am all astonishment as to what has become of winter here in San Francisco.  During the last three weeks of December, and practically all of January, the temperature can best be described as mild, even slightly uncomfortably hot, on most days.  My heavy winter coat has hardly seen the light of day this winter.  Now we are being told that California has entered into a period of drought unlike anything seen in the entire history of the state.  The effects, unfortunately, are already visible.  I worry for the flora and fauna.  I worry for the farmers who toil in the dry soil, and what will become of their thirsty crops.  I just worry.

 Avalanche Narcissi at the front door
Photo: Chronica Domus


The unprecedented warm spell has also welcomed the traditional harbingers of spring this winter around my home.    In the front garden, in full bloom, I see a pretty row of dainty heirloom narcissi Avalanche to brighten the way towards my front door.  A mockingbird has taken up residence atop the tall yew trees and has been singing its melodious tunes almost constantly over the past few weeks.  Old-fashioned forget-me-not plants that self-seeded have revealed their diminutive sky blue flowers to the world.  It truly feels like spring has arrived, early.

Forget-me-nots have not been forgotten this winter
Photo: Chronica Domus


I also see signs of grape hyacinths (Muscari Armeniacum) rearing their spear-like heads, and the green leafy tips of other varieties of narcissi that will surely be in bloom within the next month or so.  I have even spied the first bloom on the magnolia tree (Magnolia x Soulangeana Black Tulip), which has no business showing its dramatic color in the month of January.  What has become of winter in this topsy-turvy year?

 
Black Tulip Magnolia
Photo: Chronica Domus


I must declare that although I eagerly await the arrival of these cheery blooms that awaken my garden each spring, it is a little unnerving to think that the rest of the nation is presently experiencing record snowfalls and low temperatures.  Perhaps by sharing a little of my garden through these photographs, the arrival of spring will be hastened at your home.

What, if any, untimely effects have you experienced this winter season?

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