watervole: (Default)
Judith Proctor ([personal profile] watervole) wrote2021-05-14 03:52 pm

Wildlife friendly gardening

This is the first time I've tried DW's photo hosting (it's available to free users). It's a right pig's ear, but I've finally got it to work.

The trick seems to be to set the thumbnail size to around 1200 (or a bit smaller if you wish, but definitely not the default of 100), cut the thumbnail code and past it into the html version of your post.
Messy, but does actually work.


The garden is currently buzzing with bees (at least three different species, hoverflies, beeflies and other insects I can't identify.  In the pond, there are tadpoles and newts, pond skaters, water boatmen, pond snails, water fleas and doubtless other things I've missed.  I'm expecting dragonflies before long. We usually get them visiting and laying eggs.

Pond plants include marsh Marigold, bog bean, yellow flag iris, water mint, water soldier, and one that self-seeded in a year or two ago and I've forgotten the name of... Marginal plants include figwort, (self seeded), and purple loosestrife (which looks wonderful when in flower)

,

There's fewer plants in the pond than normal as we had to replace the liner last winter because of a leek along a seam. But it will soon fill up again.

We grow quite a few edible plants in the garden.

One of my favourites is wild garlic.  The have three great advantages in a garden.  First off, they grow in dark, shady corners which are shunned by most plants, second you can eat the leaves, thirdly they make a gorgeous froth of little white starburst flowers in May.

You can see them here growing under our mulberry tree.

Mulberries have squishy, hard to pick fruits that stain the moment you touch them, but the flavour is wonderful and worth the effort!

In front of the garlic, you can see the purple flowers of honesty - another native plant.  When the flowers have finished, leave the plant well alone, as the seed pods are wonderfully decorative and will stay there for many months and can be used indoors in flower arrangements, etc.  Honesty is a biennial, so leave some seedlings to flower in a later year.

In the foreground, you can see a variegated leaf - that's lamium, (spotted deadnettle) which comes in many varieties, most of which are perfectly happy in the shade and many have pretty leaves and flowers.

Bees love all the plants I've mentioned so far.

Down the end of the garden, we have:

 

Rhubarb lurking behind the tall leaves of a lovely blue iris which will flower later on, and another variety of lamium.  Rhubarb has big contrasting leaves, which can look good in a garden setting.

Next, two varieties of geraniums (blue and pink flowers), a  second gooseberry bush (we like gooseberries a lot, and they make perfectly good shrubs), and tall Rosasrie de la Hey at the back by the compost bin.

I fell in love with Rosarie de la Hey when I hit the scent on walking into our local nursery a few years ago - they have an entire hedge of it.  It has the best scent of any rose I've ever encountered and requires no pruning.  The flowers are a single pink blossom, followed by wonderfully big red hips.  I'm told the if you use it for a hedge, it's a good burglar deterrent - the thorns are very enthusiastic, but as I have it growing in a corner, it's not trouble at all.  And I can smell the flowers whenever I walk along the back path.

The plant with last year's seed heads still visible (keep seed heads and old stalks as long as possible - insects need them over winter - and they add texture to a winter garden)  is a sedum "Autumn Joy" which has pollinators flocking to it late in the season.

Pretty much everything we grow is bee friendly, with a preference for native plants.

It's not a particularly large garden, but we squeeze in two gooseberry bushes, a blackcurrant, a redcurrant, a tayberry growing through the hedge along one side (hedges are essential for small birds), a row of raspberries by the back door, plus wild garlic and rhubarb.

Plants that cope well with the shade are: wild garlic, lamium, epimedium (not a native, but I like the way the leaves appear to float and it's very good for shady, dry conditions), stinking iris - distinctive seed head with red berries, bluebells (try to get English not Spanish, and try to check if they have been grown legally), pulmonaria (an old cottage garden favourite - not in photo, as it's finished flowering.  Mediterranean garlic will also grow there, but be warned, once you have it, you'll never get rid of it.  It's very pretty, but it spreads very quickly.  Red-veined sorrel can also tolerate shade and is edible.  Ferns can cope fairly well with shade and there are several native species.  We have harts tongue fern and others.

reapermum: (Default)

[personal profile] reapermum 2021-05-14 04:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm not seeing the pictures here either.

I use DW's photo hosting, do you find my pictures too large?
reapermum: (Default)

[personal profile] reapermum 2021-05-14 05:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I reduce the maximum dimension to 500 pixels before I upload the image, then I embed it.
pensnest: Photo of me with face painted squirls (My squirly face)

[personal profile] pensnest 2021-05-14 07:01 pm (UTC)(link)
I usually use the thumbnail with the code as given, but it's clickable and will show at the right size when you click on it.

Alternatively, I think just using the first bit of the code in the brackets will present it at the right size, which I've done once because the original was not very large. Had to experiment a bit as to which part of the code to leave out, it might have been the img src section that works.
pensnest: Octavian from Rome looking sceptical, caption Hmm... (Rome Hmm from Octavian)

[personal profile] pensnest 2021-05-14 09:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Erm... I'm not sure what it means to embed it. I mean, I don't know if that has a technical meaning that goes beyond 'paste it into my post'. Sorry!

To get the thumbnail, which should be clickable, I copy the Thumbnail Embed code in its entirety and put it in my post or comment:

Red, green and blue socks!

And that's clickable, and will show up larger although not full size when you click.

Using the Image Embed code instead gives you a big image (in the case of the socks, a huge one!).

igenlode: The pirate sloop 'Horizon' from "Treasures of the Indies" (Default)

[personal profile] igenlode 2021-05-14 11:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Ouch, that was a *very* big image when you click!

Looking at the actual HTML in the page, the thumbnail for the socks is exactly what I'd expect to see:
<a href="https://pensnest.dreamwidth.org/file/52818.jpg"><img src="https://pensnest.dreamwidth.org/file/200x200/52818.jpg"> </a>
The 'thumbnail' 200x200 file being displayed as the clickable portion of a standard HTML link (<a href=)

[personal profile] watervole's 'tiny thumbnail' is the 200x200 version of her file, but it's not being posted as an <a href= link at all, but just as a straight <img>:
<img src="https://watervole.dreamwidth.org/file/200x200/4596.jpg" alt="" />
So naturally it's not clickable, as there's no link in the HTML.

And the other attempted embedded images are a hot mess, each one inside a separate iframe with complicated CSS styling and a link to an extremely obfuscated source address:
<div class="lj_embedcontent-wrapper" style="max-width: 480px; max-height: 800px;"><div class="lj_embedcontent-ratio" style="padding-top: 83.3333333333333%"><iframe src="//embedded.dreamwidth.net/?journalid=150767&moduleid=293&preview=&auth_token=sessionless:1621029600:embedcontent:150767%26293%26:4402956ad4c04d67f54c4994301a5b4fc9df31a1" width="480" height="400" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0" class="lj_embedcontent" id="embed_150767_293" name="embed_150767_293_twadf"></iframe></div></div>
I don't know how it's supposed to work, but it's just ugly...

By analogy with the socks example, one ought to be able to view the original of the garden thumbnail at https://watervole.dreamwidth.org/file/4596.jpg and indeed it's there (but huge).

I checked to see if an '800x800' thumbnail image existed on the server, and in fact it does. So this code will do what is desired:
<a href="https://watervole.dreamwidth.org/file/4596.jpg"><img src="https://watervole.dreamwidth.org/file/800x800/4596.jpg"></a>

How you get Dreamwidth to do that for you automatically, however, I wouldn't know, not having access to the image hosting myself :-(
igenlode: The pirate sloop 'Horizon' from "Treasures of the Indies" (Default)

[personal profile] igenlode 2021-05-14 11:18 pm (UTC)(link)
"Rosarie de la Hey" is presumbly roseraie de la haie - 'of the hedge' :-)

{Edit: L'Haÿ is apparently a place: the wonderfully-named L'Haÿ-les-Roses, named after its roseraie where this variety was presumably bred in 1901: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roseraie_de_L%27Ha%C3%BF
And the name is nothing to do with hedges, but is a corruption of the original Latin placename...}
kerravonsen: Paradise Farm, Queenstown, New Zealand (Paradise)

[personal profile] kerravonsen 2021-05-15 02:57 am (UTC)(link)
Native species FTW!
ranunculus: (Default)

[personal profile] ranunculus 2021-05-15 04:04 am (UTC)(link)
Hope you get the photo sharing figured out, I'd love to see the pics. Can only see the first "thumbnail".