Browsed by
Month: May 2011

Transformation

Transformation

It’s been exactly two years since we first saw Casa Azul. The first video shows how it has changed since that wet May morning in 2009.

 

This is the 360 degree video we took of the garden.

 

And here is the garden in May 2011:

 

And here’s one for our friends Helen and Peter. Our local friendly snake pictured in the courtyard:


Any idea what it is Pete?

Quince wine

Quince wine

Some of you may remember that back in October I started making my very first wine from the wonderful quince harvest. Since then it’s been racked a few times and now at last, over 6 months later, it’s been siphoned into bottles. As predicted the wine is a beautiful rose colour, not as clear as it should be but that’s fine by me. Six bottles have been filled and we tasted what was left over – not too bad, really! It actually tastes like wine! A touch sweet but I reckon it’s the perfect partner for rhubarb crumble… (and how nice to have a morning tipple of homemade wine on one’s birthday).

The fall of the monolith

The fall of the monolith

One of the strangest features of Casa Azul has been a large stone, standing in the courtyard. Well this week we took it down. It went as part of patio project stage 2. Now we’ve done the barn we are paving part of the courtyard and turning it into a small patio area. The stone was in the way but we wanted to keep it so we’ve turned it into a stone seat. Very nice it looks too.

monolith in place
monolith gone
patio coming along nicely

After the recent, much needed, heavy rain a surprising thing happened. I found some puffball mushrooms at the bottom of the garden. Autumn was so dry we didn’t get any mushrooms but here they are now. I’d never eaten them before and I must admit they were rather a disappointment. Like creamy tofu.

puffball mushroom

Much tastier, I am sure, will be our honey and on the latest inspection, the bees are really going for it. Keen readers will know that we started off with one box (the brood box) and after the bees had settled down we added a second on top. Between the two was a queen excluder. This is a wire frame that stops the queen from going “upstairs”. Therefore she concentrates on laying eggs and making new bees in the bottom box while the workers fill up the top with honey. And after a few short weeks the bees have been busy making honey comb in the top box and filling it with honey. As can be seen in the photo below. This is just one frame of ten, so we are hoping they will all be full by July and ready for harvesting. Thinking of which, I’ll have to do some reading and work out how to do it.

honeycomb

Never mind honey bees, we also have a carpenter bee making its home in the pergola. I’ll try and get a photo of the bee soon (it’s a big black hairy thing like a bumble bee). The nest itself is just a small perfectly round hole which the bee has chewed out of the frame.

We’ve also got a wasp making a nest in the potting shed!

wasp nest

With the rain and now more sun, the veggie garden is taking off. Here are the spuds in all their glory. And thanks to the polytunnel we have been eating  strawberries for weeks (admittedly only about 6 or 7 a week) and have enjoyed plenty of  artichokes.

Of course warmer weather means the smell of summer is here – yes the barbie!

Most of the locals have small tractors but we’ve got one old boy who still uses the old ways.

Couldn’t resist putting in this photo of the hairy one enjoying a puddle. They won’t be here for much longer.

And of course the wild flowers are still a joy. The poppies are coming up now but we still have a few orchids about. We’re not sure whether this one is a bee orchid or woodcock.