Part 1 HERE
I know y’all were taken with Frank and Marjorie’s story last week, though I condensed 50 years into a couple of paragraphs so touched on not much more than an inch of it. They come across in Frank’s book as two lovely people, loving each other and their garden and home. I took a phone shot of them from the book, taken in 1994, they’d be in their 50’s here,under the arches of the byre, and sitting next to the falconer statue.

I took a fair few shots of some of the flowers on display, with some interesting (I think anyway) factoids.
The term digitalis is also used for drug preparations that contain cardiac glycosides, particularly one called digoxin, extracted from various plants of this genus. Foxglove has medicinal uses but is also very toxic to humans and other animals, and consumption can even lead to death.
hupehensis, which means “from Hupeh province, China”, refers to a region where the species is known to occur. So that makes sense π.
The plant also produces an essential oil that can be used in herbal medicines.
a species of Psephellus native to the Caucasas Mountains and Turkey. It is widely cultivated as an ornamental perennial.
It is native to Italy but it can be found growing wild as an introduced species in parts of western North America. In the UK it is regarded as something of a weed, spreading readily on stony waste ground and walls, although it is tolerated for its attractive, long-lasting flowers which are very attractive to bees. This plant is poisonous to livestock, but in a recent study conducted in Italy the plant was found to contain a compound exhibiting antifungal activity, making it a potential natural and ‘green’ anti-aflatoxin B1 agent suitable for use in the food industry.
is a Eurasian species of lily. It has a widespread native region extending from Portugal east through Europe and Asia as far east as Mongolia. It is highly toxic to cats and ingestion often leads to fatal kidney failure.
It is native to western and southern Europe (from southern England south to Iberia and east to the Crimea), northern Africa, and southwestern Asia (east to Georgia). It has also been introduced to Australia, South Africa and United States, where it is an invasive weed. Due to a high concentration of pyrrolizidine alkaloids, it is poisonous to grazing livestock, especially those with very simple digestive systems, like horses. When eaten in large quantities, it causes reduced livestock weight, and death in severe cases, due to liver damage. It can also irritate the udders of dairy cows and the skin of humans. After the 2003 Canberra bushfires, a large bloom of the plant occurred on the burned land, and many horses became ill and died from grazing on it. Because the alkaloids can also be found in the nectar of it’s flowers, the honey made from it should be blended with other honeys to dilute the toxins.
And we saw some butterflies
The red admiral is found in temperate regions of North Africa, North and Central America, Europe, Asia, and island regions of Hawaii, and the Caribbean. It resides in warmer areas, but migrates north in spring and sometimes again in autumn. Red admirals are territorial; females will only mate with males that hold territory. Males with superior flight abilities are more likely to successfully court females. They are the Tom Cruise of the butterfly world. It is known as an unusually calm butterfly, often allowing observation at a very close distance before flying away, also landing on and using humans as perches.
Today, the anglewing butterflies are found only in the northern hemisphere. Carl Linnaeus described the first members of this group in 1758, and it has since become clear that anglewing butterflies evolved from a common ancestor. During winter months, in latitudes with snow cover, all members of this group hibernate as adult butterflies During hibernation, hidden in various shelters, the butterflies are dormant. The camouflage provided by crypsis (the ability of an animal or a plant to avoid observation or detection by other animals)is advantageous to hibernating butterflies. Potential predators will have difficulties in seeing the dormant butterflies. With their wings closed, exposing only the ventral cryptically coloured underside, they blend in with their surroundings.
More pictures taken with my film camera at
OK school’s out π π Stay tooned for next week!
Gorgeous flowers. I was particularly interested in the lily, as I’m having murderous thoughts about cats at the moment.
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Oh dear. If it’s any help before we had our 2 we had the neighbourhood cats pooping in ours so we got one of those gadgets that emit an annoying (for cats not people) noise, that did the trick.
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Ohh, I didn’t know such a thing existed. I’ll have to get one. Thank you.
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Type in cat repellant ultra sound in google or Amazon and you’ll see them come up.
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Thank you.
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Lovely images, and very enlightening. When I moved back to New Zealand from Australia one of the first things I noticed while driving south to Invercargill was the foxgloves in the fields….they really seem to like it here!
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They are fabulous, and grow so tall! Cheers Steve.
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Reblogged this on NEW BLOG HERE >> https:/BOOKS.ESLARN-NET.DE.
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π
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Insects always seem so busy, especially compared to the rest of the natural world. They’re always doing work.
Nice flower pics!
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Thanks!
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Lovely colours in these pics. But…
‘They are the Tom Cruise of the butterfly world. It is known as an unusually calm butterfly, often allowing observation at a very close distance before flying away, also landing on and using humans as perches.’
Wut? How does Tom Cruise use humans as perches?
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I was referring to the previous sentence – Males with superior flight abilities are more likely to successfully court females. Was thinking Top Gun.
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My mother in law has a couple of horses and was always going off about some purple weed and how annoying it was. I guess she goes around and has to pull the things up by the roots, as just cutting them isn’t enough. And now I know she’s talking about purple viper.
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Every day’s a school day here! π
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Caught up on parts I and II. I love the story of Frank and Marjorie. Searching for the Good Life in a philosophical sense is woefully out of fashion, but these two have found it, regardless of how their story ultimately ends.
Spending the day in the garden would be absolutely wonderful….as long as you don’t eat anything!
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Haha yes indeed!
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Wonderful flowers. Love the Persian Cornflower
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Cheers Rich!
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Frank and Marjorie look so well-suited and gentle in the photo. They grow a lot of dangerous plants though! π
Best wishes, Pete.
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They’d be good for a murder mystery!
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The Factoids were my favorite!
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Thanks Marland! π
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You’re welcome!
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I find all the pictures and stories wonderful, Fraggle. But by Jove, plants, seemingly so innocent, are dangerous!
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A lot of medicinal ones too though! π
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Thanks for the photo of Marjorie and Frank, and of their beautiful flowers. I hope they get to stay on the property! No one will care for it like they do.
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True, I hope so too Jennie.
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π
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Just lovely!
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Thanks Naomi.
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Some of them might be poisonous but you sure captured their beauty, Fraggle.
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Cheers Don!
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Purple Viper has the intensity of a drawing, not wonder it is poisonous. Quite a living encyclopedia, fragglerocking. Thank you : )
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Cheers Francis!
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Very interesting factoids on the plants/flowers. Some of them providing health benefits, some not so much, but all are attractive. I’m a big butterfly guy and enjoyed seeing and reading about the ones inhabiting this garden courtesy of Frank and Marjorie.
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Thanks WOTC!
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Good photographers have a way of capturing the detailed differences in flowers. Thank you for making me take the time to notice the intricacies in the botanical world. The Foxglove and the Purple Viper’s are my favorites. π
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Thanks Frank, the flowers make it easy π
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all these blooms…how gorgeous! and I loved reading all the tidbits you shared…like paging through a gorgeous field guide (but better, because YOU) π₯°
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Ah thanks Michelle π
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