I saw this beautiful hanging bowl, very heavy, wanted it to stick out from everything else, but in the magnolia it was hidden too much, then I used that same stick and hung it with some sisal hemp or summink in our giant cherry tree. Where I'm actually dreaming of kids and grandkids swinging. Again, I can take this construction apart in one minute, which is again good, because as ever I'm not fully satisfied. Reminds me when I first put up all my paintings indoors, I used to rearrange them and turn many of them upsidedown or sideways, until they found their place more and more. Not final, but a bit more stable. Again each pic takes one minute to move. I'm actually now planning to put the pics I have no more room for, and also "calendar paintings" all over the place in the cellar, the shed, partly praps outdoors, rather than just storing them for no one and nothing.
The daffodil patch now has some selected natural stones. In the middle to the right is a big seasnailshell, which I feel is kitchy, but an eye-catcher too, praps something for kids to discover. I remember finding a strange shell somewhere on a walk and asking on a forum what it could be and was disappointed that it wasn't local, like this it was deco stuff. But on the other hand it is natural, and why do we collect this sort of stuff and then put it away. I just need ideas to make it fit in better. But it was fun to find a snail shell on a climbing rose this morning, and even more to find it alive and kicking an hour later. I don't know whether I need to protect anything from it, but first the joy at the beauty is above all.
Then small purple flowers on the "lawn" - this spawns hope that just letting it grow will end up in a natural beauty all of its own, esp. if I bring everything to its own right, keeping balance between the life forms.
What I do myself seems so artificial compared to the beauty of the natural growth that's coming up everywhere, I need to develop compromises.
In one of my organic food stores yesterday they had loads of seeds, which is what all the pots I've been finding and placing empty are waiting for, altho I was actually thinking of just waiting and seeing what grows by itself, cos there's so much shade everywhere that I shouldn't be forcing anything.
But I'm so keen to see the seeds get going, esp. sweet mace and cornflower / bluebottle, two of my absolute favourites. First I read I'd need to cultivate them first, then read on and saw if I wait and put them in later they will come later, and that will exactly solve a problem I saw last year: Loads of bulb flowers flourishing in the spring and early summer and then just green, no more colour at all.
This will now change, I'm sure. Just got to try and find or make room, cos I bought 25 types.
Maybe all the pots first, but maybe dig up some or all of the patio which is such a waste of earth...
Ah, that's just brought me to my next plan....