RichmondRound

The evening round with the watering can

You know it is rose season when the watering can becomes part of the evening routine. The soil dries fast in June. By six o’clock, the beds are asking.

It starts as a chore. You fill the can, walk the borders, tip and move on. But somewhere around the third evening, it shifts. You notice the weight of the water, the arc of the pour, the way the roses lift their heads by morning.

The rhythm settles in. You check the clematis on the fence, the pots by the back door, the patch under the cherry tree that never gets the rain. The can empties. You fill it again.

This is not about hoses or timers. It is about the ten minutes when you are outside, moving slowly, paying attention. The light is softer. The birds are louder. You see what has opened since yesterday.

By the end of the week, you are not watering the garden. You are walking it. The can is just the excuse.

It will rain eventually.

Do you water in the morning or the evening?

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The garden in Richmond at midsummer

The garden in Richmond reaches its peak in July, when the air thickens with heat and the borders crowd with colour. Lavender spikes stand tall along paths, their purple blooms humming with bees. Roses sag under their own weight. The lawn, if you have kept it watered, glows a defiant green. This is the moment […]

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The lavender is out in Richmond gardens and the bees are everywhere

The lavender is out in Richmond gardens and the bees are everywhere. You can hear them before you see them: a steady hum rising from the purple spikes. They work the flowers in a kind of methodical frenzy, dusted yellow with pollen. The scent thickens in the heat. It hangs in the air around benches […]

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The shady corner in Richmond gardens where lavender meets old walls

The shady corner in Richmond gardens becomes a refuge when the sun is at its worst. You find it behind the south-facing wall, where lavender spills over brick and the air smells sharp and sweet. Bees work the purple stems with a low hum. You sit on a bench that has been there longer than […]

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What survives a heatwave in Richmond gardens and what doesn’t

What survives a heatwave in Richmond gardens and what doesn’t becomes obvious by mid-afternoon. Lavender stands firm, its grey leaves designed for drought, while the bees work overtime in the purple spikes. Sedums, salvias, and anything with a Mediterranean backbone keep their composure. Roses droop but recover. Hardy geraniums fade to papery wisps. Hostas give […]

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The first tomatoes in Richmond gardens

The first tomatoes in Richmond gardens are ripening now. You notice them one morning, a flush of orange breaking through the green. The smell hits you when you pinch out the side shoots: sharp, green, faintly chemical. It clings to your fingers for hours. This is the moment gardeners wait for. The fruit has been […]

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The Bench

A different conversation about Richmond, every day.