Tags
Autumn, garden, nature, October, photography, suomi, uusimaa, vanha talo suomi
Hello friends!
For the last weeks of this October, I’ve been admiring the late autumn vignettes glimpsed through windows which look out upon the garden. My favorite views are those seen while gazing out from a long, narrow window in our bathroom, which just happens to allow several distinct views. When looked upon at the left angle, it’s possible to use the bathroom vanity mirror to see far to the right and at angles which would otherwise not be possible without concerted efforts to crane the neck for a look. The mirror trick allows the gravel pathway to pop into view with its pleasurable trek around established beds as it leads out beyond the shed building. When looked through straight out, the window offers a view of the large hawthorn, with itself taking up most of the view, with just splashes of color catching the corners of your eye in either direction left and right. The hawthorn is oft visited by blue tits, who perch among the many branches while taking a break from their activities searching for seeds & bugs and their general socializing. The other angle out of the window grants you a viewpoint out towards the walnut tree. A crab apple also shares the frame of view, as do the rose bushes further out.
At various times of the year, and through the several years I’ve been gazing outside my windows, so many views have changed and altered. As trees have matured and grown larger, they have begun to fill the entire view. But it’s not just trees. There are also a few bushes which have joined ranks with the volume of the trees, and they too have grown to fill their spaces. It sometimes takes a bit of effort, especially when the branches are covered in leaves, flowers, and fruit, to see structure. But, once the leaves have started to thin and drop, and blossoms are just a memory can you really see through, and among the many branches jutting this way and that, to rediscover depth of field, the structure of the plants and trees. The forms are right. The structure is right. The layering is right. How in the world did I get this right? It’s amazing! I still find it a mystery how this all has come together.
With the drooping of branches due to rainfall which carried over from last night, and which only just cleared up late this afternoon. A walk around the beds reveals a garden which is not quite yet resigned to sleeping, but which is still pushing out the last blooms of asters and rudbeckias, and a few green leaves abound in clusters here and there. Perennials are spent and showing the strain of recent rains, the coolness of both daytime and nighttime, as well as diminished sun exposure have begun folding in upon themselves and each other in heaps and mounds. High winds have passed by, but none lately, and without a recent visit the remaining leaves look like they are content to hang on till the end, or the next big blow. Rain and cold notwithstanding, the evidence suggests there’s still a might bit of living still to do for the wee and the braw which are taking up presence in my garden. Oh. the days and hours are numbered, no doubt, and old man winter and his maker of frost are but a month away. But until then, we’ve a bit of the autumn finery to warm our hearts and bedazzle the eye.
Enjoy the autumn finery in your next of the woods, or wherever you may find yourself!
Until the next time ❤
I’m sharing some of the finest of our autumn foliage, that which remains that is, and what has developed thus far in the proceedings of autumn closure.










I have say this autumn ha been odd, some of the plants, dropped before turning yellow as used to. And it did pass quickly.
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Yes, Ritva, it has been a bit confusing trying to guess what is coming next with this strange weather.
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Hi Kate, do you know that my Asters are blooming well too? They are really the last spot of colour in the garden.
Have a great week ahead! 🍁🍂
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Hi Luisella! Asters are great. They usually aren’t much appreciated, or even noticed…until everything else has faded, and they remain the last flowers blooming. I should try harder to include more varieties and colors, as they are such a welcome sight this late in the season.
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They are beautiful..
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Thank you
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Beautiful!
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my goodness! I’m so happy to hear from you Lis. I hope all is well there for you both. Thank you for the kind word 🙂
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You’re welcome, Kate! I’ve been way too busy to look at WordPress for weeks so I’m now trying to catch up on everything I’ve missed, it’s lovely to see what people (and their gardens) have been up to. 😊
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I figured your absence was the demands of processing the bounty, which I’m sure your garden delivered. More and more, after all this time on WP, a number of people are finding limited time to maintain writing and updating their blogs. I am nearing this too as the 10th year closes in on our garden endeavors.
Next year, I hope to participate in the yearly Finnish open garden day event, which to me seems the climax of our efforts. I already have taken the step to downgrade the WP plan I’ve been paying for all this time, despite never reaching anywhere near the storage limits…
It would be optimum to downgrade to non-paying, but with so many posts which are media-heavy… I doubt I can get there. who knows…
Hope the summer was rewarding, and your bounty has you well-stocked for the upcoming months. 🙂
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Ah, that’s exactly what I did earlier this year, downgraded from a paid plan back to a free one as I could see my writing output would be diminished (and I use far too many photos). I’m not a natural social media fan, I’d far rather spend my time living my life than sharing it, but I do love to write and as much as anything else, it’s a useful diary to look back on as I’m hopeless at making garden notes. I think our blogs evolve as the years pass, it’s the natural way of things. The Finnish garden event sounds like an amazing opportunity to showcase your gorgeous garden and the years of hard work you have put in to create and maintain it. Please find time to at least share that experience if nothing else! 😊
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Yes, my blogging as a diary/journal to keep track of progress was mostly for family overseas to ‘ride along for the journey’. But there’s less of that now than before. I don’t have social media accounts. My youtube creation was also to assist as a visual for those who were far away and had expressed wishes to see a ‘tour’ A spate of content during one summer, and I haven’t posed anything new. I also would rather live than share to the masses. amen!
I will definitely continue at least until the national event…afterwards, is anyone’s guess! 🙂
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gorgeous colours..
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