Sunday, April 18, 2010

Blue Skies and Sunshine

I had a fabulous couple of hours at Kew Gardens yesterday - the sun was shining and the sky blue - no sign of volcanic ash in the atmosphere as far as I could tell!!  I am lucky enough to live fairly close to Kew - not sure how far it is distance wise, but two short train journeys - changing at Clapham Junction - and I can be there in about an hour - a short walk over the River Thames at Kew Bridge.  I try always to be there in time for opening at 9.30 (then I can be home in time for whatever live football is on tv at lunchtime.....) and I like to be first through the gates.... (little things please me!) Yesterday I had quite a crowd with me.

Anyhow, yesterday was glorious. I knew that the magnolias were in bloom because the BBC breakfast tv programme had been there one day in the week with their weather forecaster) so I made for that part of the gardens first.  I got a bit carried away with the photos - in all I took 2 films (36 shots each...) so will have to prune (sorry about that!) out the shots so you don't get bored.  You should be able to click to enlarge them.

Magnolia trees. From a distance they look so fluffy!
magnolia blooms in close up.
I think this is the first year I've been going regularly, that I have caught the Snake Head Fritilleries in flower - they looked fab too.

I walked round the conservation area alongside the river but the bluebells are a way off flowering yet - leaves only - so will be back to see them in a couple of weeks or so, I expect. 


Doesn't the sky look blue taken up through the tree! It wasn't quite that blue to the naked eye.
Although lots of the daffodils had finished, there were areas that still had lots of glorious drifts - and with the sun shining through them they looked amazing. (I have been know to lie down on the ground for this - but not today as the grass was quite damp - it was obviously cold overnight and the dew hadn't dried)

It was so peaceful for once, with the shutdown on flights over the UK with the ash problem from the Icelandic volcano, you could really hear the birds (not that I could identify many of them - although the peacocks are quite distinctive).  I did come across one peacock, but didn't get close enough to photograph him - he wouldn't put his tail up either - and he made off at a steady trot, obviously looking for his lady-love!!)  Normally, with Kew being so close to Heathrow, planes flie overhead every minute or so, and if you go up the Treetop Walkway, you feel as if you could reach up and touch them!


They regularly change the display in these beds outside the Palm House and these spring bulbs looked - and smelled - glorious!






In front of the Palm House are a couple of round beds full of tulips - again I crouched down low to get the sun shining through the petals.
I had to take some more shots of the sun on the fountain in the lake in front of the Palm House - it still makes one of my favourite Kew shots, especially with the sun out.


This Japanese Cherry makes a great spectacle, although I am sure last year the blooms were pinker - but maybe it's just my memory!
I loved the reflections of the trees in this small lake.
I hope you enjoy looking at these as much as I enjoyed taking them yesterday.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

A damp day in London

Last Saturday I took a trip to London instead of Kew - the weather was forecast; and turned out to be - dull and showery - not the ideal for photographing flowers - and despite numerous tube lines being shut for engineering works, I started at Covent Garden Market.  I was a bit early - by the time I got there it was only about 9.45 and the stallholders were just setting up.  There was some sort of filming going on - I couldn't work out what, although some of the people being filmed where wearing London Wasps rugby club colours (they were singing "Jerusalem") so I assume it was something for the rugby club, but I couldn't find out what was going on.

From there I walked to Trafalgar Square - which is so much easier to walk around now it's partly pedestrianised. 
There is water coming out of this fountain, but the day was so dull it doesn't show up in the photo.

There were already lots of tourists in London, especially Japanese - I guess the currency conversion rate is good for tourists at the moment!

I love walking around London, I hadn't been "up" to London (I live south of London) for quite a while.

This is Tragalgar Square, London buses and taxis and all - in a brief lull from major traffic. 



The "other side" of Admiralty Arch at the top of The Mall leading down to Buckingham Palace. I saw some Japanese tourists standing in the middle of the road to get a good view! I wouldn't - not even on a Saturday when the traffic is lighter than weekdays.







From here I walked through Horseguards Parade (where they have Trooping the Colour in June) - and home for the beach volleyball I think, come the London Olympics in 2012...

I love the way The London Eye dominates so much of London's skyline.  I have been up in - round in?? it a couple of times - but last Saturday wasn't the day for it - ideally you need a bright sunny day to make the views best - but it is spectacular - I thoroughly recommend it if you get a chance.


Leaving Horseguards, I walked through St James Park (it was quite an exciting day as there had been some kind of "police incident" at the restaurant at the start of the park - the restaurant was all taped off and a police forensic guy in his blue suit and camera was at work.  I googled when I got home but it didn't seem to have made any news sites - I suppose it's such a common occurence that it doesn't always.

Once I got past the police tape, into the park itself, there was some gorgeous drifts of daffodils and it wasn't quite raining yet....

I walked through the park down to Buckingham Palace to find crowds and crowds of tourists - I had chanced upon Changing the Guards.  Feeling a bit like Alice in the A A Milne poem, I joined the crowds - I think the last time I was in London for Changing the Guards I was about 10 with my Mum and brother and sister... Unfortunately I couldn't get a very good view and the gentleman in front of me kept turning to talk to his daughter (teenaged) just as I was trying to take pics of the guards ..

This is one of the only really decent ones I got. Like I said, I was quite a way away, and the crowd was too deep to allow me to get into my camera bag to change to the longer length lens, which would have helped!

It started raining about this time so I left the crowds to it and was going to walk down to Westminster bridge but took the wrong road (too wet to get my map out, didn't want to look too like a tourist....!!) and ended up walking all round the outside to Buck Palace gardens till I got back to where I'd started -


I didn't want to come home without finishing the film off so I took the right road down to Westminster to take a couple of shots of the Abbey and Houses of Parliament

They've obviously got the builders in judging by the tarpaulin on the roof!  I had to stand on the corner waiting for the traffic lights to change to keep the buses and lorries out of my shot...

so that was my morning in London.  The rain had just about stopped and I couldn't be bothered to wait for a bus so walked back down to Victoria station to catch the train home.

The photos don't really do London justice due to the poor weather but it was a good day nevertheless.

I have got some more Kew photos to blog from the week before this, when the daffodils were truly gorgeous, but will come back to do that another day.
I don't know why there are such large gaps between the pics, sorry!

Saturday, March 27, 2010

My Own Year at Kew - continued

Thank you to those of you who've been along so far.

I went up to London today for a change from Kew but won't get the photos back till tomorrow (I may be impatient, but even I can wait 24 hours for them!!)  So here are a few more of my faves from my experiment to "do a year at Kew"

These were taken on 23rd May 2009 -a light, bright sunny morning.

I should know the names ....!








I love the way the sunlight is shining through these ferns!








I was kneeling down as low as I could to get this shot!  I love poppies and have always wanted to recreate the Cadbury's Flake advert with the poppy field - but never seem to find a poppy field in full flower!!












It's not all plants at Kew!  The architecture is great too - especially on nice days like this one was with the blue sky - it looks very different in November!

This is the Temperate House.








I did go in June, but there aren't any truly great shots!

This was the 18th July. I took several of these thistles, they were covered in bees so I had to be careful!

Again I was crouching down shooting up through the plant - good job it hadn't been raining!

August now - this is the Palm House


Here's "my" fountain again - I told you I was obsessed with it!  This time I've taken it from a different angle (for the sun) using some bushes to border my shot!  This was 19th September.  Another lovely bright day.

I love autumn - the flower borders are just full of gorgeous colours.

This is 3rd October.  Last year's autumn colour wasn't quite as good as the year before but this is one of my 2009 favourites though.   The joy of going to Kew first thing in the morning (I time it to arrive just before they open at 9.30) is that there are fewer people in the way of my photos!  



This is the newest of the glasshouses at Kew - the Princess of Wales Conservatory, opened in 1987. I love the shapes of this one.  This is where they have the orchid displays in Feb-March.

Monday, March 22, 2010

New blog - Welcome

Hi!  I decided to start a separate blog to show some of my photos - I love to take photos but I know that they may not be very interesting to many people.  I seem to spend a lot of my Saturday mornings (depending on what football match is on Tv early at lunchtime) and obviously on the weather!

A couple of years ago I really enjoyed a TV programme made by Alan Titchmarsh, gardener and TV broadcaster extraordinaire here in the UK; that followed Kew for a year - imaginatively called, A Year At Kew. And I decided that I'd like to try my own photographic version.

So I took out an annual membership and away I went!  I get a bit carried away when I take photos and end up with loads and loads - in a visit lasting a couple of hours, I can easily take a whole roll of film - or more, depending on what's in season and if there are special events on.

It is amazing to see the changes between visits, when life springs back into the plants and trees.  Although autumn is probably my favourite time, you get some spectacular displays all through the year.  Crisp frosty mornings, bright sunny days, I've been there! So to start off this blog, and to stop the rambling, here are a few of my favourite pictures that I've captured over the last couple of years.


This is possibly my all time favourite photo - I was at Kew early on a cold autumn morning late in 2008 and the sun was shining brightly through the water drops on this fountain.  I became obsessed with this fountain - I still am, 2 years later!! You do have to be lucky to catch just the right time of day/year/weather but this day it was PERFECT.  I thought about entering it for Kew's Photographer of the Year competition but chickened out.  I always leave my camera set on automatic and trust to luck!


Don't you just love how the sunlight has caught the water drops?! I must have taken 10 or 15 shots that day... just of the fountain - I won't show you them all, that would be silly!!  But I did keep swapping lenses, zooming in and out, you name it!


Between Christmas and New Year 2008, I took another trip to Kew and the lake was (partly) frozen, you can just about make out the ice (BOY was it cold...):


Each year in February, they put on a stunning Orchid Display in two of the glasshouses - these are from 2009 - displays to look like giant presents!


 Orchids intertwined with these frothy looking airplants.

A month or so later, the spring colours were coming out in all their glory. This Japanese Cherry borders the lake I love so much!


I love this one with the Palm House in the background.



21.3.2009


Beautiful tulip displays! (21st March 2009 - this year they're not even through the soil!)

Then in early April, I was lucky enough to find this courting peacock in full display - I got very carried away with him too, and took loads of photos.  I know they are meant to  be unlucky, but he was sooo beautiful.









Three weeks later, I went back to see the bluebells in full flower and luckily it was another sunny morning!




The peacock was still in full love mode that day too!  I loved the way his tail feathers were carefully draped over the bench that 5 minutes before I had been sitting on changing my film!




Wow!  we've only got till April last year!  I bet you are all bored by now so I will leave off for today!