Saturday, 4 October 2025

Saturday 4th October - Holiday at Home; Thursday, Nymans Gardens

 We met up with Son and Daughter for lunch at Nymans Gardens. I think the weather was best described as Autumnal. Unsurprisingly, considering it's October. 

It looks as though the National Trust has standardised the menus across the sites; I'm not complaining  because the curried cauliflower pasty in wholemeal pastry is so delicious I was more than happy to have it again. I am determined to work out how make that filling at home.

But we were there to spend time together and have a walk through the gardens...

They always have a display of flowers to be seen in the gardens. I wondered about doing a bit of a scavenger hunt...


Unfortunately this tree wasn't included;


The fruits or whatever they are look so alien

The branches were low enough that you touch them... but somehow I didn't want to... I kept thinking of the witches scene from Macbeth

Fillet of a fenny snake,

In the cauldron boil and bake;

Eye of newt and toe of frog,

Wool of bat and tongue of dog,

Adder's fork and blindworm's sting,

Lizard's leg and howlet's wing.

For charm of powerful trouble,

Like a hell-broth boil and bubble.


We did spot another of these trees a long while back and I found out what it was then. I haven't managed to track down that information yet.

We carried on to a lower path lined with huge mature trees. Here's one with some fungus at the base


This path goes down to the lowest level of the gardens. I knew I was facing an uphill climb in every sense of the word to get back to the entrance /exit level. Taking my time I made it to the top! What a sense of achievement, rewarded by the view right across to the far side of the valley! 

You can see that the sun came out towards the last of the afternoon - perfect end to a lovely day.

We agreed not to meet on Friday as rain was forecast - accurately as it turned out - we've plans to finish the week by meeting for lunch at the weekend. 





15 comments:

  1. I think the unnamed fruit on the tree is a magnolia seed pod I have something very similar on my Magnolia Stella. I am hoping to get some viable seeds to see if I can grow a new plant.
    Jane (a regular reader)

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    1. I hoped someone might know, thank you Jane 😊

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  2. Certainly very strange seeds. The leaves dont look like magnolia, but it might be a different variety.

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  3. Beautiful photos. That is a very strange looking type pod.
    The curried cauliflower pasty sounds delicious!

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    1. I'm still thinking about what was in it... cauliflower potato onion sultanas... doesn't sound complicated

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  4. The pod at the bottom of the third picture looks like a dragon. I don't care about its proper name, I have decided it is a dragon tree.

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  5. So pleased you can meet up with the family even if your original plans had to be changed. Our crowd arrived unexpectedly yesterday- to cheer us up because our holiday was cancelled. I loved teaching that Macbeth piece to my yr 6 pupils, finding all the strange qualities of the animals mentioned- nocturnal, amphibian, shape changing etc

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    1. Families- such a blessing!
      I wish our elderly English teacher had been as imaginative when she taught us Macbeth for O-level... she could make anything dull!

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  6. That is a strangely beautiful tree.

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    1. The red waxy-looking seed pod is so very, very vivid

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  7. The cauliflower pasty sounds delicious. And what a striking colour the seed pod has. Beautiful views.

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    1. The gardens are a favourite place to visit locally for the plants and the views, so many unusual plants

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  8. Definitely a magnolia. Can't tell which one from the seed pod!

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    1. Thank you, I've since discovered it's magnolia sargentiana. I'll put that in a future post.

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