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July/August 2020
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Best Front Garden Competition 2020
Bradley Stoke in Bloom summer 2020 update
News
Bradley Stoke in Bloom (BSiB) has opened entries for its annual Best Front Garden competition, now in its eighth year The competition has two categories: • Small garden (terraced or semi-detached house) • Large garden (detached house) Judging will take place in late-July and the assessment categories are: ‘well kept frontage’, ‘quantity/quality of plants’, ‘outstanding character’ and ’well kept lawn, paths and driveway’. Entry forms are available to download from www.bradleystokeinbloom.com and the Bradley Stoke in Bloom page on Facebook. Alternatively, you can request one via email at bsib@hotmail.co.uk • Entries close on 17th July. Sara Messenger of Bradley Stoke in Bloom says: “We hope this year to have many more entries, from both ‘old favourites’ and some ‘new faces’, so if you have been busy gardening during the Covid-19 pandemic, why not pick up an entry form and let us come and admire your handiwork?”
By Sara Messenger of Bradley Stoke in Bloom (BSiB) t’s been six months since I wrote an ‘in Bloom’ column and what a six months it has been! Although I sometimes felt that I was nailed to the spot as the Covid-19 storm raged around me, sweeping aside all that I thought I knew, Mother Nature was having none of it and seized the moment and bloomed. The traffic that used to queue daily past our house no longer drowned out the dawn chorus and the resulting fumes no longer polluted the air. Our cherry tree sprang into life, its fruit still bright and clean while the bees and other insects seemed to buzz happily all day long. In our garden we had nesting blackbirds, sparrows, blue tits and robins who were taking advantage of the increased insect population to feed their broods. Although the lockdown prevented us from meeting as a group, I did manage to have a pair of secateurs or a trowel in my pocket on our allowed daily walks and do a few bits and pieces, and again at Easter and VE Day we appeared through the early morning mist to decorate our planters and the Manor Farm Roundabout. Although Treacle, the Manor Farm roundabout dog has gone missing, Debbie the heifer, complete with quarantine tape, made a very
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welcome return. The community herb garden had some spring additions, although we see a pigeon has set up home over one of the boxes and has generously supplied much fertilizer for the strawberries. Much as we may appreciate the gesture, we have moved away any plants that were in its firing line! The Brook Way wildflowers strips are regularly checked and debrambled for SGC. The Primrose Bridge ‘rainbow’ steps had yet another repaint and, despite the lockdown rules, scything the orchard was never going to be a problem, as most sensible people seeing me with a 2ft blade keep much more than 6ft away! The RHS has abandoned its annual competitions for this year, which may be a good thing, as we were not sure how we could have topped the Gold that we scooped last year! However, we have decided to run our Best Front Garden Competition again as I don’t know about you, but I kept myself sane during lockdown by getting on with my garden ‘to do’ list, and judging by some of the wonderful gardens we saw on our daily walks, I wasn’t the only one using ‘garden therapy’. Although you won’t be able to collect the entry forms from the town council office this year, you can still post them there once complete. The forms are available from our Facebook page, our
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