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Thursday, 10 July 2025

A stroll round Llandovery

 I had the dentist this morning - two small replacement fillings - one either side of my mouth so those required two injections which made my lower lip feel gigantic! I stopped at the garage for a cold drink before driving back, but couldn't feel the can on my lower lip and was worried about pouring it down my front!  Managed to drink it, all the same.  25 deg. out - too hot for me.  Greenhouse door currently wide open and I shall go and give everything a drink in a moment.  Can't have the new growth scorched to a frazzle. 


 Isn't this a gorgeous display?  Close to the colours of the flowers were stunning.  


A wonderful attention-seeking colour to paint the walls too. Compare with the pub opposite:


My friend Kim will recognize this as she and her partner stayed there on a visit to Wales, before deciding to up sticks and move to France, where she still lives.


The ruins of Llandovery Castle.  


The monument to Llewelyn ap Gruffydd Fechan ap Caeo (1341 - 1401), a wealthy Carmarthenshire landowner who was executed by Henry IV for supporting the rebellion of Owain Glyndwr.  Some know him as the "Welsh Braveheart" since he was executed the same way and was hung, drawn and quartered by the gate to the castle in October 1401 and Gruffydd ap Rhys was granted his lands by Henry.  There is mention of Gruffydd ap Llewelyn Foethus in his pedigree (he of Dryslwyn Castle) through his mother Jonnett, Llewelyn Foethus' daughter.  Hence a random link to our old house, which was recorded as being connected with him through the Lloyds who lived there in the 14th C.  Strangely, a link to Tam's Jon too, through the Scudamores!  Check out the Wikipedia link HERE.



The Market Square in Llandovery.  Just to the left there used to be an antiques shop and we were friendly with the owners.  We went in for a natter one day and were admiring a set of 6 (or 8?) beautiful Irish chairs.  "Try them out," the wife said, so I sat on one. O.M.G.  the drop in seat wasn't properly fitted and me and seat fell through - imagine me with my btm hanging out the bottom, and knees up around my ears, laughing so hard I feared I would pee myself!  Fortunately Keith, though weak with laughter himself, managed to haul me out.  Fast forward a couple of weeks, and the wife was in the shop on her own.  She sat down to rest her legs and - you've guessed it - it was that same chair and the same thing happened to her, only she was on her own, both laughing and shrieking for help!!  Fortunately, someone in the shop next door heard her and came to her rescue.


The Craft Centre.  I didn't bother going in as it doesn't change much and I went in there last time to browse the antiques unit there - that doesn't change either!

I needed some 1" elastic to replace the had-it elastic on some comfy hareem pants of mine, and noticed this gorgeous Rose and Hubble fabric - remaindered (as I think she's not doing patchwork any more) at just £7 a metre.  I got a metre and a half for a dress for Rosie - I know - must get cracking!



The drive back was as beautiful as yesterday.  Around the Sugarloaf are masses of Common Knapweed ("hard heads" we knew them as when we were children, and used to hit one another with them.)  Such a pretty purple and matching the nearby purple Tufted Vetch.  I noticed lots of Yellow Loosestrife (garden escapee perhaps) and yellow St John's Wort, and some Codlins and Cream (Greater Willowherb).  In a damp ditch was the gorgeous Purple Loosestrife, positively puce in the bright sunshine. I forgot to mention, but when we were driving back last week (Tam had her dental check up then), hay had been cut and cleared from a hilltop field and there must have been 30 Kites and Buzzards (mostly Kites) lazily drifting round on a thermal overhead, hunting for meeces and voles in the stubble.  Today on a different cut and carried field, there were as many Rooks looking for food.  The ground is so hard and dry and it must be so difficult for them to find things like worms.

I was 6 years old when I started being interested in wild flowers, when a neighbour's daughter was doing a project for school.  That began a lifelong interest, so thank you Marilyn.  We had a wild border to our garden so lots of wild flowers grew there, and we had Common Lizards and Slow Worms for the wildlife side of things, and the occasional visit from a Grass Snake too.  I still love to learn about Botany, and wild life - life is one long learning process after all.


Vergeside flowers on the way to Llandod recently - the delicate white flower is Hedge Bedstraw, next to the yellow Ladies Bedstraw.  These would have been strewing herbs for floors in Medieval and Tudor times.

Now, I am considering setting up my sewing machine in the cool of the kitchen and getting that last hand-quilted border in place . . .


21 comments:

  1. A lovely read, TQ x
    Alison in Devon x

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  2. I had the dentist as well today, all good thankfully but have to visit the hygenist. The earliest she could fit me in is October. When I got back in the car the temperature was 32 degrees. All the doors and windows are open and the cat is lying under the buddleia on the soil. Parts of Derbyshire will be having a hosepipe ban from tomorrow, can I find out what areas - no I can't. Xx

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    1. Yup, £40 worse off now, but hey, I still have NHS dentistry, as does Tam. Your car must have been scolding hot inside. Alfie has been lying beneath my Lark Ascending rose for shade. I kept Pippi in when she came back mid-afternoon for her tea and she was glad to just lie upstairs on a bed. Not surprised that there's a hosepipe ban in your county.

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  3. Replies
    1. It was. Lifts my spirits to see the wild flowers and the scenery.

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  4. That orange is wonderful as a backdrop for all the flowers. I've wondered where your blog's name came from.

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    1. A perfect foil. Quite a few bold colours on the Georgian houses around the market place too. Yes, named after that particular wild flower.

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  5. What a lovely and peaceful post. You have so many wild flowers where you live. Those flowers at the one pub are absolutely stunning.

    God bless.

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    1. We do indeed - normally Wales is pretty damp, even in the summer. It's unusual to have sun from early spring onwards, and all the wild flowers are rewarding us this year. Whoever did the pub flowers has real green fingers and an eye for a great display.

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  6. I love the bright orange and that wild riot of flowers and pennants! Certainly catches the eye, doesn't it? But then, right across from it, that plain building - what a contrast, but a lovely one, like a white haired grandma sitting with a lively granddaughter!

    Over here, purple loosestrife is considered invasive and 'bad'. I've never understood that. I think it's beautiful. I never knew there was yellow loosestrife.

    I think that you've pictured that ghostly sculpture before. It is so very perfect for the poor man executed 600 years ago, but standing his ground still.

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    1. Very cheerful - I love jewel-like colours and this is very . . . vibrant! Especially a positive note on one of those drab, drear, grey February days.

      Purple Loosestrife grows fairly discretely here - I wouldn't have called it invasive. What IS invasive is the Victorian-introduced Touch-me-not Balsam (HImalayan Balsam) which is all along every river bank. I'll take a photo of my Yellow Loosestrife on the bank and put it up on the next post.

      Yes, I've had Llewellyn ap Gruffydd on my blog before. It is good that he is remembered - though for a ghastly reason.

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  7. surprised the dentist did two sides, if he/she does it again try drinking through a straw rather than risk dehydration. Colourful it may be, but I couldn't live near that riot of colour for too long it's a bit overpowering.

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    1. She did ask me and I said just get it done - pointless having another appointment in a couple of weeks' time. Just go for it. The straw would be a good idea but then I would have had to search Llandovery for a pack and the shops aren't that many or likely to stock them. I managed.

      I have strong colours in my house, toned down with more muted ones. I think the town looks very colourful. Llandeilo has a row of brightly coloured houses going down the hill to Ffairfach, and they are often photographed. A bit like Tenby too, which has some. Ireland takes the ticket though - gosh, they put SUCH a mix of colours together. Anything goes!!

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  8. I love your wild flower photos. It is something I am interested in too. From Spring onwards I try to name each type of wildflower on verges if we are stuck in traffic jams, which is a good way to prevent getting would up about being delayed. I often find that I can name the type of plant, but not the specific name i.e. Vetch, rather than Tufted Vetch. Even the most uninspiring looking bit of roadside often reveals a surprising range of wildflowers growing on it, once you get your eye in.

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    1. If I manage to get out early over the weekend, I will take some more. Good way of keeping amused when you are in traffic jams. I have quite a selection here on my bit of wilderness - Hedge Woundwort around the wild raspberries - along with nettles and brambles and me with bare ankles!

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  9. Here in South Yorkshire we’ve had a hosepipe ban imposed as of yesterday - however if we grow vegetables and fruit we will be given a little leeway to use water to keep them alive.
    Not so with flowers, which seems reasonable.

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    1. Not too much of a surprize. I hope you can use some grey water from the house to keep things going. I use all my washing up water - and what runs off cold until it warms up too - always half a bowlful. I fill the watering cans with it. I am on my own spring supply, which also brings its own problems at times!

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    2. Luckily my back door is right next to my kitchen sink and my plants in the backyard!
      They get all the grey water, some of it soapy!

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  10. I would be drinking in the nice cool looking pub across the road. That scorching orange one is too bright and overly fussy with plants for my liking. But we are all different.

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  11. Oh I loved the plants. They were stunning. The colour is very bold, I agree, but in a Welsh February, cheerful!

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