Post Comment Love and Blogger Showcase 21-23 April 2017

Hello and welcome to another Friday and another #PoCoLo - if you were here last week, thank you and if you're new here welcome. Both Morgan and I hope you find plenty of good reads in our friendly Post Comment Love community.  

It's been a funny week hasn't it, I think short weeks always are. We had a good, but chilly Easter, and the weather has been tricking me this week since we've been home too. Tuesday morning it looked nice out and so I left home without a cardy, I almost came home again to find one but decided against it and later wished I hadn't. Although the skies were blue, so was the temperature.

It has warmed up a little as the week's gone on, but generally let's just say it's been brrrrrr! The wind has been showing its hand in other ways too, just look at the blossom on my walking commute.  There's much more on the ground now, although I kind of like the idea of pink flower beds, don't you?

Blogger Showcase: Pam from Pam's Bake and Baby blog

1. Who are you? 

My name's Pam and I'm a 32 year old mum of two - Fraser 3yrs and Hannah 1yr. I'm wife to a mountain biker-surveyor-whisky-drinker, Ross. We've been together 15 years, married for eight and I've worked in the rail industry for over 10 years.

2. How did you discover blogs/blogging?

I have been reading baking blogs for about 5 years since I really got into cake making. It opened up a whole new world for me, moving onto parenting and lifestyle blogs as well.

3. Why did you start blogging?

I started blogging - at Pam's Bake and Baby - because friends badgered me to. Since having kids I have been posting funny anecdotes and pictures on Facebook and everybody told me I should be blogging. Having taken fiction writing courses and writing only fiction since I was younger I wasn't sure how I would get on, but I'm really enjoying it.

4. What do you find most challenging?

Writing content I think will engage people. Sometimes I try too hard to write what I think others will want rather than what I enjoy.

5. What is your favourite topic to write about?

Definitely mishaps with the kids. I love the humour and the camaraderie from fellow mums.

6. Are you blogging for fun or do you have goals?

I've only been blogging for 5 months so at the moment it's just for fun but I'm keen to see what I can do with it.

7. What is your favourite thing about blogging?

It has to be the feedback and support from other mums, bakers and bloggers.

8. Have you ever attended a blogging conference?

I haven't yet attended any conferences.

9. What are your 3 best posts?

My 3 best posts are 

  1. Harder, Better, Stronger, Faster

  2. Things I've learnt today 

  3. Bakes and Blushes

10. Describe yourself in three words...

I'm a continually harassed individual that sets herself constant goals and puts herself under more pressure than she needs to. I work full-time, shift work in the rail industry and juggle this with a husband who works away a lot, two kids and a growing list of cake making requests.

...Oops!

11. Are you a tea and biscuits or coffee and cake person?

Tea and biscuits all the way. Have been known to finish a whole pack of chocolate hobnobs and hide the wrapper like a guilty child!

12. What's your idea of a perfect night out?

That would be a very luxurious meal with good wine, then cocktails, followed by a night in a hotel so I didnt have to get up with the kids.

13. Your perfect night in?

A takeaway slob night with a good box set and no housework!

14. What would your best friend/OH/mum or kids say is your best quality?

My mum would say I work too hard and don't take enough time for myself. My husband would hopefully say I'm a fun person to be around and make our home a place he can't wait to come back to.

 

Thanks Pam, it's lovely to read more about you and your blog and thank you for letting us know you enjoy our PoCoLo linky, please do grab your "I was featured" badge.

Connect with Pam here:

Twitter  -  Instagram  -  Facebook  -  Pinterest 

Inside the Potting Shed at Mottisfont

On our way back from our Dorset break at the end of March we stopped off at the National Trust's Mottisfont in Hampshire. It was my first visit there and it certainly lived up to its romantic billing in the NT blurb. I'll share more from our time there over the next few weeks, but today I'm concentrating just on one quite small part of it, and that's the Potting Shed. Which is, as its name suggests, a shed.

Mottisfont is a large estate, and yes I'm showing you a shed

And yes I know, it's a vast estate - we walked around a lot of it - and I'm showing you a shed. But, it's a very nice shed!

IT'S A VERY NICE SHED!

IT'S A VERY NICE SHED!

You're starting to believe me now aren't you?  

It was the kind of place I could happily have spent a good hour or two in, but I didn't think I'd get away with that so I spent as long as I could. It was also the kind of place that had the right mix of being a real space, but also carefully orchestrated, and I couldn't work out which it was more of. My head said the orchestrated side, but my heart just wanted to pull up that stool and get my nose into one of those books. I'd have preferred an easy chair over the stool, but I think that's probably why there wasn't one!

Garden tools close at hand and neatly stored

And is it just me, or do those tools say G & T? 

Boxes of seeds and a cup put down to enable a two-handed rummage

I like the wooden box for seeds, and make use of some wooden wine boxes in my own greenhouse and they're a great modern day equivalent. I always look out for those on our French trips and so far, have been lucky twice.  

I wanted to rummage through the seed box and sift through the papers on the desk but held back. Just. The notebook telling part of the story was a nice touch and a tactic that Mottisfont used in the property too, where if I'm honest I found it a little too forced, but also the handwriting a little too small and too wordy when the place was much busier. It worked here in the shed though as there was time to read it without someone hovering at your shoulder willing you to move on. 

Like many areas of the house the NT uses the display to educate visitors

The rose paintings on the wall were beautiful and reminded me of a herb book I have, a present from  my nan, with its botanical style illustrations. And it's true, I think, the best roses do survive and quite often we rarely know their names, just how they flower, their scent and of course their colour. 

Hand-painted pictures of roses decorate the walls of the potting shed at Mottisfont
A dog rose painting in the potting shed at Mottisfont

It's hard to believe isn't it, that this is just a relatively normal sized shed, perhaps a little bigger than most of us have, but definitely somewhere to ponder and learn, experiment and succeed. And for all kinds of roses too.  

A real rose alongside a trug and other paraphernalia in the potting shed at mottisfont

The "in tray" made me smile too. Not just the old tobacco tins no doubt used for storing seed, but also because it's just the kind of in tray I'd be happy with. I've still seeds to plant right now and so it's a job I  must get on with this weekend. 

Old tobacco tins, no doubt storing seed, in the in tray and terracotta pots
More seeds and vintage looking packets, looking about as neat and orderly as my own seed store

Yes, it really was a fascinating place and jam packed with information and treats for the eye everywhere I looked. Even down to what must surely be orchestrated dirt... 

crates and terracotta pots, and more of the Mottisfont story

Quite a shed, and it's easy to see why sheds are often a safe haven and places for pottering isn't it? My pottering place is my greenhouse, while MOHs is his shed although lately neither of us have had enough time for a decent potter - we'll need to put that right, won't we? 

Tulip-mania in Dad's garden

We've been in Norfolk for some of the Easter weekend visiting family and clocking up a second visit of the year to one of our favourite counties. I was expecting bulbs to have sprung up in dad's garden but I didn't expect there to be quite so many tulips. The garden was full of red and yellow tulips, everywhere. Even among the chard.

A cheeky tulip in the chard

They certainly knew how to find the sun in the garden too. Their petals were glistening in the sunlight, even this one that looks as if it should be in the shade.

Shade or sun, this tulip can't quite decide

Masquerading amongst other flowers - or vegetables - or even jumping over the flower bed edges seems to be a speciality of dad's tulips.

borrowing the foliage from other spring bulbs

I was keen to see how the "top down" photography angle would work for tulips, and both red and yellow varieties obliged, boldly showing off their dark centres

Peering into the dark centre of the tulip
And a group of top down yellow tulips

In one part of the garden, it looks as if some cross-fertilisation has gone on. The red tulips have yellow edges and the yellow one red tinges, and I quite like the look of these. I'm assuming they've done this themselves as these were the only ones that weren't true colours, but who knows for sure.

Red plus yellow equals orange, or pretty tulips

And a trip around dad's garden is never complete without seeing any pink flowers, and this time is no different. Dad's columnar apple tree is laden with blossom, very pink blossom. There's so much the lower branches are almost touching the ground. And look at the colour of the soil, it's such a different colour to mine, and way less stony.

apple blossom on a heavily laden branch

Out the front the clematis that I spot all over Norfolk is already in flower, and I think it'll be in flower for a long time yet looking at the amount of buds looking as if they're about to burst.

The Norfolk clematis is already in flower
And there's plenty more flowers to come judging by these buds

Like many gardens, mine included, the foliage is growing strongly even though there's been less rain than usual. The leaves below are from a poppy, which looks as if it's going to be huge!

foliage of what looks like it'll be a giant poppy

The lupin leaves with their distinctive shape are also springing up around the garden. I'd love to be able to grow lupins in my own garden, but my snail population are rather keen on them too. I've tried growing them in pots, but then invariably there'll be a hot spell and I'll lose them through lack of watering.  The toads in our garden do help to keep the snail population down, or at least I hope they do - I have a mental image of being knee-deep in snails without the toads which isn't a great image, but maybe there's just too many snails for my toads. 

And luscious lupin leaves too

This weekend I saw a couple of flowers I'd not seen before, one in dad's garden and another in his neighbours. And just so you know I spotted the neighbours flower when I went to my car and not because I was loitering with my camera ready - just saying.  So here's the pretty star shaped flower in dad's garden, I'm not sure I've seen it before, and I'm not sure what it is either, so if you know please leave me a comment and let me know what mystery flower number 1 is.

MYSTERY FLOWER NUMBER 1

MYSTERY FLOWER NUMBER 1

The neighbour's flower is mystery flower number 2 and it's a lilac and egg yolk yellow combination, which is unusual enough anyway, and a combination you might question if you didn't see the picture. But it seems to work, but again I'm not sure what it is. So if you know what mystery flower number 2 is then please let me know.

MYSTERY FLOWER NUMBER 2

MYSTERY FLOWER NUMBER 2

And if you know what both of them are, I'll be super impressed.  

PoCoLo