Sunday, 20 July 2025

The Beauty of a Courgette Flower

Hello Friends!

Well, there is weather we are having!  One day it's a blistering mini heatwave and we melt, the next day the temperature nose dives and we're thinking about putting the heating on during the evening.  It poured during the night and is now a beautiful blue sky morning, but it could be another hot one, despite the stiff breezes that blow bouncily across the land.

Oh! The irony of hosepipe bans in effect across certain regions only to be finding themselves on the receiving end of torrential downpours delivering a month's worth of rain in a day.   Mind, it will take more, much more, than a week's worth of torrential rainstorms to top up some of the reservoirs, and we are told that the hosepipe bans will be in place for up to a year, or even longer.

I am very tired of late, the tweaks to my medications have not resulted in any of the hoped for changes, so I have been through the mill for the last few months in vain.  Still, it could have worked out that things could have improved.  As it happened, they didn't and I can honestly say that I have not felt well for months, not myself at all.  I miss being me.  Consequently, today I slept until midday and the I began sorting out photos on the laptop.  Here are a handful of courgette flowers I photographed using my macro lens some several years ago when I was still gardening and able to hold the camera, pre Pandemic and pre Parkinsons. 

Courgette flowers are simply beautiful to look at, as well as making a casing for delicious stuffing mixes to make a light lunch with a twist!  

My late neighbour, Maggie, and I used to have a friendly rivalry over our courgettes.  She would sow her seeds in April or May in pots in her greenhouse, potting on and nurturing the seedlings for weeks, before planting out in June, whereas I would sow mine directly in the soil in late May.   Within a few weeks, mine had germinated and grown well, caught up with hers, and come harvest time we were both starting our harvest in the same week!   I suppose the growth of Maggies plants was slowed down every time she potted them on, which was two or three times before they actually arrived in the garden, whereas mine just had to focus on growing without adjusting to root disturbance and new pots ever couple of weeks.

Do take your time with these, look at the incredibly detailed lines, the fine hairs, the subtle changes of colours in the bright yellow petals, the tiny spikes that do not deter slugs as one might expect!  These flowers are miniature works of art, and most of the time go unnoticed as they tend to bloom half hidden under the much larger leaves of the courgette plant.










Until next time,
Debbie xx

8 comments:

  1. I am so sorry that the tweaks to your medication haven't worked and you feel so poorly. Sending you love and do take care Debbie

    Your macro shots of the courgette are wonderful and it is such a thing of beauty. I've never tried a recipe for stuffed courgette flowers but we do grow them and have them in quiches and pasta dishes or a side vegetable.

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    1. thank you. Do look up online, for there are many recipes, some under zucchini, and most are ricotta or soft goat's cheese based and fried.

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  2. So sorry to hear that the medication adjustments have bought no relief, and to hear you don't feel yourself at all. I hope that the carers are finally coming to you?

    Those photos are amazing. I've not eaten the flowers but as a thankyou for watering at my neighbours at the weekend, have three good sized courgettes for adding to meals. I was kind and left him the half-a-marrow-already sized one! He has about15 + plants and is inundated with courgettes!

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    1. thank you. Maybe you should offer your services to make courgette chutney and split it with him. Its a wonderful way to use up a glut, which he obviously has!

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  3. You are right -- thee are beautiful works of nature's art. I'm sorry about the meds. hope you have some relief soon.

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    1. thank you, as one artist to another, the colours and textures are amazing!

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  4. Have you ever cooked courgette flowers? We have hosepipe ban, although we don't use a hosepipe, a ban is annoying given that Yorkshire Water leak a tremendous amoint of water due to mot maintaining the system. Too busy paying shareholders and bonuses. They are also one of the worse water companies for pollution.

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    1. thank you. Not cooked them for a long while now, but used to do so when I had good, blemish free flowers. The situation with the water companies is unbelievable, we pay top whack, get very poor service in return, certainly not commensurate with the amount we pay, and they sit back and take all the money they can get their grubby hands on!

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