Posted by: Debra Kolkka | April 25, 2020

Liberation Day

Today, 25th April, is La Festa da Liberazione, Liberation Day in Italy. It commemorates the end of Nazi Occupation during WWII. It was the day in 1945 when the National Liberation Committee of Upper Italy officially proclaimed by radio the seizure of power and the death sentence of all fascist leaders. Mussolini was shot 3 days later.

The liberation ended 23 years of fascist dictatorship and 5 years of war. It was a war most Italians did not want. Many young men were dragged from their farms and sent off to fight, unwilling and ill equipped. Some were sent to the Russian front in the dead of winter where they froze where they stood. I know people here who remember the war.

The war touched everyone. It seems difficult to believe that a tiny, remote village like Vergemoli could be affected, but fighting was all around this area. I have seen photos of the village being bombed.

My favourite building in Bagni di Lucca was Nazi head quarters in WWII. It is just around the corner from our apartment.

There is a plaque on the side of the building telling of the 13 partisans who were held and tortured in the building. They were murdered and there is a memorial to them in the local cemetery.

On the other side of the mountains here was one of the worst massacres in Italy in the town of Santa Anna di Stazzema. The people in the town were rounded up and murdered. See the story here. The massacre at Sant’Anna di Stazzema

Today there would normally be celebrations in many town and villages, but not this year. People will remember these awful times quietly at home.

25th April is also a day of commemoration in my home, Australia. Anzac Day is a day commemorate all Australians and New Zealanders who served and died in all wars, conflicts and peacekeeping operations. It marks the first major military action fought by Australian and New Zealand forces during WWI.

There were no big celebrations today. Many people gathered with candles on their balconies or their front yards at dawn, the time of the first charge by the soldiers.

My favourite uncle fought in WWII. He served in Palestine, Crete and New Guinea, yes, the whole war. He lived, but my mother said he was never the same. My mother was the youngest of 8 and her bother Robert was the second oldest. She was a young girl when her favourite brother was sent off to fight leaving his young wife, Rose, behind.

He is at the bottom of this photo, the one with the sketch pad on his lap. He used to write letters to Rose with drawings and cartoons on the envelopes. She would wait for the postman for his latest missive. He was a talented artist and cartoonist. In another time he may have become a professional artist. Instead he was a house painter, a good solid job after the war.


We loved our uncle Bob. We loved it when he drew something funny for us or whirled us around doing “aeroplanes” while we screamed for more. He never talked to anyone about his war experiences. He didn’t want to go to Anzac Day celebrations or have anything to do with the war. Whatever was in his head stayed there.

Today is a reminder of the awful times past generations have had to live through. Lockdown is mild by comparison. For those of us with a home and food this is not too much to ask.

Posted by: Debra Kolkka | April 20, 2020

Rain at last

Finally rain has arrived at Casa Debbio.



We have had almost no rain since the beginning of March. My grass was dry and crisp and the fruit trees were badly in need of a good soaking.  This has been a strange spring for many reasons.

The garden is growing and will do even better with this rain.

The quince tree is covered with flowers.

The cherry blossoms are falling and tiny cherries will soon appear.


The kiwi vines are doing well.

The May bushes are flowering.

The weeping cherry has leaves.


Lilacs are flowering.


Wisteria is still growing over the pergola in front of the house and beginning on the one on the side.



Bleeding heart flowers are delightful.


The Judas tree is bright pink. It is still a baby, only about 2 metres high. It will get bigger and better.

My peonies are opening daily.

Lockdown continues and life goes on. A few small restrictions have been lifted and I felt it would be OK to go down to Ponte a Serraglio to collect a few things from our apartment. I went early in the morning, spoke to nobody, and quickly gathered what I needed.

It is very sad to see my little village looking so forlorn. Bar Italia is closed and there is no life in the piazza. It makes me realise how protected I am from the reality of this lockdown. I have my garden to walk in and looking after my plants gives me something to do. I feel desperately sorry for those shut inside for weeks and those having to work on the frontline to keep things going.

I did my weekly shop on my return from Ponte and gathered some plants from the nursery. Here is my haul.

Filippo and I spent the next day planting geraniums and continuing to fill gaps in the garden.



We also converted an old table into a planter. I can’t wait to see how the flowers fill the top.

With the rain coming I picked a few peonies and snowballs to have inside so I could enjoy them. They get sodden in the rain and droop with the weight of the water.


I hope you are all doing well in the lockdown. I wonder when it will be over.

Posted by: Debra Kolkka | April 14, 2020

Bad goats

Lockdown continues at Casa Debbio and will do until at least 4th May. My garden is the thing that makes this staying at home bearable. Last week I planted pansies between the new hydrangeas along the driveway.

Muffloni, wild goats, have nibbled a few since they were planted, but a couple of nights ago they pulled them all out and tossed them down the hill. They also kicked one of the logs at the edge down to the next terrace. Then one of them left the regular message in the form of a black poo on my doorstep. You have to laugh!

Wisteria is growing well over the pergola, the purple more quickly than the white.

 

A couple of evenings ago one of my peonies began to open.

 

The next day it opened along with its neighbour.

 

 

 

The ricotta flowers are growing. Soon they will turn creamy white.

The blue sky makes a stunning backdrop for the ginestra. The Judas tree is flowering on the top terrace.

The ginestra won’t be in flower much longer. The forsythia is already getting its leaves.


I had to buy these lovely petunias.

For lunch yesterday I made cauliflower fritters, delicious. Gardening, cooking and Netflix…lockdown continues. We had a tiny bit of rain last night so I didn’t have to spend most of the day watering.


This stunning wisteria is growing on a house in a nearby village. I drove past on my way to the supermarket last week. I hope mine is as impressive as this in a few years.

How is lockdown going for you?

 

Posted by: Debra Kolkka | April 8, 2020

Lockdown report

Here in Italy we are beginning the fifth week of lockdown. It seems that the numbers of people contracting the virus are decreasing but strict lockdown is still in place with no end date certain. We are not allowed to leave the house except for essential shopping.

It has now been decided that everyone must wear a mask at all times when away from home. In Tuscany masks are being distributed to each household.

Right now I can still see cars approaching Casa Debbio along the track through the forest. Once the trees have more coverage that won’t happen. Yesterday I saw a car hurtling along the track. I rarely have anyone come to the house, especially now.

It was my nearest neighbour delivering my masks. The village received their quota a day after the announcement. I think that is very efficient. Vergemoli has fewer than 100 residents and is just one of hundreds of tiny mountain villages in the Garfagnana.

These 2 masks will cover my next 2 outings. Previously I made one from a red and white check linen table napkin, keeping with the Italian theme.


For me at Casa Debbio it is all OK. The weather is lovely. The mornings and evenings are still cool but the days are warm and sunny.

I have been kept busy watering the garden, particularly the newer plants. My nearest plant nursery was allowed to open early this week. I was first at the gate on Monday morning and filled up the car. What looked like quite a lot of plants in the car is hardly noticeable in the garden. I am trying to fill in a few gaps left by things that didn’t make it through winter and planting a few annuals.

We have not had rain in weeks and everything is drying out. There isn’t much hope that the grass will grow, but I can keep most things alive until it rains again.

My biggest cherry tree is in full bloom.

The trees in front of the house are becoming greener every day.

If you look closely you can see some white spots. These are wild fruit trees coming to life in spring.

My peonies are in all stages of growth. Some are still just tiny pink points poking out of the soil, while others have flowers which the bugs and bees love.

This is the first peony I planted at Casa Debbio. It gets about 60 blooms each year. The flowers are a glorious crimson colour.

The one beside it is called Shirley Temple. It grew about 30 pale pink flowers last year.


An animal of some kind climbed into this pot and squashed the growing peony flat. It seems to be bouncing back. The goats/deer/porcupines don’t just eat stuff, they like to dig them up, pull them out and sit on them. My goat shouting is not working.

Wisteria is beginning to open. There are several different types.

 

The ginestra and forsythia are continuing to put on a good show.

So is one pot of rhododendron. There are others close to blooming, including one that had a severe pruning by goats recently.

Lilacs are almost open.

So are ricotta flowers.

I planted a couple of things around the edge of the bed. I hope the seeds I put in grow soon. Something pulled out the pink flowers last night, but I managed to replant it before it died. ( I don’t like goats)

The big excitement is my drive down the mountain tomorrow for my weekly food shop…and I get to wear my new mask. We have to wear gloves while shopping too. I found a pair of cotton gloves which I prefer to the plastic ones issued at the supermarket.

Stay home and stay well.

 

Posted by: Debra Kolkka | April 3, 2020

A new lockdown project

Lockdown continues and I am trying to stay motivated. I have to admit that I sat for quite some time on the swing chair today. It was deliciously warm and sunny and the view is marvellous.

The first red rose has appeared.

The garden on the terrace below the house is coming along.

The trees around Casa Debbio are becoming greener every day.

Peonies and verbena are growing.

Pear trees have blossoms.

The quince tree has tiny blossoms.

This tree doesn’t look much yet, but in a week or so it will be spectacular. (I hope)

The old cherry tree is starting to bloom.

If you look behind the cherry tree you will see my straw bed.

This is how it looked last year.

 

This year I am going to turn it into a garden bed. I doubt that I would be able to find new straw this year to redo the bed. I cleaned it up. Grass was beginning to grow out of the straw.

I had some soil delivered from a local nursery and tomorrow I will sow some flower seeds and see what happens. I have some seeds a friend gave me last autumn and I have found a few packets of seeds at the supermarket. There will be progress reports.

My pastry this morning was pear and ricotta.

I also made banana bread, which I shared with Filippo.

The lockdown in Italy is slowly having some effect. The numbers of people contacting the virus are dropping, but the lockdown will continue until at least after Easter.

Even in Vergemoli, a tiny mountain village with fewer than 100 people police patrol regularly to make sure people are not wandering outside their homes. I don’t go down to the village often. I drop my rubbish in the community bins once a week on the way to the supermarket and I went down today to collect my plants.

I am very lucky to have my garden to walk and work in.

This lovely rainbow appeared the other day.

 

Stay well and stay at home.

Posted by: Debra Kolkka | March 30, 2020

3 weeks of lockdown

Apart from the occasional trip down the mountain to the supermarket in Gallicano I have been in lockdown alone at Casa Debbio for 3 weeks. Filippo comes up from the village below to work in the garden sometimes, but we keep our distance.

Watching the world on BBC world news makes me realise how lucky I am to be where I am right now. Casa Debbio is the perfect place to be away from the world. Possibly the only other place I might like to be in isolation would be a private beach where I could swim in the surf every day.

I also feel very lucky that I am here in spring. The view below me changes every day. The trees are turning green while I watch.

We have a dondola, a swing chair, that sits on one of our terraces. It is brought inside for the winter and just before lockdown, when there was a man here to work on the roof, he helped Filippo to take it outside for me. It has been put on the terrace directly in front of the house for now and I like to sit there in the morning to have my coffee while admiring the view. I am not accustomed to sitting doing nothing, but right now it seems OK.

Here is my latest pastry, delicious blueberry and ricotta.

I made a small pizza for one the other night. I make bread every few days and I kept some of the dough to make a pizza base.

The old proverb tells us that a watched pot never boils. The same might apply to peonies appearing. After almost 3 weeks of standing in front of one of my peonies 3 or 4 times a day and speaking nicely to it, the last peony has appeared. Yesterday afternoon a tiny crimson point emerged from the soil.

Yesterday I dug up the baby peonies I found all over the garden and planted them in pots where I can keep an eye on them. They would not have grown in the odd places they appeared. They are tiny and still have the seeds attached. I wonder how many will survive out of the 20 I found. Time will tell. 2 out of the 3 I planted last year have reappeared.

Forsythia is flowering all over the garden.

Ginestra is flowering.

The weeping cherry is getting its leaves.

 

The rhododendrons are looking great.

A gazania has avoided being eaten. Perhaps my shouting at the goats is working.

A wild fruit tree, possibly plum, has blossoms.

Wisteria is about to bloom.

It looks as though wisteria will cover our pergola this year.

One of the tree peonies has buds about to open.


Yesterday my first peony bloomed.

Today is was open more…complete with bee.

 

Most of the daffodils are finished, but a few are still hanging on.


The ricotta plants will soon have blooms.

We have lots of fruit trees and they are beginning to blossom and soon there will be lilacs…and who knows what else might appear. It looks as though lockdown will continue a few more weeks so I will have time to observe the developments.

 

Posted by: Debra Kolkka | March 27, 2020

Lockdown continues

I don’t have much to report from Casa Debbio. 3 days ago my gardening wanderings ended when a fierce, freezing wind came through bringing snow flurries with it.

I have been mostly sitting by the fire watching Netflix and keeping up with virus news through BBC World News. Thank goodness Filippo chopped some wood for me a few days ago.

The numbers of people getting the virus in Italy is slowing, which is great news, but the death toll was higher today. The number of people with the virus has increased in many countries, including the USA, where there are now more than in Italy. This virus does not respect borders.

I  heard today that the prime minister of Britain, Boris Johnson, has the virus, joining Prince Charles. This virus can claim anyone.

All we can do is stay home to avoid catching and spreading the virus, not too much to ask.

The thing I miss most in isolation is my morning coffee and sfoglia at Bar Italia. To help make up for this I made a pastry in my kitchen. I bought some ready made uncooked puff pastry at the supermarket and some raspberries…this is the result.

It was delicious, and I only made one. If I had made two I would have eaten both of them.

This will not continue after lockdown. I will be back at Bar Italia as soon as I possibly can.

The awful wind is not keeping the wild goats from my garden. They seem to be curious about the gazanias I planted. Shortly after I planted them they strolled in at night and ate the flowers off some of the plants. Recently they have decided to just pull the plants out. Maybe they didn’t like the flowers and want to kill them. I have started shouting at the goats to go away. I can’t see them, but I can hear them. I’m hoping I sound scary to goats.

I usually prefer to leave flowers in the garden and only pick them when there are lots, but the wind was blowing the camellias away so I picked two so I could see them inside.

The cold weather has killed a few of the new plants, but on the upside I have found another 10 baby peonies which will be transplanted to a pot once this miserable weather is over and spring warmth returns.

This afternoon the sun appeared. The wind is still wild, but tomorrow may be better.

Stay home and stay well.

Posted by: Debra Kolkka | March 23, 2020

Who will buy these pretty things?

Today there was lovely sunshine, but with it came a fierce, cold wind. The wind is blowing the blossoms from the weeping cherry. Soon the leaves will come and it will be pretty in a different way.



Because I didn’t spend much time outside today I went through some photos I took in Florence recently. The shop windows were full of spring fashion. Here is a selection of my favourites.

 

 

 


 

There are some gorgeous things, but who will buy them now that the shops are closed and there is nowhere to go to wear them? These big players will survive, but I worry for small businesses who may not cope well with this shut down.

Not all of the fashion appealed to me. I am wondering who would buy these unattractive sandals…ever.

Neptune’s fountain in Piazza della Signoria has been covered with scaffolding for cleaning for sometime. It was great to see it looking almost brand new.

Lunch today came from a recipe by Not Quite Nigella, an excellent blog I follow. I had a jar of green curry paste I brought from Australia and I found coconut milk at the local supermarket. I improvised on some of the ingredients and my green curry chicken meatballs came out very well.

It was warm enough at midday to eat outside. Lunch with a view.

The cold wind is due to persist for a few days, so there will be lots of sitting by the fire. I will still do my regular garden tours to see what is going to bloom next. The forsythia and ginestra are not far off and some wild flowers are close. All but 3 of my peonies have appeared. I have about 70, not including the 9 babies I found growing from seed. Filippo jokingly says they will take over the garden. I wouldn’t mind at all.

 

 

Posted by: Debra Kolkka | March 20, 2020

Peony patrol

Day 11 of isolation and I did my usual peony patrol. I have about 70 peony plants at Casa Debbio and they are almost all on the move. Tree peonies bloom much earlier than the bush type.

Some of the tree peonies already have buds.


Some of the other type are still just shoots.


Others are zooming along.

A couple have not yet shown themselves. There is one, in particular, I have been watching. It is in a row where all the others have appeared. I checked in the morning yesterday, nothing. I looked again at midday, nothing. When I went back at 4.00pm there was a shoot about 4 centimetres high and it was as thick as my little finger. This morning another shoot appeared. How does this happen??

Peonies are the perfect plants for Casa Debbio. The wild goats and the deer don’t eat them. They require almost no work, just a little pruning of the tree peonies and keeping weeds away from the others. They just come up all by themselves each spring and look gorgeous.

I found 7 tiny peony plants which have come up from seed. I have moved them to a pot where I can keep an eye on them. This morning there are 2 more…I love it!

The weeping cherry is now in full bloom.

We lose a few lavender plants each year for unknown reasons. This year I am filling some of the gaps with daisies for a change. They are not perennials, but most things in the garden are, so adding some annuals each year is OK.

I found some verbena at the supermarket.

Gazanias should do well in summer.

Some of the rhododendrons are beginning to open.

Things are gradually turning green.


I think these are grape hyacinth. They pop up all over the place.

I wish the nurseries were open. There is always room for more plants.

Yesterday I made pulla, a slightly sweet Finnish bread flavoured with cardamom. The dough just kept rising. I thought it would take over the kitchen!
It turned out well, but I think I left it in the oven about 5 minutes too long. Anyway, it tastes great and I sliced most of it and put it in the freezer. It will last until my next supermarket visit.

Today has been overcast and cool, so I am back inside with a fire. Spring came a bit early this year, but when the sun is not out it is not warm.

Maybe tomorrow will be better.

Posted by: Debra Kolkka | March 18, 2020

A supermarket visit

Today I went down the mountain for the first time since the lockdown to shop at the nearest supermarket. We are not to leave our Comune, or district, to shop. Fortunately the supermarket at Gallicano is excellent.

Armed with my document to show why I was leaving home I headed off. The drive from Casa Debbio is beautiful. I can’t resist stopping along the way to admire my favourite view.

 


I was pleasantly surprised to find the supermarket very well organised. There was no waiting to get in, the shelves were fully stocked and everyone was keeping a good distance from each other.

The staff were gently reminding people to use the plastic gloves provided to select items and not to crowd the aisles. I was able to buy everything I needed to allow me to stay at home for at least the next 10 days. I was even able to buy a few plants for my garden.

I am particularly upset that plant nurseries are closed. I went past my favourite one today and it is fully stocked with gorgeous things for spring planting. I felt very sorry for the owners, whom I have come to know quite well. I hope things return to normal soon so all that their beautiful stock can find a home.

I cooked ricotta gnocchi and made a sauce from mini Roma tomatoes for lunch.

The trees around me are just beginning to get their leaves. I can actually see it from my terrace. It will all happen quickly now. Within a few weeks it will be glorious.


In the afternoons my neighbour, Sisto, whose house is below mine, plays music. He has 100 speakers under the eaves of his house and around 5.30pm if the mood takes him he plays tango, or old Italian records. It is quite magical. I wish he did it every day.

Here is a post I wrote about him some time ago. Sisto, the music man of Vergemoli

If you go to my Instagram (Debra Kolkka) you can hear a snippet of what he was playing yesterday.

Lockdown continues…

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