Sunday Puzzler: Feb 12

Back to the regular feature again and this time you have to find National Trust properties so all are in the UK. This week it is a ‘house’ in the east of England.

 Identify the plants below and take the first letter of the names and rearrange them to make the name of this property which has a garden and snowdrops.

12-feb8

12-feb-6

12-feb7

12-feb5

12-feb3

12-feb4

12-feb

12-feb2

As always, you need to use the botanical name of the genus, not a common name. This is because common names vary. But it is just the genus, nothing else:

Answer tomorrow.

Do not scroll down to comments if you don’t want to see the answer yet!

2 Comments on “Sunday Puzzler: Feb 12”

  1. Unknown's avatar
    derrickjknight
    February 12, 2017 at 10:05 am #

    Peckover – Much help from The Head Gardener needed 🙂

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Sweetgum and Pines

gardening in the North Carolina piedmont

Ravenscourt Gardens

Learning life's lessons in the garden!

RMW: the blog

Roslyn's photography, art, cats, exploring, writing, life

Paddy Tobin, An Irish Gardener

Our garden, gardens visited, occasional thoughts and book reviews

AltroVerde

un altro blog sul giardinaggio...

vegetablurb

four decades of organic vegetable gardening and barely a clue

The Long Garden Path

A walk round the Estate!

Journals from the Caribbean

Photographic Journals from the Caribbean

Flowery Prose.

Sheryl Normandeau - Author

ontheedgegardening

Gardening on the edge of a cliff

Uprooted Magnolia

I'm Leah, a freelance Photographer born and raised in Macon, GA, USA. I spent almost 9 years in the wild west and this was my photo journal on life, love, and the spirit of Wyoming. Now I'm re-rooted in Georgia. Welcome to Uprooted Magnolia.

Garden Variety

A Gardening, Outdoor Lifestyle and Organic Food & Drink Blog

For the Love of Iris

Articles, Tips and Notes from Schreiner's Iris Gardens

One Bean Row

Words and pictures from an Irish garden by Jane Powers

Plant Heritage

We are working to save garden plants for people to use and enjoy today and tomorrow

HERITAGE IRISES

An English persons experience of living and gardening in Ireland