tulips and a giant troll

3.29.25 ~ Eno River Farm, Hillsborough, North Carolina

I had never gone tulip-picking before so I was excited to visit Eno River Farm for a new experience. What a unique place this farm was. The first thing to be seen was a giant troll, half-buried on top of a grassy hill. We should have walked up the hill to investigate because I later learned that you can climb up the troll’s leg or go inside of his head.

head, hand, leg, and foot of a giant troll

This picture illustrates how incredibly tall some of the trees down here are. And the people in the picture highlight just how big that troll is. But we were here for tulips! We passed an ice cream parlor with plenty of outdoor seating overlooking fields of organic strawberries and made a note to return with the grandchildren when strawberry-picking season arrives.

my favorites ~ these rosy pink ones
I cut three of them to take home

We went inside a nursery to pay for the tulips we cut and came out with an additional, but unplanned purchase, a big red potted geranium for the back deck. We’ll have to see if the squirrels and deer will leave it alone. In the meantime, I’m enjoying the simple beauty of these large tulips on the dining room table where I sit with my laptop most mornings.

the three who came home with me

19 thoughts on “tulips and a giant troll”

    1. Nah, I’m lactose intolerant so it is sadly not an option for me. But we will be bringing the grandchildren there for ice cream soon!

    1. Thank you, Susie. The tulips were great company for five days before the first petal fell.

  1. What joy this brings to me this morning, Barbara. I am in need of Spring, I guess.

    It looks like the tulips were all in raised planters, was that true? That would make it so much easier to plant the bulbs AND to cut the flowers; much less bending!

    Thank you for this morning’s words and beautiful colors!

    1. You’re welcome! Happy to share a little dose of spring with you, Janet! Yes, the tulips were in raised planters, but they weren’t high enough to prevent bending over to cut them. Since I had to squat to protect my back I couldn’t reach the ones in the middle of the planter. Thankfully there were enough pretty ones on the edges.

  2. I want to let you know how much I appreciate your posts and photos but am having trouble making the comments work! Maybe this time😊

    1. So sorry you were having problems leaving a comment, Edith. Sometimes WordPress gets awfully buggy and someone else was also having trouble, too. I’m so glad you didn’t give up and it finally worked! 🙂

    1. Thanks for the info link, Eliza. It was definitely an impulse buy and I didn’t start wondering about the deer until I go home. Did a quick internet search and found similar advice. Last year I bought a pot of mums and a squirrel buried nuts in the soil, making a big mess of it. I’m keeping my fingers crossed.

  3. How I love Tulips, Barbara! Ours aren’t quite ready to bloom yet, but with all the rain we’ve been having, they should be spectacular. I think your grandchildren will want to see that huge troll … and feast on ice cream!

    1. I’m a tulip lover, too, Debbie! I don’t see any in the gardens down here because the deer are fond of eating them, so I wonder how this farm is managing to grow them so well. Hope yours will be as spectacular as you’re hoping for! Yup, definitely taking the grandchildren for ice cream and strawberry picking, and a climb on the troll.

  4. What a fun place to visit Barbara – I like the idea of the half-buried troll. I think the kids would not only get a kick out of picking strawberries, but also seeing the troll at Eno River Farm. Your tulips are beautiful, not only the pictures at the venue, but your tulips you took home. The rosy pink looks so cheery. I don’t think we have anything like that here, just lavender a few farms and sunflower farms. In Holland, Michigan they have the Tulip Festival, but it is more “look but don’t touch” and last year it was so warm the tulips bloomed before the Tulip Festival began. People come from everywhere to the Festival to find spent blooms.

    1. Looks like your tulip festival will have to move its dates up a week earlier like they did with the maple festival in Connecticut. Climate change. There was a daffodil festival in CT, about an hour drive away from us, but I never got there. I did enjoy visiting a lavender farm as the pandemic was starting to lift. And of course we visited the sunflower farm every summer for many years. Now, down here, I am hoping we see some farms on the Piedmont Farm Tour (April 26-27) this year. We missed it last year due to the weather or my illness, I can’t remember which. Maybe it was both. I’d love to see some chickens and sheep and whatever crops they grow.

    1. It was such a nice change of pace — I felt like a wild animal getting some enrichment, something new to stimulate my mind!

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