27 July 2010
lovely lovely gums
Our block includes a few introduced gums, presumably planted as ornamentals. These have flowered through much of winter, and are a joy to have. In permaculture terms, they serve a number of functions, including providing bird habitat (the wattlebirds, particularly, love them) and pollen (if not nectar) for bees at a time when food is quite scarce.
26 July 2010
the ‘drying day’ and permaculture principles
For a notoriously unhousewifely person, I’ll admit to one unmitigated housework pleasure – drying laundry on a good old-fashioned clothes hoist. Watch it effortlessly harness wind and solar energy! Towels are drying well with winter sunshine and a bit of breeze.
Labels:
broccoli,
hoist,
jonquils,
laundry,
pumpkins,
rocket,
solar energy,
wind energy,
zone 1
neglect, forgetfulness and pleasant surprise
Despite best efforts to record and document garden developments this year, I’m rather glad some things have escaped me. Let's call them uncontrolled experiments and pleasant surprises ... Daffodils have appeared between feijoas in the first orchard bed, and broad beans in one of the beds further back.
Labels:
black water,
broad beans,
capeweed,
daffodils,
feijoa,
irrigation,
nitrogen fixing,
soil,
watering
winter’s mushrooms
Mushrooms are growing all over the grove and lower area of the property. Why so heavy here, I’m not sure. But they’ve sprung up throughout, everything from scatterings of fairy-sized knobbly orange buttons to dense, wrestling clumps of heavy, leathery, soil-encrusted brown wads that break open seams in the damp earth.
22 July 2010
drying pumpkin seeds
Successfully dried and lightly toasted pumpkin seeds following the method discovered a couple of months ago. So simple, I'm kicking myself for only discovering this now. A great way to make use of something usually discarded, a free version of something I usually buy, tastier - if I say so myself!
20 July 2010
beautiful tools for a better job?
Does a beautiful tool do a better job?
And is it completely irrational to invest emotion in the tools we use?
18 July 2010
14 July 2010
class at claudia's
Spent an afternoon at claudia's with permaculture class. Claudia is our sample 'client' for a site assessment activity. Beautiful mudbrick house in bushy block above a creek gully.
13 July 2010
the nostalgic fruitgrower
Looking at my most recent plantings, and thinking of the things I've regretted not being able to grow, or secretly dreamed of growing, has started me wondering why fruit trees, more than any other plants, seem so deeply nostalgic.
Labels:
apricots,
crabapples,
figs,
fruit,
lemons,
mulberries,
persimmons,
pomegranate,
quinces
11 July 2010
fruit trees are go!
Big day in the yard Sunday (July 11) as the long-awaited fruit trees were picked up from Katie of Mt Alexander Fruit Gardens at Wesley Hill Market on Saturday morning, and all planted out on Sunday. Only 13 trees, but that was tricky enough, especially doing them alone!
Labels:
almonds,
apples,
fungal activity,
irrigation,
mulberries,
pears,
planting,
plums,
pomegranates
04 July 2010
a stitch in time?
Slowly building up beds, planting holes and planting mounds to take fruit trees. First lot are due as bare-rooted trees shortly. Others to be ordered for spring planting. Lessons from past failures have been learnt.
tools, love ’em or leave ’em?
With the husband determined to help out with yard work, he took the big decision to buy an angle grinder, with a view to turning some of the discarded corrie around the place into garden bed retainers. And we both figured it was a tool we’d find more jobs to turn it to once we’d made the commitment. One cut-in-half piece of corrie later, and the angle grinder’s going back to the shop. Refusing to start again!
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