Posts Tagged ‘Autumn’

Green Lives Matter!

Garden losses.

Losses of plants are a given, and they can die in a variety of ways. Over the years most of the plants that have died have simply perished from not being suitable to the semi-arid conditions here. Others are beaten to a pulp by frost, and try as they will to recover during the warmer months, eventually they give up completely. These losses are par for the course.

More frustrating are the losses that shouldn’t have occurred: plants that have slowly died from other plants nearby taking over all available resources, other plants fail after being savaged by flocks of galahs or corellas, or munched on by sheep on the loose looking for feed before the rains come. The really frustrating deaths are of plants that have survived months of drought only to cark it after the first good rain, as if they couldn’t cope with all that water.

2015

The sweet appleberry (Billardiera cymosa) between the trees

Out of all the ways to lose a plant the worst is by the hand of humans. I had one such loss today, when people came to fix the wire fence so that cows they were putting in the paddock next door don’t get out. I lost my appleberry creeper (a bushfood plant) to these men, who broke off the plant at ground level when they could have snipped it so much further up. That plant had taken ten years to grow. It was the only survivor of three or four plants I had put along the fence. Despite the current drought it was green and luxuriant, and I haven’t had to water it for years. Naturally I was bummed.

2017

Winter morning

What was worse was that no one apologised when I explained to them what they had done. Four men just stood there gawking at me, the dotty plant person. Of course they weren’t able to tell that the plant they tore up was not some local weed, and I would have accepted an apology. Instead they all got in their cars and drove off.

There have been numerous other occasions where I have lost plants to people, some of them when the people were clueless like this time, and other times the damage was intentional. Like ten years ago around this time of the year when some well meaning person poisoned my cactus, a fruiting one, thinking they were getting rid of a prickly pear. That cactus I had had for 20 years, and it had been about to fruit for the first time… I wrote a poem about it. Okay maybe I am a little bit dotty. And it’s taken nine years to get fruit from the pieces I managed to save.

Before that there was a meltdown back in late 1991 when my brother accidently mowed over a marguerite daisy I had planted at my mother’s house, which I had propagated from the one I had left behind at my childhood home, and it was just starting to grow after a shaky start. Green lives matter, especially after we have survived tough times together, and I mourn them all.

And so today after all this my son says to me, “see, I told you it was pointless to garden….” You can tell he’s not a gardener.

Arghhhh! He just doesn’t understaaaaaaaand!

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The green and gold

These yellow daisies lift the whole garden, and they lift me too.

Euryops chrysanthemoides from Africa is happy here.

Euryops chrysanthemoides from Africa is happy here.

And isn’t this a vibrant shade of green?  This too has helped with my May doldrums. I should probably get some fish…

Pond #2

Pond #2

 

 

What happens when gardeners get together

Funny little thing happened when I invited Sharon around for a cuppa and cake the other day. I was having a discussion with myself about whether I should change into some better clothes, and decided that seeing as she’s seen me in my old clothes before, I wouldn’t worry about it. Well, she turns up in almost identical gear having decided that ‘Tarla loves me as I am’!

 

Not far from Eden.

For the past month or so Amaru and Maya have gone out to this tree every morning to get an apple for recess. It’s times like these that I hope become golden memories for them as they grow older.

Gathering the last of the Royal Galas

Gathering the last of the Royal Galas

I have also been a little proud because many people around here believe that you can’t grow apples in Quorn.

And there I was thinking that you can’t grow much any further north than here, when Marg Wilson brings back this huge watermelon from Ethadunna Station, which is out along the Birdsville track about 100km north of Marree.

"I carried a watermelon?"

“I carried a watermelon?”

And didn’t it rain!

The only trouble was that we missed it. We were away, so the garden still got it. Five inches of rain one night in the middle of April. More rain in one go than we’ve had for years.

I’ve always said that for us to get a good rain (=2 inches), Melbourne has to be under about a foot of water. So it wasn’t surprising that the weather that brought the five inches turned into something that killed people in NSW a few days later.

After that I was finally able to start my autumn digging, and watch a few late crocuses poke through at last.

By the pond

By the brick pond

I also got some mulch from the dump and a few ‘finds’, cacti and succulents that had been thrown out, which I rescued and planted at home.

By the carport

By the carport

Pond #3 with mulch after a rainy night.

Pond #3 with mulch after a rainy night.

Something done finally

Not much has happened in the garden lately or on this blog; school started again, and then my eldest moved to Adelaide to start uni – before he left I got him to help me install the bath pond under the verandah where the little fibreglass one used to be.

April 2015

That bath had sat there 6 months on rollers waiting to go in, but it was so dry I did not bother trying to dig. Then along came some nice rain in January, and once it soaked into the soil I was able to dig. Antonio helped me with the bath just before he left towards the end of February. It annoys me by looking lopsided even though according to the spirit level it is almost perfect. Oh well, I’ll just have to wait until the plants grow some and disguise it.

I have also finally got back to working on my dry creek bed, which I’d not touched for two months. Some of my excuses involve the hot dry weather, but I’ve also embarked on a couple of writing courses which have taken my attention away from Gardiner in a dry land.

April 2015

Over summer I had put all my water plants back into the brick pond and covered it. Late March when I take the cover off, which I love, because I can see the sky reflected in the water again, I began planting things out around the other two ponds.

April 2015

After that I drained all the water from the brick pond into here, gave the brick pond a good mucking out, and then set up the little fountain once again.

April 2015

I really do love my ponds. When I was a kid I wanted a pond badly, but the answer was always no. My parents had a whole set of reasons. But now I have three!

Happy Easter!

There is not much happening in the garden thanks to there being almost no rain since early January, but despite the dryness this Easter Lily has popped up out of nowhere to give us a lovely surprise.

April 2015

This made up for the non-appearance of my naked ladies after the rain in January, even though they flowered just about everywhere else around here.

A bit of autumn

Actually, we did get some nice autumn days in the end. It was mild and still, so still it seemed the wind would never blow again. Moths were thick around the house at night.

Golden rain tree - pride of China

Golden rain tree – pride of China

I even had a few autumn leaves. This golden rain tree has been in five years and is still only knee high (sigh). What I’m wanting is this:

Golden rain trees at Stone Hut.

Golden rain trees at Stone Hut.

May the 4th and 6th

On May the fourth, 2009, a couple of years before all the Star Wars stuff started appearing on that date, I began a garden. I finished clearing the last of the junk away in the area facing my kitchen window, and the first things went in.

On May the fourth

On May the fourth

Two days later, when my husband died, the area became Edi’s garden.

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What happened to autumn?

Last day of April

Last day of April

We seem to have gone almost straight from summer to winter, as there have only been a few weeks of autumn weather in between. Just like Alice Springs.

Winter already

Winter already

The super hot summer meant we have had a good wet start to the sowing season here, and three days after a decent 18mm it is raining again! I am thinking about the lovely wood I was lucky to be given which is out there and wondering why I did not bring some in.

Wet again

Wet again

About half the time the block is still dry this time of year and doesn’t green up until June. This time last year my tanks were almost empty and I was praying daily that the water would last until the rains came again. And I was still watering my desperate garden.

12 months ago.

12 months ago.