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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Pottering


I love to potter in my garden. I spend a lot of time pottering. I pull weeds, check for growth, damage, bugs, fruit etc. I find a lot of peace and calm in my garden. I truly enjoy just being out in it and soaking up the sun. I think my overall mood has improved a lot since I started to potter. I really appreciate my life a bit more. Our time on this earth really is short. We can get so caught up in all the things we worry about. My garden brings me no worries; only ideas, inspiration, peace and joy. I have truly enjoyed following my garden through a year of seasons. Finding out the identity of plants when their buds unfurl, watching where the sun falls as the seasons change, seeing the birds raise their young in our trees and adding my own touches to what was originally here. I hope your garden brings you the same feelings of contentment mine does. It's truly a blessed feeling. 
Here are some of the things I have noticed while pottering this week.


New growth on the Camellias. These are newly planted, so I am very happy they are doing well.

The second Clivia has bloomed. It has three flower heads

Yet to be identified plant has a flower? stem coming

Interesting pattern on its leaves

The Cordyline Stricta is about to bloom

One of the grasses out the front has blooms coming

Full shot of the plant. I don't know what it is.


Maple leaves are well on the way

New leaves on the Boysenberry? Unsure what berry this is.

It's doing quite well. Last time I checked it, it looked like it was dying

Photo of the whole plant. This shoot came from my mother-in-law's plant

Cutting I took of the Chinese Lantern and just popped in the dirt

Quick check reveals it has taken root

Dandelion

Flower stem coming on another unidentified plant


Sunday, September 23, 2012

Spring planting

 

My Spring seed order arrived in the post this week. The week prior, a friend had sent me a copy of her crop planting schedule she had designed for her garden here in Victoria and moon charts for planting according to the phases of the moon. I sat down and decided which vegetables our family would like to grow and eat and then I worked out which ones could be planted this coming Spring and promptly ordered way too many types! Next I sat down with the moon charts and worked out the dates for planting each vegetable I had ordered. The ones that could be planted this weekend, all seemed fairly suitable to go in our raised bed together and I mapped out exactly which ones could co-exist with which others. I have been saving our toilet rolls to use as seed pots. I usually compost them, but keeping them for this task was no loss to the compost bin.


Of the seeds I purchased, only the Tomato, Capsicum, Bean and Cucumber could be planted this week according to the moon. The Tomato and Capsicums required planting in pots/trays first. The other two could go straight in to the garden. My boy helped me cut some slits in one end of the toilet rolls. We then folded the flaps down, creating a base for the seed pot. I then added seed raising mix to each pot and watered them down. They dropped a fair bit, so I topped them up some more.


I decided to plant five seeds each of the tomatoes and capsicums. I won't have a lot of room so cannot plant too many.  Capsicum seeds are on the left here, tomato on the right. I lightly covered them with potting mix and did not re-water them after doing this.




After planting them I wondered whether the toilet roll pots were the right choice. Would they be supportive enough for the seedlings? Would the toilet rolls break down well enough in the ground for the plants to spread their roots? I had some nursery plants die on me once and when I removed the dead plants from their soil, they were totally pot bound and still encased in those degradable pots. I do know the toilet rolls compost well though, and I can always open up the folded bases easily enough to let the roots free. I have popped them into the greenhouse for now, alongside hubby's nursery bought tomato plants and some corn seedlings that are not yet ready to plant out in the garden. Shall let you know when they first poke up from the soil.


I also planted out the bean and cucumber seeds today, straight into our raised garden bed. I added a few dill and celery seedlings while hubby worked on the uprights that the climbing plants will need.
I didn't take any photos, but will get onto that this week.

Another job for us this weekend was to plant out our new strawberry plants. After killing my last lot I returned to the nursery and picked out another five plants. On Friday I was kindly given five plants from a parent at our kinder. She was removing strawberries from her garden bed to make way for tomato plants, so had plenty to give away. I decided against returning the strawberries to the hanging bag I had. Instead this time we chose to plant them in to the suspended gutter garden hubby had built out of the waste guttering left here by the previous owner.



I purchased a mix of varieties and who knows what the ones I was given are. I have a terrible track record with strawberries. I seem to either kill the plants or something eats the fruit before we ever get to. Looking forward to nurturing these plants and hopefully harvesting some fruit from them.




The gaps in the sugar cane mulch are because I planted some Borage seeds between each plant. Borage is a companion to strawberry. I have no idea how big they grow and whether I have enough room here for them. Maybe someone can tell me, or I will just wait and see.
Happy Spring planting everyone. May your gardens be fruitful this season.


Tuesday, September 18, 2012

It was Wattle!

In one of my previous posts I wondered what plant this one was and whether it was a Wattle. Well it clearly is. I am really enjoying the Wattle this year, after previously paying little attention to it at all. It grows all through our suburb in all its varied and beautiful forms. I am finding myself really drawn to it and wanting to get to know the different types. Must see if there are any books at our library.



I did not know Pittosporums had flowers! Well I did know the sweet variety we have growing in our yard did, but not these screening type ones. The flowers are quite sweet, don't you think? We had these growing at our last place and I never once noticed flowers. Maybe not all types flower? These plants have gained very little height since I put them in. They are supposed to grow quite tall and fast, maybe mine have been concentrating on flowering instead.



Still wondering if this is an Azalea or not. It has a whole lot more new growth, but not a sign of a flower anywhere.  Maybe next year?



Looks like I have lost this passion fruit vine. It wasn't looking good after I first moved it, but then it perked up and was greening up and growing taller. The awful winds we had the other week battered it about and now it is looking very sad and sorry for itself. Maybe passion fruit just aren't meant to grow here. I will persist though, too soon to give up.


On a brighter note this Grevillea is bouncing back. This particular one was looking very sickly after we removed the prickly companion growing next to it. All this new growth peeking through the brown dead leaves has put a smile on my face. Grevilleas are such lovely plants to have about, a half dead looking one wasn't so nice though and considering I have killed a few of my natives recently, it's good to see this one isn't going the same way.



The other one is doing much better
 Lastly I thought I would share a photo of my raised flower bed. I got this wooden planter from Aldi and painted it with paint the previous owners left in the shed (can you see it matches the window frames?) I put Jonquil, Freesia and Daffodil bulbs in here to begin with. They have just about finished blooming now, so I added some Asiatic Lillies to the mix, you can see them coming up in between the others. At the very back I planted the Calendula seedlings my mother in law gave me. This bed will look quite sparse once the bulbs all retreat to the earth to renew, so I need to think what else I can grow in here.


Saturday, September 15, 2012

What's been happening around the garden this week?

My vegie bed is looking over grown. This is the one the old owners left behind. The rainbow chard self seeded in this bed along with the curly leaf parsley. I planted the celery, dill and rocket. The rocket has shot to seed now and I am waiting to save them. I like the look of this bed, all full and bursting with life. I hope to get the rest of the garden looking full like this too over time.





The silverbeet is looking lush. There is a stray onion in this pot too by the way. My MIL gave me this plant from her garden. They have a wonderful silverbeet bed at their house. It just comes back season after season.



This is what is left of my snow peas. Not sure what went wrong here, maybe a fungal thing? I did manage to harvest a few though. Maybe they were not suited to life in pots or too much rain, I don't know. Will try again though as I love snow peas.



I also killed my strawberry seedlings. They were doing wonderfully then about 2 weeks after planting they keeled over. I thought it was the few sunny days we had just had, until my mother in law told me the bag of what I thought was soil she had given me, was actually pure chook poo! I think I have saved two plants, the rest are gone. I have bought some more and will try again.



I have finally filled our potato tin and the plants are now bursting up through the top layer. Looking forward to harvesting these when the time comes. I have never grown potatoes before; except for the ones coming from the compost pile.



Well that's it for edibles. A few things are blooming about the place at the moment. The Dietes have opened. They are such pretty flowers.



Fuschia

Chinese Lantern


Grevillea

New growth on the rose. I cut it back, although I have no idea what I am doing when it comes to pruning roses. The new growth looks nice. I sprayed for black spot too as this rose was badly affected last year.

Rose

Pretty things near the pond

Arty looking Lavender leaves

Pink Lady apple bloom

Clivia finally opened