Saturday, October 26, 2013

Bill was right - especially about the crocodiles

 

This is what Bill Bryson said about Australia:


Not as tough as my place! 
Our garden contains, and has contained over the years a variety of critters such as  (Note, this is just a small selection):

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Eggshell recycling 101

Eggshells are great for deterring snails and slugs, as they do not like the sharp endy bits.  Once you have broken and used the eggs, just put the eggshells into the microwave for about 30 seconds to harden them up, then break them up and store in a jar for use on the garden.

Eggshells are a great source of calcium, so put them into the worm farm or compost (don't nuke them for this!).  This is very beneficial to  tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant. These crops are susceptible to blossom end rot, which is caused by calcium deficiency. While this deficiency is most often caused by improper watering, there’s no harm in making sure your plants have a steady source of calcium. As the eggshells break down, they’ll nourish the soil, and your plants.  Don't be concerned that there are bits of eggshell in the worm castings, just make sure you have crushed them well before putting them in.  I go on, and then off, putting eggshells in with the worms as I don't want them to dominate the castings.  If you are using them as direct fertiliser, then crush the shells really well until they are powder as I have for the tomatoes below.  (sorry about the glare in the corner).




Oh dear, I nearly killed the lettuce!

Lesson learned!  DO NOT FORGET TO WATER LETTUCE AFTER FERTILIZING.
It was raining a bit yesterday, so I put some liquid fertilizer on the lettuce thinking the bit of rain would do the rest - Today they are burned at the edges.  Well, that is the last time I do that.



Failure is good.
 It's fertilizer.
Everything I've learned about coaching,
 I've learned from making mistakes.
........Rick Pitino
 
~

Sunday, October 20, 2013

The first snow peas have peeped above the ground!

Exciting, the snow peas are peeping through the earth.


Only just!

I wish I had shares in the weedkiller company

Seriously, I have spent a fortune on weedkiller!  When we moved into our house the garden was infested with wandering jew - a weed.  Now it is 35 years later and I am still killing it.  The only thing I have found is to pull out as much as possible, and hit the rest with roundup or zero weedkiller.  But it does not stop there!  Oh no.  I have a large area of paving, and it constantly gets weeds in it, and around the side of the house is concrete, it also constantly gets weeds.  So I have tried this recipe out, to see if it works.

Friday, October 18, 2013

The seeds they are a spouting!

Great news, after less than a week, and despite horrible winds and heat, the rocket, marigolds and radish are sprouting.
 
 

Rocket
 
 
 
Radish
 

Marigolds
 
 
So the first of the seeds are up!  The marigolds will require no special attention. 
 
The Rocket  is a slightly different, here is some advice from Burkes Backyard:

The best rocket to eat is baby rocket, very young rocket, and that’s almost impossible to find in supermarkets. I get all my rocket by growing my own and harvesting it young, when it’s about 50mm (two inches) tall. When it’s young, it’s sweet and nutty and lovely Keeping crops of salad greens well watered is the main job for salad green grown either in pots or in the ground. Also keep them growing steadily by giving them a liquid feed (mixed up in a watering can) every fortnight. I use Nitrosol, but there are plenty of good alternatives.
 
So my plan is:  water every day,  weekly liquid feed with worm poo,  eat young,  and plant more each 3 weeks
 
 


The love of gardening is a seed once sown that never dies.
Gertrude Jekyll
 
~
 



Wednesday, October 16, 2013

necessity is the mother of invention.

Its very hot today, with an estimated 38degrees C top temp!  And the hot wind is blowing from the west/ north west - not so good for newly planted plants.  What to do?  Well, I have put an old fitted sheet over the stakes, should be both a wind break and some shade - hope it works.  Also watered around the roots and where the seeds are sown.



"Necessitie, the inuentour of all goodnesse."
...Toxophilus, C1545
 
 
Postcript.  18/10/2013

 
The sheet was a failure as the winds were really bad.  This is what it looked like yesterday at my sisters house, bear in mind she lives in a suburb, NOT near the bushland.  It was the same at my house.
 
 
Many homes have been lost in the fires, that only lasted about 24 hours, but were very destructive.  It is not even summer yet, and we have had catastrophic fires!  I cant think what it will be like in February.  As for the plants, well the lettuce look a bit worse for wear, I have hand watered them, and the seeds so hopefully they will survive well.  We are all coughing from the smoke left in the air. 
~

Monday, October 14, 2013

The fun begins with the planting

After a day that got to 40degrees C, (that is really HOT), it rained overnight so my beds are perfect for planting today.  The soil is warm and wet.  This is the great thing about living where I do, we face south and are on the top of a hill, so my house was built to passive solar standards to take advantage of this.  When we get a hot day in Sydney, it is usually followed by a southerly buster - rain and wind from the south.  I just open the doors and in comes the cool air.  I doubt I will ever move!

So the plan today is :
Bed A
  1. two tripods for snap and snow peas,
  2. a row of radish, rocket and pac choy seeds which is repeated every 3 weeks so we have a continuous supply.
  3. flowers in one corner - courtesy of a wedding my son went to where he received seeds to plant as a thank you gift - lovely, and some marigolds if I can find them,
  4. parsley in the other corner to keep away pests and encourage good bugs

Bed B
  1. Yellow cherry tomatoes
  2. Grosse Lissie grafted tomatoe
  3. More tomatoes
  4. Basil
  5. Lettuce that can be continuously picked.
After a trip to the shop for seedlings, this is what I actually planted




So, all the things in bed A are seeds, and only the basil and flowers are seeds in bed B.  As the soil already has manure and compost in it, I only added lime to the lettuce and tomatoes, and worm castings to the bottom of the tomato holes, and coffee grounds on top of the soil around the tomatoes.

4 peas have been planted at the bottom of each tripod, 2 per stake, and I will put in another 4 under the other stakes in about 3 weeks, that should keep a good supply going.  The beds currently look like this:




Here are some tips I used at the plating stage
  • Add a bit of lime to the soil for tomatoes and lettuce
  • Take off the bottom leaves of the tomatoes so that they don't develop fungus or virus diseases.
  • Put some worm castings into the tomato holes.
  • Sprinkle ground coffee (not instant) around the tomatoes.
  • Water Epsom salts over the peas to help the seeds sprout, and over the lettuce because they like it.  (I did this the next day)
  • On the second day I watered everything with a mild solution of seaweed extract and worm juice.
By the bye,  I set up a very successful worm farm for next to nothing, here is the link on how to do it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZN3cACBUWjI  - and thanks to Gardening Australia.  I have used this method and it works.  I bought my worms from a place in Oatley though, as they are much fresher than if you buy them from the hardware store.  Check out  Able Worms -   Myall St, Oatley NSW 2223

Here is a picture of my worm farm, I got the boxes for free at the Sydney Markets.




When I judge art,
I take my painting and put it next to a God made object like a tree or flower.
 If it clashes, it is not art.
...Paul Cezanne

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Test, and when you think its right, test again.

OMG I have been so sick with some virus/flue that I caught out on Sydney Harbour.  Well, probably my fault as I did go out in the rain and wind on the Manly Ferry just to take photos of the tall ships coming into the harbour - see below, that is the crew on the masts!   It was all part of the Naval Review in Sydney.   Trouble was, it was a sunny day when we left home and the weather deteriorated badly, by the time we got to Manly it was terrible.


 

Anyway, I am on the mend now after a trip to the doctor and several drugs later, so we headed off to Bunnings to buy some seeds etc.  While I was sick, the best husband and son in the world shovelled all the soil into the beds for me, and it has had a couple of weeks to settle in.  Don't fill a bed like this to the top, as you need some room for water and mulch.




I decided a soaker hose is the easiest way to water the garden, and bought 2 that are 6 metres long, I put the first one in....



And turned on the hose to test,  way too much hose  and  water for the area!  (This is why you test), so one hose will do two boxes nicely.  I will tie down the hose with some metal ties that I use for tying up the tomatoes to stakes.  These are pink plastic coated ties, similar to what is used to tie the end of plastic bags etc, but much longer.



Even with the hose on very low, this will only need about 20 minutes per day to water the plants well.  The way to tell is to test, put the hose on for 5 minutes, see how far down it has penetrated.  Then try another 5 etc.  once the water has penetrated 8-10 cm down, you know how much to water each day.

Tomorrow the planting starts.
 
Gardening requires lots of water -
most of it in the form of perspiration. 
~Lou Erickson
 
~

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

I do wish it did rain roses

Some time ago, the electricity dept had to do some work in my area, and it involved running underground cabling around the corner block we live on.  They soon discovered we have only 3cm of 'soil' which is actually sand, and then you hit large sandstone blocks.   Out came the special jackhammers and off they went.  But it brings me to the point of this blog, I have always wanted a vegie garden, but with no soil its a bit difficult.

So I began researching above ground gardens, and found them hideously expensive.  Just recently however, Aldi had garden bed edging for a reasonable price, but it was only 30cm high.  No. 1 son hit on the idea of putting one on top of each other, and making them 60 cm high.  Great for me, as I get some decent soil depth for veggies, and I don't have to bend so much.  So, we have bought 4, put them together on the grass.  We have to work out how to make sure they stay together, so off to the hardware store it is.

Grass is an enemy in this circumstance, so I have used the cardboard boxes they came in to line the bottom, along with some chook manure and wet newspapers.  This should kill the grass and stop it from coming through.    I have used this method before and know it works.


 


We found a great landscape supplies company that makes soil specifically for vegies, a mixture of loam, compost and manure - perfect!  They are BC Sands at Caringbah, when we went there to order and pay, they were really helpful, suggesting we order a bit less and delivered the same day, which we were surprised at.  No sooner had we driven home than the text had arrived to say the truck was on the way, so we quickly got the tarp down for the delivery.


 
 
It will never rain roses:
when we want to have more roses we must plant more trees.
.....  George Eliot
 
~