Sunday, 21 October 2012

Tell me why I don't like Sunday (night)s...


So it's Sunday night and I'm restless and tired. Why is it that I dread Sunday nights? Well, the weekend is nearly over and I'm cranky.

Cranky that I didn't finish weeding the whole vegie patch, cranky that I didn’t whipper snip the edges of my garden beds, cranky that I haven't mulched my newest no-dig garden and cranky that I haven't transplanted the multiplying mini mondo grass from between my vegie patch pavers to a new spot to flourish. The weekend always goes by so quickly.
It seems my endless list of jobs is rarely done, and my backyard is never, well for want of a better word; perfect. But I have to remind myself that that’s the point really. A garden is never ‘finished’ or 'completed', it’s a perpetual cycle of growing and evolving, a perfect mixture of nature and human effort intertwined.

These days I’m trying to follow a gardening philosophy of less effort and more nature, that is, something of a permaculture flavour. This idea of working with nature rather than against it, lends itself well in my opinion, to the busy lifestyle many of us seem to find ourselves occupying. For example, rather than struggling to mow and manicure lawns, I’ve done away with most of mine and replaced it with garden beds and paths so that the precious time I do have can be spent growing food rather than watching grass grow.

less lawn = less maintenance & more space for growing food
Seriously, one summer about two years ago I remember being nearly finished the boring weekly task of mowing my 640m block when I ran out of petrol. It was late in the day on a Saturday, so I decided to leave finishing the job until the next morning. After a quick trip to the service station, I had the mower revving back to life, only to find the small square left to cut was now lower than the rest of the grass. Yep, in less than 24 hours, my lawn had perceptibly grown, and it was at that point I realized how ridiculously futile the idea of a manicured lawn actually is.

newly mulched garden bed
Like many things in life, it is the sum of many small actions in the garden that add up to being something great. So as I look agitatedly at the wall clock edging closer to Sunday bedtime, I try to remind myself of all the small garden things I’ve managed to fit in amongst my weekend of household chores. Like the three sections of vegie patch that I did finish weeding, like mulching the little garden bed leading into the chook pen, like picking off Bronze Orange Bugs (Musgraveia sulciventris) from my citrus trees and also planting out my little corn seedlings into their new garden patch.

Musgraveia sulciventris
I also managed to help a friend beautify her courtyard this weekend. Let’s face it; everyone should be able to enjoy a pretty garden. It’s just plain nice to have aesthetically pleasing things around us, and in the same way it’s enjoyable to have a pleasantly and personally decorated living room, it’s a pleasure to have an attractive garden that reflects your personality too. So with some assistance with plant selection and placement, some shoveling of soil and a small amount of hard yakka to dig out an unwanted bird of paradise plant, and hey presto chango a garden transformation had taken place!! Not bad for a half day’s work now that I think about it.

So maybe, upon reflection of the weekend's little achievements, Sunday nights aren’t so bad after all….And hey, if I set my alarm just a bit earlier for the morning, (assuming the crane is operational) perhaps I could transplant my zucchini or rosella seedlings out from their seed trays before work; another small but significant contribution towards having a Bountiful Backyard.







1 comment:

  1. Argh.....and I am the reason you didn't get as much done in the garden....helping me achieve a lovely garden that I can manage (translate: lots of pavers and plants no one can kill).

    And how lovely is it looking - amazing! A couple of more tweaks and clean up and you can pop a pic on this page so people can see you not only work hard in your own place but you're a wonderful help and friend to me....from giving general landscape advice, helping to pave (perfecting the old chinese lady squat), to plant selection and placement and digging (oh and helping me find my inner grunt to use a sledge hammer effectively).

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