Sunday, 27 October 2013

A gardener's best friend and the alien dog

This weekend I've spent weeding the vegie garden, replanting some beds with seeds in the cool of the late afternoons, weeding and watering, watering and more watering. And still more watering. I've been collecting water in the shower and in the kitchen sink, like a Nanna. The temperature hasn't been too bad (hot) outside, but as you know, there's not been a drop of rain and the sun is just, well, really hot and burny when it's out!

Night time mulching will mean I finish Section 2

I was just sitting back enjoying a glass, or three, of wine after dinner and reviewing an idea on paper to divide my garden into sections so I could  work on each section in rotation. The idea is I systematically get around to each garden bed in what spare time I have. It's a bit, well, un-spontaneous, but it might mean that I don't 'forget' about some plants, and force myself to keep on top of certain areas.....

Anyways, I was just reviewing this new idea, when I realised I had worked on Section 1, and nearly finished Section 2, and if I just headed outside NOW...... Yes! In the dark!  I could also finish Section 2 before the end of the weekend.... So wine in one hand and torch in the other I head outside to lightly mulch around all the baby self seeded cosmos and under the recently planted Tamarillo tree that are in the new, arbitrary Section 2 of the Bountiful Backyard.

I was just congratulating self on how clever I was; this night time gardening caper really has its advantages with no sunburn and pleasant temperature gardening. What I wasn't planning on was coming face to face with the first (and massive) cane toad of the season!!! No doubt attracted by my diligent watering today. Luckily Kairos hadn't seen it and I managed to capture it via a bucket on the top, plastic bag underneath, dull its senses in the fridge before a proper freezer death method! All the while I am holding my torch in my mouth. It really was quite the night time gardening experience! <insert shudder here>

I go back to mulching, and re-congratulating self at such a good idea as working at night without the sun. (Surely there won't be another cane toad, so it's back to business.) The torch is getting heavy in my mouth (I need hands free to be mulching), when I have a sudden brainwave. I have a head lamp torch thingy somewhere inside.... A wonderful find in my camping gear a few weekends ago. A 200 lumen (or something) headlamp.

A large spider caught in the dizzy heights of the headlamp.
Wow! It's bright. It makes hands free mulching a breeze. A head torch - it's the best garden invention ever!! It's a gardener's best friend! I look up. A rather large spider crawls up a web just above my head. It seems there are a few more creatures out at night than I'd planned on. They're also a bit harder to spot in the dark. Nevertheless, I strategically bend over and continue mulching and avoid my new arachnid friend.  Insects buzz at my head. It appears it's not just me that thinks a massive bright light on my forehead is a great idea.

Special K as the alien dog.
What was I thinking with this night time gig? Or, what was the wine thinking? Either way, the moonlight glow on this idea is beginning to wear off. Special K is loving the night time jaunt, however.   Normally I'm asking him to lie down on his mat at this time. Instead, we're both outside chasing possums along the fence line (or so he thinks that's what I'm outside for). What's not to love? He makes me giggle, my trusty garden side kick. It appears my 200 lumen headlamp has turned him into the red-eyed alien dog. He doesn't seem to mind though, and if I'm prepared for the night time creature festival in the future, then perhaps this night time gardening idea is not totally silly. No, really.... it's not....






Saturday, 19 October 2013

Loco Lindsay and a late race....

A massive day in the garden today. The rain yesterday meant the ground was still damp and conditions were ideal to do some serious weeding. I managed to weed 2 large beds and half of the parterre vegie patch. The chickens were the beneficiaries of  all the extra 'greens' Well, all the chickens that is, except for Lindsay.
It appears, she has gone loco again... and by that I mean, she's broody. How do I know? Well, she spent the whole day in the laying box, until I physically removed her late in the afternoon, at which time, she pecked me ferociously. I basically had to dump her on the ground away from the box so I could bring in the eggs Britney and Paris had laid. Once she's removed, it's like she comes to her senses somewhat, and realises she hasn't eaten or drunk all day and spends about 6 minutes stuffing her beak before returning to her post.
Bummer. I realise it was about this time last year that she started this crazy business for the first time and it took about 10 weeks for her to recover. And that was after trying every old home remedy in the book to try to 'shock' her out of her broody state. It's going to be another long lead up to Christmas in the hen house, it seems.

'Loco Lindsay' - broody and sitting on the other chickens eggs.
It was great weather for being outside today, not too hot and not too cold and it meant I had time to notice all the wonderful things that have been developing in the garden, despite the lack of rain. My dwarf mango seems to have quite a few fruit forming this year - only its second year to fruit.  I've been trying to tip the shower and kitchen water on it, so the baby fruit won't drop off. But today the fruit almost looked bigger, and the tree happier, after yesterday's showers.
Baby mangoes forming.

A sweet pea flower, where the  purple beans used to be.
There are some beautiful little flowers around the yard now too. The chives are flowering their pretty purple and this little sweet pea managed to survive the chronic lack of water. 

Also to my delight, and complying with my grand plan, a whole lot of cosmos are coming up. You might remember I had them growing between the broad beans in the parterre garden a few months ago. I let the flower heads dry and hoped they would drop their seeds so I would have a never ending cycle of beautiful flowers, without ever buying seeds again! I'm pleased to see it looks like this is going to be the case. You can also see a lebanese eggplant growing well now that its competition (the broad beans) have finished. 
Volunteer cosmos coming up and a lebanese eggplant. 
I planted a few other seeds in the parterre garden, to compliment the existing vegies. I put in a few zucchini seeds, grabbed a handful of sweet basil seeds drying on a plant and dumped them along the edge of another bed, and sowed a few different varieties of lettuce seeds too. I always do really well with cos, and I have to admit it is one of my favourite tasting lettuces too.
I planted sweet basil seeds along the border of this bed next to the very late parsnip

Peanuts are up and growing well. Some are even flowering.
Something I love about growing plants are all the wonderful surprises and constant experimenting that occurs. Behind my silverbeet in this patch, are some parsnip plants. They seem to be growing really well, even though I think it is much too late for growing parsnips in Brisbane. I wonder if they will form a root at all? I'm interested to find out what will happen, so I'll leave them growing. At the very least, the chickens will get the leaves at the top! 

Between the silverbeet and the parsnips, quite a few peanut plants have emerged. Last season, I left my harvest too late, and after the water logging January rains, the nuts were starting to go mouldy. I will have to make sure I pull them up this year prior to our really consistently wet weather. You can see the cute little yellow flowers on some of the plants already.

Along the fence surrounding the vegie parterre, are a few espaliered fruit trees. My espaliered peach is probably about 4 years old now, and this year it looks like the fruit is a decent size!! Very exciting. No doubt this has been helped by the neighbours removing a massive poinciana tree, which would have been competing for water and nutrients. I really need to keep an eye out for fruit fly too. Growing up in Victoria, I'm not really that familiar with fruit fly, but I think I may need to buy some organic traps....or get Googling, at the very least. 
Real sized peaches on my espaliered tree!
It is nearly time to head inside for dinner. Just as I am surveying the garden, admiring the day's achievements and I start thinking how things will be looking great again after the rain.... 
My deco path around the parterre doubles as a race track.
I hear galloping. Rhythmic, loud, hooves. (Actually, it was paws.) I look up. Special K appears on the path, pounding out full zoomies, and circumnavigating the parterre garden like a  race track!! 

Damn it!  He leaves big paw prints, disrupting  my newly weeded pathway. 
I sigh. Oh well, I guess it is the Caufield Cup today, after all!!

Saturday, 12 October 2013

Apparently it's too hot for dogs to garden..... but not too hot for sex!


This morning I look despondently outside. It's hot and dry, again. Actually it's been relentless, and the lack of rain is becoming a serious problem. Of course the lawns are brown and dead, and riddled with weeds... not that I really care about them. Lawns can't feed you, after all. But it's all my plants that I'm worried about. I've been catching water in a bucket in the shower, and in the kitchen sink too, as well as watering with town water from the garden hose. (No, I'm not looking forward to the water bill!)

It's actually a bit hard to know what to do for the best at the moment. Weeding is tough as the ground is so dry, but I do still persist. And it's not a great time for planting new things as the drying air is hardly the best start for any new plants.

 A step ladder and the bucket of boiling water at the ready.
So today I decided to re-tackle the Bronze stink bug issue on my lemon tree. Seeing as I've been picking off any young ones from where I can reach, it seems there are now hundreds of adults in the high up branches. This does not bode well. Not only are they hard to reach, but now they freak me out with the possibility of their stinky, stingy chemical being squirted down into my eye or onto my head. I don a wide brimmed hat, a long sleeved shirt, gloves and sunnies. I seem to have misplaced my biohazard suit, otherwise I probably would have gone for that. ;-)

I grab all the ones I can reach, but it seems even with the step ladder they are nearly too high. I look up higher - the branches are riddled with the black bodies, all end to end, having what seems to be a massive bug orgy! It's skin crawling material.  And then I spot two locusts on the job, you know, also rooting. (Well, unless it's mother and daughter, but frankly, I'm suspicious.)  Honestly I wonder where they get the energy in this heat. Aren't they bothered by the fact there's no water?!
Sorry about the bad photo.
You can just see the black bodies between the leaves, having a massive bug orgy.

Shagging locusts in my lemon tree
As I muse, that the lemon tree must be quite the romantic place for bugs, I can hear Special K consistently asking to go inside. He's at the back door, banging on it, for me to let him in. (Earlier he tried digging a cooling hole under the coffee trees, until I stopped him for fear of damaging the roots.) Apparently it's far too hot for gardening today, and he'd much rather be inside under the fan. Quite frankly, I was thinking it wasn't that bad, in my wide brimmed hat with my steely resolve. But now it's clear that I'm wrong.
Under the fan is the place to be. It's just too hot for gardening at the moment.
 So I've taken my direction, and we're inside, out of the sun. Lord Kairos continues to rest on the couch, and I thought I would take this opportunity to make some home made tomato sauce from the huge amount of tomatoes I picked last weekend. I think I will slow roast some for salads too. They are so very red and delicious looking. I reckon they'll make a great sauce.
My inside job of making tomato sauce
I actually had quite a lot of unripe, grass green ones too, that I had from pulling out a tomato plant. I left them on the bench outside, and miraculously they've ripened in the week,  going from looking like they belonged in the compost, to  tantalisingly red. As in many organic gardens, it turns out they are tantalising for the insects too, and a mosquito-ey looking thing has been hanging around, and I suspect laying eggs inside. I noticed that one of the tomatoes had squiggly larvae inside it when I cut one the other day. Not a big fan of larvae in my salad sandwiches, nor in my sauce, although onion and garlic and fresh herbs make everything taste good don't they?!! Just kidding, I'll definitely be cutting them in half for larvae inspection before they make the sauce grade!
Any ideas on my tomato loving insects?
So the kitchen is smelling good, I'm not getting sunburnt, Special K is conserving energy and the bugs are being given some private time (!)  before I head out again, after 4pm, when it's a bit cooler.