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Old 01-11-2006, 11:42 AM posted to aus.gardens
Chookie Chookie is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 301
Default Water restrictions and gardens

In article ,
"Farm1" please@askifyouwannaknow wrote:

Truth be told, there are probably too many people in Sydney who
don't 'think about things' because they are trying to keep their heads
above (metaphorical) water of some kind. I work in TAFE and I see these
people.


You mean you have such things as TAFEs within easy access?


THere is actually a TAFE in my suburb, but I don't work there. I have a
45-min drive through Sydney traffic to get to mine... is that 'easy access'?
:-)

Of course all of Sydney is not posh but at least it has such things as
hospitals and schools and police stations and all sorts of other
services. On a platter.


Most large (and even small) country towns will have those things. You must be
pretty remote if you don't have a TAFE within reach. Bourke and Coomealla
have TAFEs! And TAFE is in reach of everyone via OTEN.

Maps he http://www.tafensw.edu.au/campuses/index.htm

The city people are very busy and talk lots (and
that is even the ones I know and love) but they really don't observe
too well. Too many fleeting glimpses or thoughts and not enough
cogitation before saying or half thinking about soemthing before
heading off to the next social engagement or need for busyness.


shrug
You can find that anywhere. One of my online friends from rural SA -- a
district with maybe 1000 people in it -- mentioned a relative who seems to be
all style and no substance.

With two small boys, I'm perhaps a bit lacking in the social engagements dept.
It's funny getting the Herald 'subscriber benefits' e-mail. Gosh, I'm missing
out on dinner with Lord Wedgwood this time. Or should I say *he* is missing
out on dinner with *me*?!

The question is: what did they DO about it? For example, farmers
were still *clearing* the WA wheat area in the 1920s. The plantings/
earthworks I saw were, I would estimate, ten years old. Bit of a gap there.


Yes, I agree. But to solve dryland salinity and all sorts of other
land related problems is not one where a quick solution or rushing in
and doing anything and/or everything will always work. It was many
years before it was found that the way to treat erosion was to treat
the head of the erosion and not the body of the erosion.


Not only that -- you have to find the limits of your solution, eg you might
find a solution that is fine in terms of your own climate/soil etc, but it
might not be appropriate elsewhere. And the information has to be passed
around and retested, too.

--
Chookie -- Sydney, Australia
(Replace "foulspambegone" with "optushome" to reply)

"Parenthood is like the modern stone washing process for denim jeans. You may
start out crisp, neat and tough, but you end up pale, limp and wrinkled."
Kerry Cue