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Old 21-04-2007, 10:10 AM posted to aus.gardens
Chookie Chookie is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 301
Default ASGAP Autumn Plant Sale

In article ,
Chookie wrote:

I'm going tomorrow! Looking forward to seeing Peter Olde's garden...

http://asgap.org.au/grevillea/


And this is what I bought. I was hunting for ground covers and grasses:

1 Ajuga australis (Austral bugle)
2 Scleranthus biflorus -- forms a soft, thick, pale-green carpet
3 Poa labillardieri (Common tussock-grass) h 0.5-1.3m, s 0.5-1.5m
2 *Themeda triandra, prostrate form (Kangaroo grass) -- Blue-green, turning
purple in autumn
1 Scaevola aemula white form (Fan-flower)
1 Arthropodium strictum (Chocolate lily) 1m
1 Lomandra glauca (Mat-rush) 0.3m x 0.3m

And I've bought a few shrubs:

1 Babingtonia (formerly Baeckea) virgata dwarf -- I love the soft foliage and
the tiny, scented flowers
1 Hymenosporum flavum 'Gold Nugget' (a native frangipani cultivar) -- Trying
again as the last one died due to too much afternoon sun! It has fragrant
cream-to-gold flowers in spring-early summer and is rather more garden-sized
than its parent at 1m x 1m
Grevillea 'Pink Midget' -- to go under my pink-flowering bottle-brush
Telopea 'Sugar Plum' 3m x 3m -- yeah, yeah, I know... they say these new
cultivars are easier to grow...
Allocasuarina grampiana 3m x 1.5m -- I love casuarinas, especially the sound
they make in the wind, but the regular kind are too big for my garden.
Thryptomene stenophylla h 0.7m -- another nice little shrub
3 Acacia cognata 'Limelight' -- lovely mop-top foliage

We had a wander around Peter Olde's garden, and heard from all the usual
suspects -- Don Burke, Angus Stewart, Merv Hodge et al -- very friendly sort
of day. It was nice to see a few of us younger types with our kids too!

Peter Olde's garden had the advantages that come with 30 acres. You can make
any and all kinds of garden with that sort of space! I can't with my 822 sq
m, even though that is a large block by Sydney standards. Not that I'm
bitter... much...

The garden is young and at this point is a stroll garden of specimens. Its
greatest strength is the variation of foliage seen in the beds, which make
them enjoyable even at a time of year when many plants are not in flower, and
simply the chance to see how various plants cope with basically no additional
water. OTOH I didn't find it a very convincing garden in terms of design; the
beds seem a bit plonked-down to me and the trees are stuck in the lawn a la
Victorian specimen gardens. I'm more of the Edna Walling school of thought
and prefer my trees and shrubs mixed together in beds, with clear lawns. But
maybe I'm just jealous...

--
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