View Single Post
  #5   Report Post  
Old 12-11-2012, 05:27 AM posted to aus.gardens
Farm1[_4_] Farm1[_4_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2012
Posts: 407
Default Calling all gardeners in Aus...

"Jeßus" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 6 Nov 2012 11:09:43 +1100, "Farm1"
wrote:


I know the feeling. We got stuck in the other day. I've been faffing
round
for weeks trying to make a mark and Himself did more in 1 day than I've
done
in weeks. It really emphasisied for me the difference in how men and
women
work. He really focusses and I (sort of) multi task.


LOL. Well, I'm most woman-like then


:-))

But I've learned (I think)... once the seemingly endless half-finished
projects I have are completed, in future I'll start ONE project and
complete it - then move onto the next... that's what I tell myself
anyway


LOL. Betcha don't!

I notice a plant
needs water as I'm trying to weed near it. I give it water and then 'cos
the soil is so soggy I cant' continue to weed there till the next day, but
while I was getting the water int he watering can, I notice that the area
under the tank looks like a snake haven and so clear that. And so it goes
on.


Yes, exactly! I do this all the bloody time.

He just does what he set out to do.


I'm hoping to become more like that...

I'm sure that when you do get time you'll make huge inroads ina short
time.

I've been busy in the veg patch, the rose bed and doing garden visits
which
always inspire me and fire me into action.

We've had 8 huge pine trees removed from between my rose bed and the veg
patch so now there will be no further root competition from the blasted
things. It was amazing to watch the men clib the trees to drop them in
chunks but in the process they dropped a huge branch on my wonderful old
Hills Hoist and it took weeks before they replaced it with a new one.
Of
course the new one is crap quality.

Bugger on the clothesline...

I imagine the soil is fairly acidic where the pien trees were, could
be good for Azelias or Blueberries.


Ah! Thanks for that tip. I'd prefer something productive and azaleas
don't
do well here because of our savage frosts.

Speaking of Blueberries and acidic soil, I have several plants
scattered around the gardens but they haven't exactly gone crazy.
I'm thinking of creating a bed just for blueberries, I have access to
plenty of decades-old sawdust, which they would love to grow in.
I'm making a LOT of blueberry mead these days, so it's something I
should do, as supply of quality berries can be patchy at times.


So how many blueberry plants do you have? Are your own plants the ones
that you make mead form our are they bought in? In any event, it sounds
delicious.



I only have a few blueberry plants at this time, I still buy from a
couple of people most of the time, for the mead at least as it
requires an awful lot of blueberries. One day I'll put a decent patch
in but it's a big job. I'll have to fence the lot with corrugated iron
just to keep the possums out, just for starters.


That IS a huge job. We don't have possums (Thank God!) but we have copious
numbers and varieties of bird and they love our fruit and veg. Netting is a
constant chore near harvest time.

My poor Silver Birches have taken a real hammering from the little
*******s. It's so disheartening to see a birch tree grow so well, then
overnight the main stem is snapped clean off about 2 metres from the
top... I melted some lard yesterday and mixed some kero in it. I'm
going to smear it all over the birch tree's trunks in the hope it
deters them.


Interesting recipe :-)) Wonder if it'll work? I'm trying to deter rats
round my hen house ATM. I don't want to use poison so it's a watering can
of water down each hole once a day. I now know what the expression 'drowned
rat' means. I haven't quite managed to drown any yet but they sure hate
water in their holes and come up looking very saggy and most definitely 'Not
happy Jan!'. ******* things.