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Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garden. Show all posts

Friday, October 10, 2014

FLANDERS POPPIES

One of my strongest memories of my paternal grandfather was of him pottering in the garden.
He had a way with plants, as has his son ( my father) and he was always propagating and pottering.

He was a veteran of World War 1, traveling all the way to the war by ship with his brother who died from the dreadful flu epidemic without seeing any action on the war front.
Pop saw action in France and was a runner between the trenches carrying messages
 - a very dangerous task I imagine !
But then everything was dangerous in that dreadful war.

Pop was a very staunch member of the Returned Soldiers' League and the family treasures the citation for his services to the Cairns branch throughout WWII.

No matter where he lived his garden always contained some red poppies.
Every year these poppies would magically appear originating from self sown seeds of the flowers of the previous year.




Bright spots of red would bob up all over the place.
When I asked him he called them Flanders Poppies but never said any more about them
 but they are the flower that I most associate with him all these years later.

Now, of course, I know the significance of them and have seen them growing wild in France and England too.


Recently, on a whim, I searched the internet to see if it was possible to buy seeds with thoughts of them popping up in my garden as they had for him.
I was surprised to find them easily and soon dispatched an order for 1000 poppy seeds for the princely sum of $1.99 !
 Now I have to say that I have never seen these poppies growing anywhere except my grandfather's garden so I guessed from that that there might be a problem with growing them here in semi tropical Brisbane.
At first I gently scattered a very small amount of seed into a pot , gently covered them and watered and waited.... and waited.......and waited.

Nothing happened and I left the whole idea for a while.
  Then one day I came upon the seeds - such tiny specks of seeds -and thought I'd give them one more go.
So I sprinkled them ALL into this small pot and just watered it.
No covering the seeds with soil, no fuss. Nothing to lose ....
and do you know I think every single seed germinated !

990 tiny little plants all jammed in together !!! 


The instructions said they should be planted where they were to grow.
The did not transplant well.
Oh dear !
Well today I've carefully taken a few chunks of plants off one side of the mass, separated them into smaller clumps and planted them out into a bigger pot.


I've also planted a few small clumps into the dry stony ground that is our garden.
All I can do now is try to keep them alive with water and a little gentle fertilizer and cross my fingers.
It may be too hot here ... but then it's very hot in the south of France so you never know.

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The big blue pots with their pretty annuals are now adding colour to the front of our house and seem to be doing well. Let's hope they can withstand the heat for a little while at least






As you can see our front yard needs all the help it can get!

A long dry Winter, no Spring rains and lots of windy days has left our front lawn very parched indeed.
Yes, this is a true colour photo of the dry, crackly stuff that is our front lawn


and with no rain to fill the tank there'll be no green grass here till it rains.
(It's too expensive to water the lawn with town water)


Cheers.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

GREEN AND GOLD

 
Back in 1988 it was the year of Australia's Bicentenary.
 
That is, we celebrated 200 years of European settlement of Australia.
 
Way back in 1788 the First Fleet arrived with a cargo of convicts, their keepers and a handful of Free Settlers who went about the arduous business of carving a settlement out of the bush around what is today called Sydney.
 Two hundred years later we celebrated that beginning and Australia's growth into the multi-cultural nation we are today.
  
Up here in Queensland our major contribution to these celebrations was the staging of a World Exposition.

We called it Expo '88 and it was set up on the South bank of the Brisbane River in the city.

I found these pages in the family photo album.



Of course it was 25 years ago so you might not recognise my family in these photos !


 
 
( sorry they are not clearer - photo of a photo ! )

To commemorate Expo 88 a special plant was created by those clever people who do such things.
It was christened Expo Gold  ( Xanthostemon chrysanthus or Golden Penda ) and it greeted visitors to Expo 88 with a lovely show of large pompom-like yellow flowers that our native birds love as they are full of nectar.



Now, 25 years later Brisbane gardens are reaping the benefit of this lovely plant.

Hidden at the bottom of our garden is one of these, grown tall but almost hidden by grevilleas and covered in buds.
 
 
Expo Gold plants have been widely used as a street tree and many neighbourhood streets are now lined with them. After the huge amount of rain they have received lately, they are putting on a fantastic show all around us.

I set out today with my new LUMIX camera to see how the 20x  zoom works taking photos of Lorikeets feeding in the Expo Golds in a nearby street.

 
They are only just starting to bloom but already the trees are thick with birds feeding on the nectar.
 


Despite their bright colours Rainbow Lorikeets are not easy to spot amongst the foliage.


 
but the zoom was great.

 
I couldn't get close to the tree or they would fly away so I stood across the road, pointed where I could see the leaves moving and snapped away.
 
 
 
The bird below is a Scaley-Breasted Lorikeet and doesn't have the bright blue and red markings of the Rainbow Lorikeets which makes it very hard to see.
 
Can you spot him? 

 
I'll make it a bit easier for you !
 
 
Well the new zoom is a big success.
 I worried camera shake might come into play as I suffer very badly from that at times but I think these turned out well.
 
Cheers.


Friday, November 30, 2012

WHAT A DIFFERENCE A LITTLE RAIN MAKES

It seems like an age since I've had time for blogging.
In fact it almost feels like the whole year has almost passed me by.
Every time I arrange to meet with friends or have an appointment booked some crisis seems to happen and nothing ever goes as planned.

I'm missing all the Christmas "dos", Mahjong days, lunch outings as well as just the normal routines and cups of coffee 'n chats with friends.

 But it can't be helped.


Dad has had his miraculous procedure - no cutting involved so we can't say operation!

He now has a new aortic valve skillfully placed inside the old one and apparently working well, all achieved through the wonders of modern medicine by way of the artery in his groin.
 
Although not an invasive procedure, it was still a big thing to go through for a 90 year old who has had his first experience of an anaesthetic, being shaved in the nether regions and supervised in the shower by a female nurse!!!
 
There have been a few side issues but hopefully they will remain of a minor nature and he and Mum can go on with enjoying their old age......

and I can get back to everything.

* Christmas planning and shopping - heavens I haven't even started and we're off to Sydney to visit Brett and Sarah for early Christmas with them next weekend !!!

  * Holiday planning - as you can imagine a lot of that has been done already. Cottages and apartments rented. Lots of research on what to see and where to go but more needed.

* Housework - yes housework ! You know how I hate it but my, oh my, do I need to get into it. Things have been allowed to slide a bit here of late !!

********************

******

Finally, a decent bit of rain has fallen on our parched gardens and it has been just in time.

The gardenia is now covered in huge buds



and already the first flowers are filling the air with their delightful perfume.



The lovely blue agapanthus are doing what they do best




and the red flowering gum from Western Australia is providing a great show.


Elsewhere in the garden colour is emerging


sometimes pale,


sometimes bright



sometimes from leaves


sometimes filling the whole hedge with colour.


But my modest garden is not the only place that is making a show.
In the streets of Brisbane the flowering trees are doing their best to brighten up the neighbourhood.




 
 
 
Here's a close-up of those pretty Poincianas.
 
 
and I can't leave out the lovely bouganvilleas.
 
 
 Thanks for sticking with me.
I've had a chance here and there to fly around the blogs but I hope to get back into gear posting and commenting from now on.
 
I've got a lot of catching up to do.
 
Cheers.
  
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Thursday, April 5, 2012

GOOD FRIDAY ACTION

Well it's 11:00am on Good Friday.
It's about 27 degrees C and if you are out in the sun it's HOT !

This is what we've been doing today.


Our front garden had become very overgrown ( so has the back garden for that matter !!!)
and today's task was to get it back into order.

When Tony cuts things back he really cuts them back !!


Just look at the state of the Murraya hedge
and the Grevilleas and flowering gums needed a "trim " too.


Dash was supervising and keeping a look out for any dogs that might think they can walk past !!


The dwarf agapanthas still had the old seed pods and look ragged and untidy with long bits of grass entwined amongst them . UGH!


We started at about 5:00pm yesterday afternoon in the cool.
The first thing was to trim back the hedge that frames the garden.


Looking better already.
'
'
'
'
This is the finished product.


A bit bare but tidy and ready for some sugarcane mulch.


The side hedge is now tamed and trim


but the poor old grevilleas look awful without their leaves and flowers.


Now the mess at the front door has disappeared too.



Tony's taken the cuttings to the dump and I'm off to the shower.
No more gardening today...
but the back yard is an even bigger job.

Hope we'll have a day off tomorrow !

Happy Easter to all my Blogland pals.


Cheers.