Wednesday, December 22, 2010

19th December

Black Russion (I think)
Costata Romonesco Zucchin

Sunshine squash
Despite cool and damp days I found a ripe tomato in the garden (not this particular one).  We think it was Black Russian.  It tasted lovely.












 I thought I was saving one zucchini for seed, but as is the way I found more than one over grown.










The Sunshine squash are pretty to look at and tasted nice when baked whole.  The skin is thin enough to eat.  Unfortunately the cool, rainy weather is causing blossom end rot in the zucchini and squash.

Small beans can be seen in the grape vine where the beans have intertwined with everything else.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

2nd December 2010

Zucchini,  freckle lettuce, greens beetroot, yams and more.

The squash is taking off

The strawberry bed is really a borage bed.
 Rain, rain and more rain.  It's years since we have seen anything like this.  I have picked some strawberries in the last week.  Today I picked the first seven raspberries.  We are eating the zucchini.  I had to cut some plants/vines back a bit tonight.  We have been eating lots of freckle lettuce.  The  chooks have had plenty of greens.  Bloody mozzies.
tomatoes and everything else out of control

It's a jungle and a sun  flower

Beans tangled in grape vine in tomotoes 


Cos seedings


freckle lettuce

Raspberries

Lebanese Zucchini

Thursday, November 11, 2010

11th November 2010

Tomatoes, sage in the foreground and greek basil in flower

It's a squeeze tomatoes, garlic silverbeet, lettuce, beans, kale

The beans

freckle lettuce


lebanese zucchini


gate bed: freckle lettuce, zucchini, cucumber, collards beetroots and radoms.
My goodness!  What a difference a month and rain makes this time of year.  We have eaten the first zucchini!  The tomatoes have grown but I haven't spotted any fruit yet.  Lots of flowers and immature fruit on the raspberries though.  The toilet roll bean seed experiment has worked.  Beans are now climbing the stakes.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Sunday Oct 31st

The new Elberta Peach tree
Cucumber seedling side of gate bed

Cucumber seedling front of gate bed

Plenty of new growth in veggie beds
 During the last two weeks we have had 64 ml of rain.  This is reflected in the lush grow in the garden.  The beans in the toilet rolls had been a success with those doing much better than beans that were directly sown unprotected in the ground.  I have extended this idea to a cucumber seedling I have sown in the strawberry bed.  I have put six new cucumber seedlings in as it had become evident the two plants I thought were cucumbers grown from seed, were in fact zucchinis.  The new seedlings are purchased lebanese.  A new peach tree went in today.  It was half price in desperate and dateless at Mitre 10.  It has some curly leaf, but is taller than me.  It may fruit next year if it takes.  The Freckle lettuce had grown well over the last two weeks.  I could start picking some now.  The coriander has been a success and we have been eating that. (yum)  The collards have done well under the curtain.  I have removed the curtain today and will now start feeding leaves to the chokes.  The babies are growing and I have several roosters to home.  The from garden is doing well with many plants in flower.  The wallaby grass has seed heads.  The kangaroo paws are flowering.  I bought another fejoa today to plant in the front yard.  The existing one needs a mate to fruit.  The one around the back doesn't flower.  The rain is making a huge difference this year.  We have been eating snow peas, silver beet, asparagus and herbs from the garden.  The zucchinis are flowering.  Penne gave me some egg plant seedlings today which I have squeezed in around the veggie beds.
Cucumber seedling and beans.  Raspberries spilling over

The freckle lettuce in the styrene box has taken off
Bean growing out of toilet rolls

Benas and freckle lettuce

Front yard


Add caption

Water iris

OEG and chicks

The babies

Babies

Babies

Down the back

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Sunday Oct 17th

I planted out some little Siberian tomato seedlings I grew from seed.  They are very small but did not seem to be developing very quickly in the pots.  There are two in the gate bed and one near the grape vine.  We had 30 ml of rain this week.  The little cos lettuce seeds I planted last week have sprouted, as have the beetroot seeds.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Sunday Oct 10th

The cabbage moths have arrived.
Mixed basil
The main bed with large stakes for tomatoes.
The very first cherry blossom flowers.  The weren't there yesterday.
Time to potter today.  Sown Mr Fothergill's Cos lettuce in the old cos lettuce wicking box and in a new styrene box (not wicking).  Planted corriander seedlings in maple pot and in pot near corner fish pond.  Also planted sweet basil seedlings in a freckle lettuce wicking box, in the main garden bed near the squash and in the Greek basil pot near the gate..  Also planted basil mix seedlings in strawberry bed with earwig baits, snail bait and a cage over the top.  Wouldn't you know it;  the day after you take the protective wire cage off the collards etc because they have out grown it,  the cabbage moths turn up.  Time to make a curtain protection tunnel.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Sat 9th Oct

Nashi blossom
freckle lettuce
four week old babies in green house
Miss oeg and belgian babies
Two week old box babies.
Beans in toilet rolls in main bed
The orchid
All the chook sheds, pens and boxes were cleaned today. The first hatch brown shed babies had their first day out in the green shed run.  After their initial hesitation they loved the grass and chasing bugs.  I added a barrow load of compost to the raspberry beds and some pots/boxes today.  The OEG hen hatched three belgian babies on Wed 6th Oct.  Another one hatched in the incubator and was successfully placed under the hen.  The babies in the box are oeg and belgian blue 2 weeks old.  We had 30 ml of rain this week. The vegies have grown well with the rain.