The good things about all the wetness: the veggie garden is growing prolifically, there have been fireflies in amazing abundance, frogs in tremendous quantities, more snakes and turtles around than we've ever seen before...the bad bit is that the heat arrived about 2 days ago, and 65% humidity and 38 degree weather is... as bad as we remember from other years.
Other than the veggies, we've been enjoying a gorgeous flower bed filled with a "hummingbird" mix of flowers. Haven't seen any hummingbirds yet, but the mini zinnias have been lovely. Silver beet is growing like stink, and we had a huge yield of blueberries - most of which, unfortunately, went to feeding the local birds. We might need a net next year.
You'd never know that behind that grassy bank lurks a large veggie garden! There are a few experiments going on out the front of our place - Nic got sick of cutting the grass there so we're trying to follow the adage: "don't plant a lawn, plant a meadow". Our meadow has been started with mint, bee balm, veronicas, sun flowers, lambs ears and probably heaps of other stuff that I don't remember. There's still a lot of lawn in there though...
Nic of course is still the engine behind most of the heavy moving. Action shots!
Ok, I'm joking. Here Nic was visiting a sweet potato farmer, and its the farmer's team of workers. They're planting sweet potatoes, by hand, from the back of the tractor. If Nic's research succeeds then we might be able to plant sweet potatoes like regular spuds, (mechanically), greatly reducing costs. But also, depriving these sorts of guys farm labour gigs. "How do you grow sweet potatoes" people ask Nic all the time. "You get a tractor and a bunch of Mexicans..." he replies, in all sincerity.
I think I mentioned that this has been a wildly fecund summer? Things reached a new height of reproductive madness a couple of days ago when we found that a toad had spawned in the dog's water dish. I thought that was exciting enough, but when I told Nic you could see a light bulb go off above his head, and he raced around the side of the house. To where the wheelbarrow had been catching the water that floods out of an undersized gutter...
Sure enough, the brimful barrow was home to hundreds of newly hatched tadpoles! Nic's over the moon and having a ball experimenting with different sorts of food. Dog food might be winning so far.
Finally, one of the best things about the ginormous garden is when you get to harvest stuff. We just dug up some 10-20 kg of spuds. And they look gooooooooooooooooooood...
5 comments:
Looks great guys. Very jealous of your garden, lots of goodies in there!
that comment about Foster's facing the highway made me laugh. Once Edo and I were eating there and he said the exact same thing. Naturally, it hadn't even occurred to me LOL
wrong shovel nic!! you need a square mouth shovel for that job... *sigh* cant say it didnt suprise me...
oh well - I reckon dozer would like you dog... they would have a great time as far as i can see!!
cam
Did you harvest as many spuds as you planted? I've done that a few times...
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