Showing posts with label 2005. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2005. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 April 2009

My New Garden: Progress 3 : Sep '05 to Mar '06



Soil . . . scoop up a handful of the magic stuff. Look at it closely. What wonders it holds as it lies there in your palm. Tiny sharp grains of sand, little faggots of wood and leaf fiber, infinitely small round pieces of marble, fragments of shell, specks of black carbon, a section of vertebrae from some minute creature. And mingling
with it all the dust of countless generations of plants and flowers, trees, animals and yes our own, age-long forgotten forebears, gardeners of long ago. Can this incredible composition be the common soil?
- Stuart Maddox Masters, The Seasons Through

We're out of the grip of Winter and Spring is in full swing again (September 2005) and the first rains have fallen - the cacti are absolutely jubilant and are all in full flower. The Red Hot Pokers are still in full bloom, much to the glee and enjoyment of the Black Sunbirds. The Echevarias survived very well, they actually like the dry season without any water and really bloomed prolifically.

Aug '05 - Had to clear out a lot of the grasses that did not make it through the winter and also heavily trimmed some of the reed species - big open patches that need filling!


Cactus flower


Cactus flowers


Close-up of cactus flower



June '06 - Red Hot Pokers still in full bloom



Echeverias covered in their stalks with small bell-like flowers



December 05 - have had a lot of rain and the lawn is running riot, desperately in need of a cut!






Jan '06 - My Pachypodium in full bloom



Pachypodium flowers



The garden by candle light in February '06



Started on the pathways and got half-way before we were driven inside by some rain, which has lasted almost a week.







Some huge fungi sprouted next to one area of the pathway and look like fossilised fairy umbrellas - too gorgeous!



circa 1982 Natal Fig bonsai in January 2006 before the Winter hit him.

This winter seems to have been rather severe - left my 1982 Natal Fig bonsai out till June and came out one morning to find all his leaves hanging black and limp. I immediately took him inside and started pampering by loosening the soil a bit and keeping him in a warm place - will wait till all the leaves fall off and hopefully he'll return in Spring. This is the first time in 23 years that he has been hit so severely and losing all his leaves...

Next up-date - April - July 2006

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Tuesday, 24 March 2009

My New Garden: Progress 1 - Jan - Mar '05



It is apparent that no lifetime is long enough in which to explore the resources of a few square yards of ground.
- Alice M. Coats

After having completed the initial layout and set up of my new garden last year, things are starting to look a bit better now at the beginning of 2005, and with all the holidays being finished and things starting to get back to normal again, the work-in-progress can be continued. Must say, the holidays were a nice break, kept me out of the sun during December and as I loathe wearing a hat, as soon as cooler days start setting in, I'm in the garden like a shot.




JANUARY 2005 -
After a wonderful rainy season, some of the trees are already flowering - the Acacia Karoo delighted with it's fat thorns (a sign of lots of water) and beautiful yellow pom-poms.
In the area where I decided to make an indigenous grass area, all the grasses were also seeding and flowering.


The Indigenous grasses flowering



February 2005 - garden taking shape and pathway actually becoming visible!



February, and everything taking shape very nicely.



The sword ferns enjoying the shade under the White Karees





March 2005 - Grasses at the edge of the pathway, which will soon be beautiful!



Added some old dead logs and more rocks which really started attracting insects and lizards...



A seed from the Black Karee took root next to the log...


Placed some rocks next to the Echevarias...

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Saturday, 21 March 2009

My New Garden: Progress 2 : April to Aug '05



"Tread softly!" a signpost in my garden reads: "Your feet are killing me!"



The Garden on a quiet April night


Thank heavens this 2005 Winter seemed extremely mild, because our area, Tarlton, gets severe frost regularly, wiping out anything that's remotely marked as frost-tender, and by beginning-July most of the trees already had blossoms and tiny leaf buds.
The lawn is taking a bit longer and it's amazing that, no matter how much you water, with the first rains, no matter how little, everything springs to life.



The White Karees have done well this summer and are well-prepared for the coming winter.



Even the Euphorbia pulled through



July and mid-Winter - things are looking decidedly dry. the lawn is dry and yellow and didn't even put up a fight against the severe frost we're having.




It's August, spring is looming and the Sword Ferns and Hen & Chickens were almost wiped out completely.




Some of the Acacias look worse for the wear, but tiny green leaves are already sprouting!



I forgot to move My Old Man cactus under-roof, but didn't seem to mind the cold and even seems a couple of centimeters taller, but the frost got the one Coco Splumosa, below.





These little Phormiums are truly wonderful, don't seem to get affected by cold, wind, water or drought. Must actually plant some more of them.




The old peach tree, which I didn't have the heart to remove, was already covered in pink blossoms early in July and now, in August, already has most its leaves.

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