Showing posts with label 2006. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2006. Show all posts

Friday, 17 July 2009

My New Garden: Progress 5 - Aug to Dec 2006

I haven't up-dated my new garden progress for some time, so please note that this progress is for August to December 2006 - I'll catch up to be current very soon!



There is a great pleasure in working in the soil, apart from the ownership of it. The man who has planted a garden feels that he has done something for the good of the world.
- Charles Dudley Warner, 1870

AUGUST 2006 : Spring hasn't quite stuck her head out yet - very windy and still very cold... not that the Arctotis seem to mind, they've been flowering since the middle of July. The Monkey-tail Cactus has been covered in flowers all Winter long.


Arctotis


Arctotis flower


September 2006 - Erigeron climbing over the log


Monkey-tail Cactus flower


Cactus flowers on a beautiful October night.


October 2006 - the Pachypodium has survived! and started sprouting new heads of leaves.


Can't say the same for the Acacia Umbrella Thorn -
nary a sign of a green bud and I really think I've lost it this Winter...
knew he was too tender, yet I still took the chance of planting him.


Above and below: The lush greenery of November after still some more rain...




The Red Hot Pokers flourishing in the December heat


Bull-Bull in the Pin Oak


December2006 - The Greater Striped Swallows re-built last year's nest
under the ceiling of the garden shed.

Next up-date Jan '07 to Dec '07

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Thursday, 9 April 2009

My New Garden: Progress 4 - Apr '06 to Jul '06



Winter is the season dominated by bare soil: the whole gardening cycle begins with the care and preparation of the earth during winter so that it will feed plants the following year. One of the things I enjoy about digging (and there are lots of things I enjoy about it) is the smell of the
earth that is released by the spade cutting in and lifting clods that have been buried for a year. Not only does the soil itself have a real scent, but the roots of the crop or plant - even weed - that has been growing there will also contribute to the mix, creating something new out of the
vague remnants of last season's garden.
- Monty Don, The Sensuous Garden, 1997

April 2006 and Winter is creeping up again, endless cycles of death and growth... The garden path really settling in well - the edging plants have taken well and the rain seems to be gone for now. Just as well, the mornings are decidedly snippy and fresh and too much water now is not such a good thing...


The Cape Robin in the Balhambra tree in my previous garden




The new pathway looking grand after all the rain...


The garden at night...



Stained glass garden ornament hanging from the Acacia Karoo



Slivers of broken mirror on a piece of string cast shimmering lights in the shadows.



Wonderful little Phormiums!



Rain gauge filled to the brim - 100mm



The birds are still enjoying the May sunshine... This Laughing Dove
I named Flutterby - reared him in the house and now he's quite at
home in the garden...


The birds enjoying the food table...



June 2006 - The indigenous wild grasses starting to feel the effects of Winter



Some of the wild grasses are seeding, much to the delight of the birds.



July and Winter is in full swing - lawn really dead!



July '06 - Oh, Woe is me... the frost seems to have gotten
my Pachypodium! Hoping and praying he'll survive the onslaught...



Pachypodium in January '06... it survived...! And looking beautiful
too with it's new crowns...

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