- Hazel
- Australia
- I ran away from teaching to the country to grow veggies. There are also some chooks and a pair of troublesome goats who were so much trouble they had to go! My simple green life isn't always as simple or as green as I'd like...but I keep trying!
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Thursday, November 24, 2011
The Aztecs
I began this post,
then thought of our own dear departed
Billy Thorpe and The Aztecs.
OK! so I am showing my age!
But doncha love the dancing, and the suits?
And why was I thinking of the Aztecs?
Because of the corn and the beans of course.
I waited until the corn was up and growing...
then I hilled up the soil around their roots
and planted climbing beans.
Just like the Aztecs
(the civilization, not the band)
used to do in South America.
This combination is the absolute pinnacle
of companion planting.
The beans fix nitrogen in the soil for the hungry corn,
and the corn provides something
for the beans to clamber up.
A real win-win situation.
Of course, the Aztecs would have planted
some squash nearby and allowed it to ramble
through the lot to save space.
And no 'poison ivy' in sight!
Can't wait to see how much it has grown
when I get home.
Fat Fruit Friday # 9 - Tomatoes
I am so disappointed with these photos.
They do not do justice to the tomato.
You can sort of tell how tall it is
by the size of the chair.
Not only is it tall...it is strong!
Look at the girth of those stems.
Here is the one in the garden (they are both grafted Grosse Lisse).
This one is doing very well for a tomato
at this time of the year in Melbourne.
However, it is only half the size of the one in the greenhouse.
This one is climbing up the racks. |
There are three BroadRipple tomatoes in this basket. I had planned to take two out and plant them outside... but I ran out of time. |
We ate some of the salad greens
from the polystyrene box last night.
The first food
from the greenhouse.
Yay!
Footnote: These photos are a week old...te tomtoes are prbably up to the roof and going out the vent!
Hand luggage? Check!
My airfare to the States is the cheapest one
my son could find.
The one disadvantage, is that it goes via
Upper Kombuckta West.
Well, via Sydney, San Francisco, Chicago and then to Indiana.
It is only about 20 hours flying,
but I ended up traveling for about 42 hours:
Monday 7.30 am to Wednesday 1.30 am (Melbourne time).
That was a little more than expected
because I missed a connection because of a late plane.
So five of those hours were
in a nice hotel bed in Chicago.
Reading material |
I quite like the actual traveling.
I even quite like the food...sad, I know.
I know it isn't good for the planet, but if I didn't fly,
I would never see my son and his family.
I do not fly for any other reason.
I have learned to take one smallish bag on the plane.
One that will fit beneath the seat in front.
That way I have access to it at all times.
The atmosphere in the plane is very drying.
So here is my survival kit.
Eye drops (just liquid tears), spritzer to spray my face, lip balm, and saline nasal spray, some moisturizers, toothbrush and small toothpaste, ear plugs, neck pillow...and some clean knickers.
Well, I am off to play with the grandchildren.
Well, I am off to play with the grandchildren.
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Fat Fruit Friday #10 - The Tardis
Something you may not have known
about the Fat Fruit Greenhouse.
Just like the Tardis it is much bigger inside than it appears.
Incorporated in one side,
is a chicken coop!
is a chicken coop!
The nest box opens from the top for easy egg retrieval.
The whole door (with the nestbox attached) swings out
for easy cleaning.
There is mesh above and below the nest box for ventilation.
At first I was a little worried
about the heat factor inside the coop.
But I have been monitoring that with a thermometer
and am very happy that the ventilation works well.
It is ideal for Jenny and her babes.
It would take three or four hens if you were using it as a night coop
and had the door open during the day to allow them to free-range.
In this view from the side you can see that it is a triangular prism.
Daniel is going to make benches with one shelf at the top so,
from now on, the coops will be square in profile.
Can you see the marine ply, on top of the coop, under the shelves?
In the winter these panels come out and there is
a mesh panel to keep the chooks out of the greenhouse.
(You can see this in the second/middle photo)
Two of the panels fit exactly in the grills on the door,
above and below the nest box.
In the colder weather, the chickens are protected from the draught
AND
the warmth from their bodies will help to even out the temperature
in the greenhouse on cold nights.
Now, isn't that clever!
Fact: Chickens' body temperatures range between 39.8C and 43.6C.
Four corner views #2
I took these photos as a record of the veggie garden
as I headed off on my trip.
So I will be able to ascertain the difference
when I return...and, if I have to,
I will use them to whack The Cook
over the head if she lets it all die.
Check out the potatoes in front. |
I have three colours of climbing beans growing up that tee pee made from fallen branches. It is very tall. |
Oh no!
I just got an email from The Cook
to say the creek pump, which feeds
all the taps in the garden,
has gone on the blink.
Being the mechanical incompetent
that she is, she will have no hope
of fixing the pump...
even if it is the simplest problem.
She is using buckets.
I am expecting to see the veggies
all tall and lush and
The Cook, all thin and taut
when I return.
We're all going on a Summer Holiday...
Who's going on a holiday?
'Hey Sis, if we cover our eyes with our ears,
we won't have to watch the world whizzing by!'
At the Goat Resort.
Also known as
'The Farm Where We Were Born'.
'Hey, waddaya mean? You'll see us in a month?
Come back, you humans!'
Rob, the man who sold us the goats was,
thank goodness, very happy
to have them back while I am away.
He muttered something about
having to keep Bubba away from the boar.
I hope he is successful,
that's all we need...
another goat...
or two or three!
Poor sooky Bazza, bleated miserably,
as we drove away.
It bought a tear to The Cook's eye...
but not to mine!
I am hoping to fix the fences
when I come back...before
they come back!
The bearded woman
I'm sorry little chick,
but araucanas are funny looking!
Who ever heard of a bearded chook?
Or are you a rooster?
I suppose you could always get a job in a circus
as the bearded woman (if you are a hen).
Otherwise, chip chop, in the pot!
Now you will notice that is two posts about
cooking roosters...
but I will never be able to do it!
I'm too chicken!
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Monday, November 21, 2011
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Fat Fruit Friday # 8 - Leafy and fruity
Yes, I do know it is Sunday,
but if it is any consolation, these photos
were taken on Friday.
The greenhouse is a wonder!
One capsicum...
...and more on the way.
Salad leaves and...
...huge leaves on the eggplants.
A little tomato and...
...ripening chillis.
Everything is so lush.
Oh, I know I promised pictures of the tomatoes.
But for some reason the computer keeps turning the
photos on the side and they just don't look as
exciting that way...so next week.
Labels:
capsicums,
chillis.,
eggplants,
greenhouse,
Tomatoes
Saturday, November 19, 2011
A face only a mother could love?
This post will not go down as a culinary highlight...
to be commented on for days.
The meal wouldn't get me a gig on Master Chef...
and I wouldn't serve it to guests.
Maybe it is a meal only the grower could love.
But I had to share it...cos it is a >90% meal.
We haven't had many of those since autumn.
(The Great Goat Raids of the Winter of 2011.)
So here it is...
plain and simple and extremely green.
Silver beet and spinach, carrots,
broad bean, green garlic, mint, mash with and feta and olive oil
(ala Suburban Tomato - Liz's looked nicer but this one tasted fine)
and a lightly poached egg from Hortense.
Seven out of eight main ingredients...
I'm claiming that as more than ninety percent home produced.
May there be many more!
Friday, November 18, 2011
Garlic re-calculation
The garlic was beginning to yellow and dry a little. Some were starting to flower. It is a couple of weeks earlier than I expected to harvest...but harvest I did...and I harvested, and harvested and harvested!
I was so thrilled with the first few that I pulled, I whipped out the camera.
Then I kept harvesting...
Not a bad haul, hey?
However, these were just the ones planted around about
and not in the main garlic bed.
So I kept harvesting.
146!
There were no humungous ones,
but very few small ones either.
They were all about the size of these ones below...
sort of 'shop size'.
When I planted these, way back on the Autumn Equinox
on March 21st, I wrote a post entitled 'Garlic Maths'.
Out of the 150 cloves I planted, only four didn't prosper.
So here is my updated garlic maths:
146 bulbs x 7* cloves each = 1022 cloves of garlic.
*only an estimate...they may have more cloves.
That's a lot of garlic!
Thursday, November 17, 2011
The early bird...
gets the worm.
In this case, the early pumpkins....
started as seeds in the little greenhouse
and planted out
are way ahead.
Potimaron...pumpkins |
These little fellas, were planted
in the garden as seeds once the soil warmed.
I have planted fewer pumpkins this year.
But looking at photos of last year's harvest, maybe I will
poke a few more seeds in somewhere.
I am having a go at some watermelons and cantaloups too.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
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