The backyard at 3pm with Gracie's woollen blanket drying in the sun.
Hanno having a rest while he fixes the pathway in the chook run. That's the mini Cavendish banana in the foreground. He's going to cut the pups off and transplant one to that bare space on the wire fence.
All citrus grow too many flowers at the beginning of the fruiting season but tend to either drop them or lose them to birds or insects in the following weeks. Our main orange tree is bursting with flowers. I'll pick many of them off soon to help it grow a good crop of large fruit instead of many small fruit.
I've spent time every day in the garden this week. The warmer weather has promoted growth and the two tomato plants have grown a lot in a week. There are plenty of flowers out now too. Today I'll finished the planting with a punnet of foxgloves - surely the sweetest flower name of all. My aim was to get all the planting, weeding and mulching done before the hot weather, and we've done that, so from now on, it's pruning, dead-heading, fertilising, watering and a little bit of harvesting. Speaking of which, Hanno harvested the curly kale on Wednesday for his annual pork and kale feast.
I will never tire of looking at this face. Gracie was under the table on the back verandah with the sun streaming in. She enjoys being there on winter afternoons because it's warm and out of the wind. Good girl, Gracie!
We got another stimulus payment from the government this month, a payment that needs to go back into the economy to help businesses survive. I bought a new camera and this week I've been experimenting with it and trying to get through the 550-page manual. Hopefully, in the coming weeks you see an improvement in my photos. I'll never stage them but I hope you'll be able to see more details in what I do present for you here and on IG.
I forgot it's Friday! 😳 I just came home from grocery shopping and it clicked. I'm glad I remembered now and not Sunday afternoon.
Making finger lime and lemon cordial. The little floaters in the pot are finger lime pearls.
It's been a busy week here with a few exciting things happening that I can't tell you about just yet. Tuesday I had my eyes seen to by my eye specialist and I was convinced I'd have to have surgery again. But no, he said a film had grown over the artificial lenses and he could fix one eye immediately, the other one will be done next week. He burnt the film off with a laser, the entire procedure lasted less than two minutes and was entirely pain-free. Go science!
Hello everyone. I had a good break and feel better for it. I did a lot of thinking while I was away, it's amazing how clearly you focus when you're sitting outside in the fresh air with birds swooping by. I've decided to use Instagram as the main tool to communicate with you. It's faster, so I won't spend too much time online, and the passing traffic there is much greater than here.
Gracie is doing her afternoon checks here. She's watching the chooks in the first photo and then she moves closer to the creek to make sure no bush turkeys are about to storm the fences.
We're learning hard lessons lately. The ongoing drought and coronavirus have taught me that to be resilient enough to bounce back time and time again, I need to strengthen my systems, learn as much as I can about what I want to do here and then put in the work to make it all happen. We have recently gone from a very productive vegetable, herb and fruit garden to a much smaller setup of flowers, herbs, fruit and a couple of vegetables. When I work through this season and my new systems start to evolve, those hard lessons might save me in the future.
One of the lessons I stumbled across years ago was to only grow the fruit and vegetables we eat. Even though it's enjoyable and rewarding, gardening is time-consuming and can be difficult at times, even for experienced gardeners. Growing vegetables that look different but are harder to grow isn't worth the extra work when you can get the result you want with something easier. For instance, a few weeks ago I found a few vines I hadn't planted starting to colonise a large area around one of the roses. I thought it was a cucumber and left it to see if we could use it. When it started to flower, the flowers were smaller than the cucumbers we usually grow but I let it mature to see what it really was. This is it below - an African horned cucumber. The seeds were probably dropped in our garden by visiting birds.

Apparently, the skin goes yellow when it's mature and it's FULL of seeds. It tastes like cucumber but the horns are spikey and there are very fine prickles along the stems. It's very difficult handling it in the garden so all the vines were pulled out. Good riddance to bad rubbish. In a few weeks time, when I'm ready to plant cucumbers, I'll choose a delicious apple variety, either Crystal Apple or Richmond Green. Both are well worth growing.
We're quietly working away in our home with a day out here and there for Hanno's doctors' appointments and grocery shopping. Life at our home is a mix of house and garden work, sitting in the garden, morning teas on the verandah, reading, knitting and thinking about what's happening in the world around us.
Above and below: we drove over to Bribie Island last weekend where Gracie discovered ibis.