It was another beautiful pre-work morning…
So I chose fine-leaved creeping boobialla and headed out into the neighbourhood.
I was accompanied by a neighbour who spends a lot of time on the street and he talked a lot about what he thinks needs to happen about the place. I kept planting. He appreciates the plants, though he has a lot of grievances. I guess we both think things could go better and we have different ways of trying to achieve improvement!
I weeded out some of these patches, as it looks to me as though the plants that have died have been lost to poison and not natural causes. Those that were larger and further from the kerb have mostly made it. The Olearias are bushing out.
My earlier boobialla plantings are mostly doing well.
Some of the rhagodias look good too. I gave this one some company.
It’s pleasing to see the places where my friends and I have been at work on this project for longer and there is now a leafy understorey. The E Scoparias we have planted have all lived thus far too!
Home again after some weeding and litter removal.
I even scored some local lemons on my way home. Extra good!
One good turn deserves another!
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Thanks!
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Those under storey plantings are looking great. Well done😊
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Thanks, Leonie! Now for the long, hot summer. I am hoping that most are well enough established to make it.
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Thanks for the change you bring. I’m a beneficiary with much appreciation
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Thanks, Lynn!!
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Random comment, unrelated to plantings (which are looking great!): I recently saw something about dying with apples…using the peels, the leaves, and the bark. It was a program out of Japan, about the apple-growing area. Ringo Kusaki-zome Kobo is the workshop name (I think!)
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Leaves and bark I have heard of. Peels?? Further evidence of Japanese dyeing ingenuity…
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Hmm…maybe I misunderstood and they were just using the peels for tea while the fabric got the leaves and bark? : )
Apple peel tea is delicious! It’s a specialty in Turkey (more randomness)
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🙂 apple peel tea sounds a good bit better than the usual sort to me!
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A quiet gentle revolution.
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What a beautiful way to think of it. Sometimes I just go out doggedly before I’m fully awake and other times I think about caring for Kaurna land, tending the commons, or simply rehabilitating patches of earth that haven’t seen a lot of love in a long while. Yours is another sweet way to think of the work. I didn’t realise I had it in me to take to this as a long term project, but I think it already is!
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