Drawstring project bags

These are the bags that really started the party.  Fully lined drawstring project bags.

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Recycled suit linen with E Scoparia print; linen with an Australian designed print; cotton printed with prunus leaves and maple leaves.

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Indigo prints from the indigo dyeing day last year… paler prints went into the linings.

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While I was on indigo prints I used up the last of my own indigo dyed fabrics making this.  And finally, a gratuitous photo of a bee enjoying a street tree in flower taken on my way to a lunch meeting.  Glorious!

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Eucalyptus bark dyepots—the outcome

Well, the outcomes are in– E Scoparia bark on the left and E Poyanthemos bark on the right.

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As I was rinsing my pots a sudden movement caught my eye.

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All those cuttings and seedlings and little trees are doing well, because, we have finally had some lovely rain!

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It’s lovely to see water pooling after the long dry of summer.

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And, a lovely pair of warm socks for the coming winter chilly toes have made their way off the needles!

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They have gone to their happy home already…

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More guerilla planting

This last week there was a big planting and a little one. See that little tree in the middle of all that weediness?

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The little one involved planting four seedling Corymbia Citriodora (lemon scented gum) trees.  Small now–but they will be huge if they grow.  They came up in my propagating area, sometimes accompanied by the saltbush I had planted. In the end I planted them along the tram line.  I don’t like their chances much having had my knees on that ground and my trowel in it looking for something a plant might get roots into.  But they volunteered for the job, so I have obliged them.  I have been making a project of taking plants out and bringing rubbish home.

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This time there was loads of rubbish and a score!  Iron plates I might be able to use to eco print paper.

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And some other rusty bits (on the right above) that have gone into my jars of iron water for dyeing.

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The bigger planting involved nine plants, added into the barren triangle up near the railway crossing where I planted three not so long ago.

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My trusty bike trailer came with two watering cans in it!  Yes, I did feel like I was doing something embarrassing.  But I did it anyway, apologising to these little plants for putting them in a place so ill treated and challenging. 2015-04-04 12.32.14

Then I made another trip to move mulch to the area and give them a chance. 2015-04-04 13.00.02

The haul of rubbish was less than the first time.  This is all I brought home.

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And here I am, a gardener with her newly planted seedlings.

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Respect the garden

My latest attempt to protect the plants that have so far survived in a patch of nearby public land is not a very extensive  one.

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Just one pennant that says ‘please respect the garden’.

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I have tried to give it flutter factor by adding all the little triangles of eco-printed fabric cut from the binding on my last quilt.  Meanwhile, I’ve embarked on an extended programme of propagating plants for the neighbourhood public spaces.

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I’m trying out taking cuttings of this saltbush. We’ll see how it goes. I read honey could help them take root.  I couldn’t see it doing any harm, so I am trying it out.

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The main action is still creeping boobialla.

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Pruned back and ready to go.  I followed up by trying pricking out ruby saltbush.  Fingers crossed this will multiply the effective number of plants from those that germinated late in summer.

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And then I might have enough plants to try re-planting some of those that have been squashed by cars under my little pennant.

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Eucalyptus bark dye pots

At the end of the year, my sisters and I were out walking and gathered some E Polyanthemos bark.  This is a purely speculative dye pot.  And it has been waiting in a cardboard box.  I moved it to a dye pot and came out next day to add water.  Do you see what I see?

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Yes, it’s a redback spider!  She got away from me before I could get her out of the pot, so I put the lid back on and left it for another day.  I don’t want to kill her this way.

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Finally I got back to the pot and couldn’t find the redback, but she appeared as the water level rose and I managed to get her out without putting my fingers in!

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Here are the pots prior to heating. E  Polyanthemos in the foreground and E Scoparia in the back.

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An outbreak of bags!

It started with one piece of fabric that came wrapped around a birthday present, that I wanted to use as a feature (I haven’t done that yet).  Then I thought maybe some of the green fabrics could become bags. They did.

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One of the green prints was a screenprinted cotton that I bought at a garage sale.  It was next to the swirly screen print in the two bags on the left below. More green scraps kept getting pulled into bags as I went.

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Then  the chicken print.  Too cute to leave in the cupboard, too small for a big project.  I made two bags.

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Then the peace symbol print.  I have been loving it as an ironing board cover… and now it’s two bags as well.

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It just seems like some kind of frenzy I get into once in a while… turning abandoned bits and bobs into useful bags that can find happy new homes.  I have now done for all of the non fusible interfacing, and all of the antique fusible interfacing… and am considering never acquiring interfacing again, although most of what I have has come without my asking for it.  So some small dent is appearing in the stash!  At least four bags already have new homes, including the one made from leftover ‘very hungry caterpillar’ fabric from a shirt or two I made… apparently it frisked out of the house so quickly there was no time for a photo…

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Plant privatisation

It was beautiful as the sun came up this morning.

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I couldn’t quite believe my eyes as I biked out to running training last night and saw an uprooted westringia (native shrub) in the local pocket park. It was nightfall when I returned, and to my distress, there were a couple of westringias (at the bottom of the picture below), a couple of dianellas, and another strappy-leafed plant whose name I don’t know lying uprooted on the ground. And, there were the holes where many more plants had previously been. The plant stealers are back.

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These poor plants were probably uprooted the previous night, and who knows why they were left behind. But since the others were taken–I have concluded they have been stolen, and this is only the latest in a series.  I put the uprooted plants in water overnight and they looked a lot better by morning. I cut them back to give the suffering roots less leaf to support.  And then, before work this morning, back into the ground with them.

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I also planted more saltbush, since my seedlings keep coming up.  They look so small and pitiful… but hopefully they’ll come along.

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I have started on another site, a bare triangle left after infrastructure works, and these three tiddlers are the beginning (I hope).  There they are in the foreground. I worked over this triangle collecting rubbish, and then heaved some buckets of mulch up from a low pile left over in the pocket park.  I do sometimes wonder if the dumpers feel like this low mound makes their efforts less noticeable, so shifting that mulch to a bare spot seems a good idea for a number of reasons.

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It soon appeared that the low wall might be a good canvas for chalk.  It wasn’t me, but I’m delighted, and so were neighbourhood passersby, several of whom offered comment.

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Thinking about the people who have been doing this (on at least four occasions I have noticed, so far–with a total loss of at least 25 plants)–I feel conscious that the inequality of the current economic system generates both poverty and greed.  And militates against any sense of shared resources or the commons. I don’t want to assume it makes sense to blame the people who are doing this.  Maybe it wouldn’t, if I knew them and their circumstances–even if their actions make me sad and seem to me to amount to privatising the commons.

If you’d like a primer on what I mean by the commons, try this song by David Rovics–aimed at corporations rather than at people stealing plants who may well themselves be desperate (and with a truly odd animation to make you scratch your head).

 

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More earth hours

We did observe earth hour.

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I liked it a whole lot, even if it was a small thing to do. It didn’t change my mind about having a bigger plan for earth hours of my own.

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So I decided on some more morning saltbush planting. I headed out to a site a few blocks away where my friends and I have been revegetating under a beloved tree for some years now.  You can see the understorey we have managed to build up where before it was barren and weedy and regularly poisoned by council.  The earth here used to be hard and dry, but now it has softened and contains much more vegetable matter–I mulched it with the leaves falling in the nearby gutters to keep the soil growing. Mulch is one of my favourite forms of loving the soil. It’s extraordinary to think of that cycle of nutrients–it is so wonderfully effective and simple to support–but so biologically complex and amazing I am not sure magic could be any better.

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Here is the aerial view of the trailer as I set out, complete with full watering can!  I must say carrying that went much better than I could have hoped possible…

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I weeded and pulled out dead bushes that were once the only native plants growing under this tree.  They finally succumbed this summer.  I collected more seed. How wonderful to have plants old enough to be fruiting so well here now.

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On the way back, I had an empty watering can, dead branches, weeds and some bark for my dye pot, and I trimmed creeping boobialla that came originally from my Dad’s garden.  He grew me a few by layering the plants in his front garden. It has really taken hold here and it is helping crowd out the invasive grasses that we’re weeding out all winter each year.

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I cut the boobialla where it was growing out over the kerb and where it is most vulnerable to passersby, because I have a plan.  Now it is cutting propagating time and not really saltbush planting time, I thought I could try seeing if I can grow more boobialla over the cooler months, when it’s my experience I can’t get saltbush to germinate.  Let’s see how that goes!

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Earthy tones

There has been spinning! I made some purchases in a destash recently and so have acquired fibres I wouldn’t ordinarily buy.  This is naturally dyed fibre by a verb for keeping warm; merino/silk/yak in ‘sticks and stones’ colourway.

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And in case you’re wondering, I have been planting lettuce and poppies and not only saltbush… and transplanting potted plants too.

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This spin made me realise that my preference for strong colours would have had me disappointed with this if I had dyed it myself. But here I am, appreciating its subtlety and wondering who would like it as a hat.

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Earth hours

I have been continuing to think on what it might mean to adopt the injunction in Indigenous law that we are all part of one another.  Reciprocity surely must follow from this principle.  With this thought in mind, I was out in the street planting again.  This time, seaberry saltbush.  It will grow a bit higher than the ruby saltbush, but it’s doing fine in this suburb so far!

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I was listening to the radio earlier in the week and there was a rather lovely story about some of what is happening for Earth Hour on march 28.  That’s today, friends.  I admit, earth hour strikes me as a rather token intervention.  But–all intervention in the matter of the future of the planet is valuable in my view, even if it is small.  I especially loved the Global Orchestra for Earth Hour–a global orchestra playing for the planet.  I have been wondering in recent weeks what it would be like to think of these times I’m out and about in the neighbourhood as my ‘earth hours’… and then along came the global earth hour!

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These little seedlings are so tiny.  Yet so much bigger than the seeds they came from.  Maybe my efforts can be like that.  The seaberry saltbush I planted a few weeks ago are bigger already.

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Those planted a year ago are much bigger, even though they are planted in such an unpromising place.  I am horrified to discover how close the concrete is to the huge tree here and how close to the surface it runs.

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So I went out into the street with seedlings, thinking about reciprocity, and came back with this: burr medic, plastic that has been through the shredder used to create council’s mulch, rubbish, and a rake without any tips left on it.  The dumpers have been back.

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Somehow that strengthened my resolve, so I went back out with ruby saltbush and planted it in a spot where garden waste is getting dumped and someone has left the roots of dead plants and soil that I imagine was in a pot once.  Maybe planting that area out will make the dumpers think again eventually?  I hope these tender seedlings will not fall victim to thoughtlessness instead.

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I am still thinking about us all being part of one another.  As I crawled around under the beloved tree these plants will surround, I tried thinking of that tree as aunty, or grandfather.  And offered these little saltbush as protective companions.  I have been registering that if I think of earth and plants as relations, I bring thinking about family to my relationship with the plants and earth.  How are these relationships like and unlike?  What can thinking about a tree as grandmother bring to my thinking about family? I am struck over and again by the lack of genderless terms for relationships in English, and how interesting it is to try out ‘grandmother’ and ‘grandfather’ on a tree.

Does ‘family’ imply a reluctance to abandon the relationship, even if we know this is possible?  I have been dogged in my connections to my family and they have been dogged in theirs with me.  We have needed doggedness as we have had long periods of disapproval and difficulty.  Maybe I need to be dogged in my relationship to the dumpers.  And burr medic.  And couch grass.  And caltrop. Family isn’t all happiness and light, after all.  It’s also hard work and persistence and times of aggravation.

Happy earth hour!

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