Tag Archives: guerilla gardening

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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We are all part of one another

I was out gardening before work again a few mornings back. The weather is changing, the first of our chooks is moulting… some things need to happen now and soon!

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The vegetable and flower seedlings have been growing quickly.  In went rocket, lettuce, kale, broccoli and hollyhocks. Not quite done, but well on the way.

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The native plants have continued to sprout and grow, with ruby saltbush still the big success story. The biggest went into the ground this morning.  Here they are in a bucket ready to travel.  Those I planted earliest in the season are quite a good size now.  In the site where council watering has helped them on, only one seedling was lost.  In the drier site (further from home), about half have made it.  Many non plussed cyclists passed as I planted.

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One woman with a dog stopped to thank me and express her concern about all the newly planted natives that died when cars kept parking on them.  We talked about what could be done.  I was planting in a spot where over several nights someone stole the plants out of the ground–about 12 in all! So we talked about that, as she passes with her dog every day and notices things I also notice.  She spoke of the bunting and how she had been maintaining it.  It’s good to know and to remember that for every person who tears it down there might be several like this woman stopping to maintain it and being made cheerier by seeing it and understanding they have company in loving trees and plants.

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Then it was clean up time.  People dump stuff in the common land.  Why is it so?  Well, I extracted the plastic sack that was coming apart from its contents (old horse manure and sawdust, could be worse) and took it to the bin.  If only those degradable bags were capable of decomposing in the sense that dead plant life decomposes.

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Then I towed all the dead branches someone had piled around the base of one of my beloved trees home.  Happily our ‘green waste’ bin for council collection is almost always empty.  We’re big mulchers.  We have worms and chooks and compost systems.  So the green bin is there for rescue missions, and its contents can go to be composted by council.

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Last time someone dumped in this spot, They left a huge pot in several pieces.  Only one small piece was missing, so I heaved it home and glued it together.  It seems to be holding, so one big ugly plastic pot that is doing a great job of holding a plant, got placed inside.  Definitely an improvement.  While I did these things I thought about what it means that people dump things on common land here.  Is there something about this site I could change, that would make this a less favoured location, for example.

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I have been thinking a lot about the injunction in Indigenous law to recognise that we are interconnected–earth, animals, plants, sky, humans, stars, wind… I’ve been wondering what would follow for non Indigenous people if we tried to live by the core principles of Indigenous law in this country (as best we can understand them–and recognising this will always be partial) instead of thinking of Indigenous principles as a curiosity.  A bit like a religion you don’t really understand but that you can acknowledge exists and holds meaning for others. This is preferable to outright hostility, and growing up in this country I have seen that hostility and disrespect for Indigenous Australians since I was a small child.  But it is still pretty impoverished as a way of thinking our relationships to the land, its people and its law. Continuing with this thought experiment, I was trying out in my mind what it would mean to think of this tree as a relative in some profound sense. I am sure it would mean I wouldn’t choose this spot as a place to put rubbish. Respect would surely be part of that relationship. I have been thinking about relationships and what they can mean. I wondered whether I could draw strength from that tree as well as plant an understory that might protect it a little and clean up the mess passing humans leave. I thought that I could and that I do.

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If we are all part of one another (and this is something I believe on many levels), surely it follows that I don’t get to pick and choose.  I have often thought one of the profound things about Indigenous life prior to colonisation is that an Indigenous relationship to land is a profound and permanent thing: each person who belonged to a place would have expected to live there for their entire life and die there.  Something so profoundly unlike contemporary Western lives lived with the capacity to leave your relatives, your place of birth, everyone you have ever known and choose not to return.   If there was no picking and choosing, if we are all interconnected: what is my relationship to these people who leave what they don’t want on the commons of our suburb?  What obligations do I have to them?  How should I think about them?  I don’t have any answers, but some days I think I might be on to some decent questions.  That I’m wondering in a productive direction. I hope so. So I gathered more saltbush berries and kept thinking.

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Filed under Eucalypts, Neighbourhood pleasures

More guerilla gardening…

I like gardening before work.  Especially at the moment, when the early morning is the coolest time of the waking day.  So this morning I was out weeding and fertilising and examining the state of the patch. Then it was time to plant.

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Here are my seedlings soaking in preparation.  I have been propagating native plants alongside my vegetable, flower and herb seedlings.  It’s a bit more random because it’s harder to get good advice about when and what to plant.  I am gathering seed of plants that look plausible and happen to be seeding or fruiting and seeing what sprouts.  The simplest thing for me to grow  is ruby saltbush .  I am not sure if it is objectively easy to sprout, or if it is just that I run my propagating system in a way that favours it.  Here’s a full grown one in our back yard.  It has magenta berries about the size of a currant.  Currently, almost none are ripe.

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These ruby saltbush were planted only a week or so ago!

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These little ones are sea-berry saltbush (Rhagodia candolleana).  I harvested a lot of seed last summer, which is good–because so far these are not ripe anywhere I have seen them growing.  The cool summer has slowed down the fruiting cycle.

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This morning I also planted a couple of little low-growing daisy plants. Here are some I planted months back that have begun to spread.  They have tiny flowers (yes, these plants are in flower) and they are seeding already.  Some Australian plants are opportunists–these ones have been regularly watered and clearly they are making seeds while conditions are right.  Judging by the ones in our garden, they can flower and seed for months of the year.  I think they are Woolly New Holland Daisy (Vittadinia gracilis).

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I also planted something that looked suspiciously like New Zealand spinach (Tetragonia tetragoniodes)–I didn’t try to sprout it but I am growing it in the vegie patch and a good part of my potting mix is sieved soil from the chicken run, so seed sharing happens… and it is a very hardy ground cover!  I seem to have a volunteer indigofera australis in my propagating system too, no doubt because the indigoferas are growing beside my pots!  Then it was back to the garden at home…

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In the last few days I finally discovered why this plant is called ‘strawberry spinach’.  I bought it at the local community garden but had been wondering about the name for quite a while!  These fruits went from green to red very quickly indeed.  So spectacular!

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And… a little harvesting before breakfast to finish.  I do love rhubarb!

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Guerilla saltbush planting–and more solace pennants

The latest round of saltbush seedlings have gone out into the big, wide (hot, dry) world.  With the occasional alyssum seedling carried along for the ride.  We loaded up the wheelbarrow and headed out with our well soaked seedlings.

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There was precious little soil to plant them in, in places… but we will just try them out and see how far they get.  We were planting by a pedestrian and cycle crossing, and I was a bit surprised by how many people thanked and congratulated us, perhaps giving us credit for planting that has been done by the council, as well as the 20 or so plants we were setting out.

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Once they were watered in, we wandered off down the road to spread a bit more mulch and pick plastics out of the mulch council has supplied.  Since planting we have realised that the council workers who are watering the council plantings are also watering the ones we put in–awesome!

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There have been yet more pennants for Solace… I went to a conference and spent the quiet evenings, of which there were few, stitching away on these.

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Some are double sided… I told my sister (we had dinner one night while I was conferencing) about the project and she asked what I was writing on the pennants.  When I said ‘ladybirds’ she laughed and said she felt that way about ladybirds too!

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‘Weeding and revegetation’ seemed an appropriate one to show in this post… but when I made this pennant I was thinking of dear friends who weed and care for precious places in the Blue Mountains and beyond… and of pulling out caltrop in the new plantings in our street, which is part of the route of a bikeway!  Caltrop produces the ‘three corner jack’, a vicious spiny seed capsule more than capable of piercing a thong (flip flop) or deflating a bicycle tyre.  For another contribution to the project, you might like to go here and be inspired.

 

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Filed under Leaf prints, Neighbourhood pleasures, Sewing

Guerilla planting

Long term readers will know that our neighbourhood was at the centre of a major piece of infrastructure development in the last few years. One of the things this meant was the loss of 173 trees in a small part of our metropolitan area, and since the project ended we have lost still more.  In the last few months (way too late for it to be a good time for new plants to establish themselves) there has been a lot of mulching and planting.  Good as this is–and parts of it are great–the trees that have been planted are a lot smaller than those we lost, and they always will be.  In our street, where more than 20 trees were removed, not a single tree has been planted.

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The plantings in our street are a little more regimental than I probably would have chosen, but they are hardy, native species that might make it through summer, and that is a start.  There are lots of spaces though, and in time this will mean that as the mulch layer becomes soil, weeds will rise.  I’ve decided on direct action of a smallish sort.  I soon discovered why some parts of the ground had been left bare.  There is concrete so close to the surface that my trowel reached it.  I put larger saltbush species in where there was enough soil to give them a chance, and smaller species in where they might make it but little else will.  I propagated them from seed some time ago and have been waiting a long while to get them in the ground.  This felt like such a small contribution–but as I knelt there digging, a chap on a bike went past and called out ‘good girl!’  This was so clearly intended as encouragement I decided to receive it as such and press on.

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I also planted some of these.  I don’t know the name of this plant.  I collected seed when we went to Wilpena Pound
a few years back and these plants are spreading in our front garden even without being watered–they have what they need to be able to survive unwatered on public land.  They are among the species being planted in the neighbourhood, so I decided to add some in our street.  They have a little pinky-purple flower followed by a pleasing little puff of seed head.  Here is the way they look full sized right now.

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Well… I have begun planting out my current crop of seedlings and put in a lot more of last summer’s seed collection.  They aren’t trees… but we need everything we can get to soften the landscape here and give solace to the smaller creatures.  Trees, we won’t be able to consider planting until autumn.

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Guerilla Gardeners and Yarn Bombers Strike the Neighbourhood!

Yarn bombers have been out and about in our neighbourhood!  They have improved a neglected spot a short distance from our place, cheering up people who’ve had a year of more construction noise, dust and reverse beeping than most of us can readily stand.  Bless them!

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Not content with tree decorating, they bombed the odd pole as well…

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Plus a raised herb garden for the locals to enjoy…

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They even left a potted lime tree and a bougainvillea.  I took a down-at-mouth neighbour along to see and she was quite cheered up by the constructive neighbourhood reclamation and whimsy of it all.  So was I.

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They go by the name of ‘Viva La Broad Bean’ and I can only congratulate and cheer them on.  I met one of them when I went to take these pictures and congratulated her in person.  I was able to share our neighbourhood revegetation projects with her, too.

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Meanwhile, the streets nearby are full of bottlebrush (callistemon) trees in flower.  Thousands of blooms, each the size of an old fashioned bottlebrush–but splendidly red.  It occurred to me that this is a form of wonder and beauty that non-Australians mostly don’t experience.

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The abundance of flowers has brought lorikeets into the neighbourhood to feed on the nectar and hold high pitched, apparently gleeful conversation.  They don’t hang about to be photographed, but I managed to take a picture of this rainbow lorikeet before it flew off like a green comet.

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