Tag Archives: guerilla gardening

More ruby saltbush!

I know… so many pictures of my watering cans and so little crafting.

2015-10-25 16.20.12

This time, ruby saltbush had its turn again.

2015-10-25 16.38.19

These little treasures are going into a narrow mulched area between a wall and a pathway.  The mulch is a saving grace, that and the fact I walk this way when I get home on the bus.  My niece came along to the planting as she was staying with us again, and we had a decent chat as I dug and she watered. The previous plantings in this truly harsh spot are all but one, still alive.  Fingers crossed for the newbies!

2015-10-25 16.43.14

Then it was home to prick out more little seedlings.  Seedlings and seeds… couldn’t be any better if they were magic.

2015-10-25 15.28.15

Japanese Indigo is coming along slowly but at least I have sprouts!

2015-10-25 15.28.23

And actually there has been quite a bit of stitching too…

2015-10-27 18.51.05

Even if the lighting lacks a little.  More news soon!!

2015-10-27 21.46.48

1 Comment

Filed under Natural dyeing, Neighbourhood pleasures

Guerilla gardening of the day

2015-10-22 08.39.58

In another pre-work bout of guerilla gardening, I stepped out with three fine leaved creeping boobialla and 17 ruby saltbush plants.

2015-10-22 08.59.11

The saltbush went in to a bank where weeds thrive in the cooler months.  It was only after I had them all in the ground and was pondering whether to invite the person whose driveway adjoins this patch to water them…  that I remembered there was a reason I hadn’t planted here before.  Occasionally a car parks here.  Hopefully that won’t be an issue until next year’s royal show, when perhaps by then these plants will be bushes big enough to fend off stray vehicles.

  2015-10-22 08.58.47

The boobiallas went in beside some plantings that are barely managing to survive.  They may fare no better, but I gave all the little stragglers a drink.  Maybe one day they will be understory for these ironbarks.  As I watered in the last of them, the umpteenth cyclist pedalled past and this one called out ‘thanks!’ so I called back ‘thank you!’  It was a pleasingly cheering exchange.

2015-10-22 08.58.52

Home again empty!  I have so many little seedlings pushing up I will need all the pots I can empty.  I realise that on Game of Thrones the chilling call is ‘winter is coming’ but in this part of Australia, the killing time is summer, and it’s coming faster and harder than usual, I think.  The more plants I can get in the ground in this relatively cool week, the better.  I planted lettuce and beetroot and dill this morning too.  The chickens were made happy by poppies and parsley and kale and calendula and assorted weeds plus a few flax plants that had gone to seed.  Even the plants they don’t enjoy eating are full of delectable caterpillars and other passengers, so it’s sure to be a happy day in the henhouse.

2015-10-22 09.01.38

 

6 Comments

Filed under Neighbourhood pleasures

Bladder saltbush out into the world

Daylight savings has started here, so long evenings have come into existence and spring is upon us. I arrived home from a weekend away where I had a lot of conversations about climate change and the prospects of halting it. What better way to celebrate such a happy and inspiring event than by planting?!

2015-10-11 17.33.12

This time, I planted out mostly bladder saltbush.  I think it is a really pretty plant, and I’ve had some success propagating.

2015-10-11 17.33.18

They went into a triangle of land where I have planted dozens of shrubs and saltbush and a tree, beside a footpath.  Most are doing remarkably well.

2015-10-11 18.11.09

I clustered them together so one day they might make quite a display of silver foliage.  I did a bit of weeding too.

2015-10-11 18.11.14

Next stop was inside the fenced off area for the railway.  Don’t tell.  I wasn’t ever near the line.  There is a spot where lots of tall weeds are growing, which shows something could grow there.  I ripped out the weeds as best I could and found they were mostly growing in blue metal. May the saltbush and boobialla I planted sink roots down to the places the weeds were finding nourishment!  That was some tough digging.

2015-10-11 18.09.45

Finally, home again with weeds and rubbish and empty containers ready to receive the plants that are sprouting now!  My spring native seed planting has begun to produce seedlings. Not to mention the vegetable and Japanese Indigo plantings…  Spring is an exciting time, especially if you don’t think about summer too much!

2015-10-11 18.09.38

A few days after I did this planting and drafted the post–I arrived home from work about half an hour before sunset to find the whole triangle had been mulched.  This is great news for weeding and for water retention, as this is really exposed land that has had no cover for a couple of years now.  However–about twenty plants had vanished, including the E Nicholii I had planted.  I hurried home, changed into gardening kit and started scrabbling in the mulch trying to retrieve plants.  There is now a watering system (or at least, pipes for one), in there under the mulch, so there must be planting plans (other than mine, of course).  So I assume some plants were destroyed in the process of putting the watering system in and others just buried–but I wasn’t able to retrieve many.  Dozens are still there and had been carefully mulched and left standing.  Now to wait and see what else is going to happen after this surprise event!

6 Comments

Filed under Neighbourhood pleasures

14 more ruby saltbush plants

Gentle readers, there has been knitting and spinning and stitching going on but there has also been an overwhelm-ment of day job and a distinct lack of photo taking. I will try to sort myself out soon.  Meantime, post-work planting began this week.  The days are lengthening and I have seeds coming up ready to be pricked out, but no empty pots to plant them into. The queue seemed to require I get onto the planting!

2015-09-24 17.26.46

14 ruby saltbush ready to go into the ground.  Plus my leaky watering can.  In the end I stood it next to a plant so the fine but steady stream of water squirting from its side could go to use while I was digging!

2015-09-24 17.45.18

The darker patches are the places where I have watered and planted.  They are around the edge of my previous plantings.  This is a patch where people and dogs can choose just to walk through (and of course, people walk through at night when small plants are not so obvious), so I am trying to allow the existing plantings to be larger and then for the planted area gradually to grow wider and wider. I am hoping that I’ll manage to sprout some larger shrubs this spring and summer that I can plant into this understorey.

2015-09-24 17.45.33

At one end of this patch my earlier plantings are now quite a decent size.  Some of the conversations I’ve had while working here have started to show that people can tell what I’m trying to do.  The Olearias along the wall further toward the street are now quite a good size and the leaves are a pleasing silver grey.  The E Nicholii is still alive!

2015-09-24 17.45.11

Home again after a little weeding.  Time for dinner and music…

3 Comments

Filed under Neighbourhood pleasures

This week in guerilla gardening the neighbourhood

This morning I headed out before going to work with some fair sized ruby saltbush and a bucket of earth.  The spot I had in mind has been thickly mulched, which is great–but it means there is little soil for small plants to get their toes into.  2015-09-22 07.30.25

The last round of planting here (by myself as well as by council’s contractors) did not do well, and I think the lack of soil was one major reason.  So this time I brought my own to help things along.  In the six months or so that have passed, the mulch has begun to convert to soil and that might help too.  The earth beneath is compacted from being parked on and contaminated with concrete components.

2015-09-22 07.52.44

It doesn’t look promising, does it?  But I think it will be lovely in time. There are trees here and more understorey will help.

2015-09-22 07.52.51

I came away with empty everything.

2015-09-22 07.52.56

But then I realised I had missed the rubbish, so I brought that home.

2015-09-22 07.55.14

Fingers crossed for long term success.  If this patch of twelve can make it, I can spread out from here and provide cover for ground that now only grows weeds.  I like that idea.

2015-09-22 07.52.59

Meantime, it is spring here and the garden is really showing it.  Woad and weld are coming along and the madder is up again.  I have been sharing plants at the Guild and planting vegetables and flowers.

2015-09-20 12.22.40

So, I decided to put in the native plant seeds I collected earlier in the year and late last year.  Let’s see if I can grow enough propagating skills to stop the neighbourhood turning into a ruby saltbush monoculture!  I make my tags from a yoghurt tub.  I quite like the look of the bit that’s left.  But have been carrying the thought that plastic is forever higher than usual lately and finding that hard knowledge instructive.

2015-09-20 12.22.50

I’ve noticed that lots of gardeners are keen re-users and recyclers, and I am among them.  I do love using this method for growing seedlings learned from Linda Woodrow’s book on backyard permaculture.  It uses milk bottles and styrofoam from hard rubbish.  So at present I am still a re-user with aspirations.

2015-09-22 08.00.47

Cross your fingers for sprouts!

4 Comments

Filed under Neighbourhood pleasures

In guerilla gardening this week…

2015-08-27 07.59.50

It was another big day in local guerilla planting!  😉

2015-08-27 08.42.43

I planted a Eucalyptus Nicholii for the sheer nerve of it.  If it grows it will shade a bench council have installed.  It’s a big ‘if’.  But evidently I can dream.

2015-08-27 08.42.49

Fine leaved creeping boobialla propagated in autumn.

2015-08-27 08.43.16

Needless to say, plenty of ruby saltbush.

2015-08-27 08.43.30

These plants are being added to a place where I have already planted boobialla, olearia and several varieties of saltbush.  Some are coming along very nicely in this spot, and while a few are struggling, very few have been killed.

2015-08-27 08.43.49

On the homeward trip, very little rubbish and a bucket full of weeds.  The last round by the council poisoner resulted in several plants being killed elsewhere nearby (those I planted and some of Council’s plantings too).  I have drawn the conclusion that I should target weeds growing among plants I would like to see live, for early weeding.  And… I am still enjoying weeding and revegetating the neighbourhood, and the sooner I plant before the height of summer, the better the chances these plants will make it through high summer.  Time to plant seeds!

2015-08-27 08.38.54

7 Comments

Filed under Neighbourhood pleasures

More guerilla plantings

One relatively fine morning last week, out I went with ruby saltbush, a couple of feijoa trees gifted by friends for just such a purpose, and some olearias also gifted for neighbourhood plantings by a friend. Plus, tools and water!

2015-08-20 07.40.16

Those saltbush went in as sweetly as ever, right beside a parking lot on one side and a railway line on the other.  Bless them, ruby saltbush are growing bigger all round the place.

2015-08-20 08.00.52

This year I have managed to get them to sprout all winter.  It is a thing of wonder to me, and evidence of the tough and adaptable nature that allows ruby saltbush to grow so well in such tough places.

2015-08-20 08.01.06

The feijoas went in too.  I have chosen a place where there is a fair depth of decent soil in hopes that they will make it to grow and fruit.  I happen to know there is at least one person who lives nearby who would love two more neighbourhood feijoa trees!

2015-08-20 08.01.29

Just the same, this is a challenging spot.  The neighbours have been tipping out the contents of pot plants onto this bed.  So I thought I’d better plant things big enough to yell ‘don’t bury me!’ in case this happens again.

2015-08-20 08.01.34

Seedlings out, weeds and rubbish back to our place, together with an empty watering can.  Perfect.

2015-08-20 08.19.57

Since I had empty pots again, I decided to prick out bladder saltbush seedlings.  And since I had pricked out all those that had sprouted, I planted some more.  Here are those seeds, with their ‘bladders’ wrapping them wonderfully!  Hopefully they will enjoy the warmer weather and sprout up ready to be planted around and about…

2015-08-20 08.41.00

1 Comment

Filed under Neighbourhood pleasures

Beloved trees

My very local tree loving friends and I have had a plan for a little while to plant more trees around here, and we decided to plant E Scoparia.  An opportunity came to buy some, so my friends bought some, and they were on special for $1 each!

2015-07-25 12.05.21

We took them, and some saltbush and boobialla… and even parsley.

2015-07-25 11.57.14

While we were out planting, and singing the tree planting blessing, this little banner went back onto its tree.

2015-07-25 12.44.49

It had been home for a wash and reapplication of string. It had fallen down or been pulled down.

2015-07-25 12.45.02

It is a huge tree!

2015-07-25 12.44.23

One of us had to climb it.

2015-07-25 13.02.03

When it was all over there was another shared lunch (I am blessed with generous friends!) and chicken happiness, and bit less rubbish in the neighbourhood.

2015-07-25 13.04.23

10 Comments

Filed under Craftivism, Eucalypts, Neighbourhood pleasures

Make way for the seedlings!

2015-07-19 16.18.03

In the spirit of experimentation, I have been planting seeds and seeing what happens.  There are resources available on propagating native plants, but they are not so detailed that it is possible for me to draw on other people’s experiences of propagating bladder saltbush in my area (for example)… and I have been trying things out in order to learn.  A couple of weeks ago I planted seed of 4 different types and to my surprise, ruby saltbush (top left) and bladder saltbush (bottom right) are coming up in numbers!

2015-07-19 16.17.33

It is a sign.  It’s time to keep planting out!  The little patches of disturbed soil in the picture below are the places I have added to plantings made by a contractor.  My trowel tells me that the contractors are not planting where there is too much rock or bluemetal below.  We will see how the saltbush take to it.

2015-07-19 16.49.43

Next stop, the park, where we planted quandong trees some years ago.  The quandongs didn’t take to it, but the fine leaved boobialla we planted to be their host (quandongs are parasitic, to simplify, and need a host plant)–have gone really well.  So here I am coming home with lots of rubbish, empty pots, and cuttings.

2015-07-19 16.55.24

On the way home, I stopped to admire one of the beloved neighbourhood trees and listen to the birds that were there at the same time.

2015-07-19 16.52.49

I am still not sure whether putting the cut ends in honey helps them take or not.  But I have lovely honey from friends who run a bee centred beekeeping operation and are such sweethearts… so honey it was.

2015-07-19 17.03.07

So many cuttings! Oh.  I forgot I needed to make way for the seedlings!  I guess I have to keep planting….

2015-07-19 17.31.52

And also, that I need to face that the time has come to mend the fingertips of my favourite gloves.   The dirt is gettting into my fingernails in a very big way!  I mended one gappy fingertip by hand and that was so hard I put a thin layer of cloth beneath the other one to catch remaining soil and stitched it on my machine.

2015-07-19 16.15.59

8 Comments

Filed under Neighbourhood pleasures

Coast daisy-bush

2015-07-06 15.48.07

A friend came over with a gift!  She lives beside the Aldinga Scrub conservation park and she grows endemic species at her place–and lots came up in her driveway where she felt obliged to dig them out.  She has potted them on for me to plant.  So this is Olearia axillaris–Coast daisy-bush.  A silver-leafed, tall and bushy shrub well adapted to drought.  We will see how it goes in the suburbs…

2015-07-06 15.47.49

And we won’t be waiting long, because I’ve been out planting.  We finally had rain in the driest winter I remember (and the driest since records began in some parts of the state).

2015-07-07 07.45.06

Olearia, boobialla and a few saltbush went out onto this spot where I reckon I have planted 30 plants at least… and council decided to put a recycled plastic bench.  Those are creeping boobialla in the foreground, just in case you missed them.  While I was planting, a neighbour who spends a lot of time on the street came over to keep me company.  His opening line was ‘so you’re out praying again!’ Not far from the mark, I think: this might be the closest I come to prayer.

2015-07-07 08.02.14

Olearia up near the railway barrier wall.  While I planted these I suggested to him that he could help the plants I have put in near his house to live by watering them as the weather warms up.  He said he would give it a try.  He clearly does like the fact I’m planting nearby.

2015-07-07 08.02.30

Then over to a new spot.  One of my friends suggested this place, where three beds have been created but nothing has gone into them.  To my surprise and delight there is actual soil beneath a generous layer of mulch.  I had my first sighting of a worm in all my guerilla plantings… There are worms in some of my pots that go out into a challenging world, but I haven’t found one already in situ until now.

2015-07-07 08.23.30

Two olearia over near the fence and another boobialla in the foreground.  Railway tracks in the background.

2015-07-07 08.24.00

I found two patches of these… eggs?  Intriguing.  And came home with a bumper amount of rubbish.  Happily rigid plastics are recyclable here, so at least some of this will be recycled and the broken glass, dead shoe, straws and suchlike will at least be off the street.

2015-07-07 08.23.16

4 Comments

Filed under Neighbourhood pleasures