Tag Archives: guerilla gardening

More local planting

 

Dear readers, it has been a busy time lately… what with the day job, and a couple of conferences, and some music… and my general tendency to cast on too many things and noodle along (one recetn effort had to be cast on three times and this means ripped out twice as well)… and the Tour de Fleece.  The Tour involves spinning every day for the duration of the Tour de France.  I missed a few days travelling but have mostly been sticking to it. But… it is hard to make one day’s spinning look exciting.  Trust me on this, especially, if I only had half an hour to commit!  Meanwhile, the cold, wet weather is ideal for planting out natives and I have been going all out.

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Out into the big, cold, wet world went these plants.  Some ruby saltbush and some fine leaved creeping boobialla.

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One poor little boobialla straight into bluemetal. It’s the only way to find out what can make it!

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The council had dumped a modest pile of mulch near one of the beloved trees in the neighbourhood, burying some of our beloved saltbush.  My friend and I got to work.  He shovelled and spread mulch.  I weeded and planted.  We both got a bit damper than was really part of the plan, but rain is the best. Here we are, finished, splattered in mud.  Next we headed to his house and there was hot lunch and fine company!

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And chicken happiness!  What is there not to like about birds who greet weeds with such delight and give you eggs and compost back?

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Winter earth hours

Happiness!  Today council workers arrived early in the morning and planted TREES in our street!  And hardenbergia and dianellas and other good things.  And I heard a spinebill’s call.  I have not been the only one planting the neighbourhood lately, and it makes me very happy.  New people have come by the blog in the last few weeks in larger numbers than usual–a warm welcome to new folk!  It might be helpful to know that my area suffered the loss of many trees (about 25 in my own street alone) a couple of years back, so the addition of trees is extra specially welcome.  This post is about a project I have been on for a while, guerilla planting my neighbourhood in a variety of small ways.  My ‘earth hours’ approach to this project started this year, after some years of quietly planting native plants had grown and grown into quite a persistent approach to the neighbourhoood coupled to a significant propagation programme.  I’ve taken to recording what I take out into the neighbourhood (here, in my bike trailer!) and what I bring back.

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Here’s how it went last week.  One winter morning before work, I set out to start on a new patch on the way to the local railway station.  There has been new planting on one side of the path, and on the other side of the path, the council poisoner has killed off the hollyhocks that had managed to self seed.  Ruby saltbush, once again, gets the job!  Once I got my trowel into the ground, I realised that there wasn’t much soil there.  The asphalt went further toward the fence than I thought.  All hail the hollyhocks that had convinced me anything could grow here.

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The eucalypts which stand opposite this fence have been showering leaves and bark down on this patch for years, and the earth is gradually converting them into soil.  I love this wonderful process by which the earth itself creates more earth.  Under the mulch there is a lovely layer of compost and soil for a few centimetres, and then bluemetal which must be left from when this path was asphalted.  The saltbush I planted in bluemetal in another part of the neighbourhood is still alive, so I pressed on, glad I had brought saltbush in bigger pots this time.  They will have a little parcel of soil to help them get started.  In some places there was gravel and earth to plant them in.

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Bricks have been dumped here over time and I turned them to good use.  Maybe they will protect these little plants from passing dogs while they grow.  I am hoping that the poisoner’s next trip is far enough away that these will grow up enough not to be treated as weeds when he comes again.

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Finally, I watered in 15 new plants, collected all the rubbish I found, applied the hori hori to the big weeds coming up among the plantings that have gone in on the other side of the path and marvelled over this volunteer, with a shiny cap.

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On the weekend, I went back and put in another 18 plants.

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It doesn’t show, but there is one little saltbush every half metre or so all along here now. One cyclist cheered me on as I planted them.

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And here I am returning home, rubbish bucket half full, watering can empty and pots ready for refilling.

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Solstice planting

My family of choice have started a seasonal celebration tradition that we are happily invited to.  Winter solstice usually involves a progressive dinner, and we hosted dessert this year.  We started out with some planting in the neighbourhood in the afternoon.  I loaded up the wheelbarrow with about 40 plants.

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My beloved pushed.

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We planted out an unloved patch of earth beside a tram stop, and for good measure, weeded the bed next to it that council had planted with grevilleas.  Hooray for grevilleas!  The hori hori got another outing and no one was injured in the process, always a good thing, especially with the assistance of so many keen people with tiny fingers.

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Who knows what the public transport catching public and people driving past in cars thought… but I thought it was wonderful.  There was a bit of chat about a recent tree planting that I missed because I was sick.  One of the folk who was planting quoted another one of our number as saying something like ‘our loyalty is to the earth’.  Which perfectly sums up my feeling… that planting saltbush in the city is no less worthy than planting elsewhere.  That said, planting a forest and rehabilitating land where there isn’t a pile of asphalt nearby is a happy thing too!  It was a complete delight to be planting in such joyous and plentiful company rather than kneeling in the dirt on my own in the chill before work.

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I have become a person who attracts native plants!  That day I was gifted a volunteer eucalypt in a pot, and a month before, two others that had come up in someone else’s vegie patch.  The gifted volunteer eucalypts went in alongside the tram line, along with a feijoa or two that friends brought along.  I was speaking with a friend this morning who had been past and watered them—I checked on them this morning and they were looking damp.  Now I know why!

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Needless to say, all this planting meant that more propagation was needed, and right on cue these ruby saltbush seeds planted improbably in May (because, how will I learn if I never experiment?) had germinated rather fulsomely.  Now that I know pricking them out works really well… I went ahead and pricked them out.

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I have also been planting creeping boobialla, so some more cuttings went in too.  The regular form:

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The fine leaved form:

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And some of the plants the council has been putting in!

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They have drip watering and they are really thriving.  Three cheers for thriving plants, whomever may plant them…  Meanwhile, India Flint’s wonderful Solace project made its way from a pile of parcels from all around the world into the crisp air of Andamooka, also on the solstice.  Please do go and see for yourselves…

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Saltbush in, weeds out

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The earth hours of guerilla gardening have been continuing quietly (and a but more slowly in the chilly mornings lately).  Earlier in the week I had a couple of interesting conversations with passersby who wondered if I might be responsible for certain things that had happened in the neighbourhood (sometimes but not always) and what had happened to those big trees on the nearby corner (cut down after tree protection legislation was changed to remove protection from them).  There have been some lovely recent happenings in the neighbourhood, including installation of some wooden barriers that will stop cars parking over the root zones of a group of large eucalypts we still have, and from killing smaller plants altogether.  Then, new plantings went in to replace those killed by careless parking and midsummer planting.  Wonderful.

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This morning there was a rainbow as I went out with my ten saltbush plants, my trowel and my fiendishly effective Japanese weeding tool.  And these fungi had appeared.  Some time later, I returned with a bucket full of weeds.  More mulch has been appearing at random all over the neighbourhood, and it has become apparent that smaller plants are at risk of being buried (some I planted earlier in the week were buried the same day!)  If weeds grow near little plants they are also at risk of being treated as weeds, since the poisoner doesn’t get out of his ute to check.  As if to confirm my perception that now is the season for weeding, the poisoner’s truck passed twice as I worked, drawing attention to itself with the sound of its pump, and the driver was not the reluctant poisoner I’ve spoken to recently, so there is no guarantee he will recognise small saltbush as in need of protection.

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The weeds I pulled hadn’t been poisoned (our street came later and it was shocking to see how much poison was lavished upon it). There were lots of sow thistle and lush prickly lettuce among them, so there was chicken happiness at our place, and I treated that Japanese weeding tool to a loving handle oiling while I tried to imagine what its name might be.  I failed completely to imagine what a Japanese mind might call this tool, and having bought it at the Royal Show years ago and never seen another, I don’t know its English name either, should it have one.  ‘The uprooter’? ‘Stabber, foe of weeds’? ‘Defier of nutgrass’?

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Earth hours

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These plants are the smallest form of statice I know.  It isn’t native.  I gathered the seed from a  spot where this plant is growing in fine gravel beside the tram line.  I hope if it can do that, it might manage in a spot where there is about 10 cm of mulch and earth over concrete beside a footpath.  It’s inhospitable terrain for any growing thing.  Just the same, burr medic is already volunteering to hold that earth in place, and in spite of my antipathy to burrs, I have to admire nature’s ways of getting the job done.  I am hoping that the more I plant and mulch, the less weeds will grow here and the less the council poisoner will apply his weedicide.  Now that I have spoken with him, I realise he prefers not to poison , and that he is aware I am planting out this patch.  I’ll put some bigger plants in nearby to make it easier for him to recognise these are not weeds.

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This is the ‘garden bed’–you can hardly see those little plants!

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On the day I put the contents of these ten pots into the ground, I realised a further 12 plants had been stolen from public land just around the corner (they even stole some of the saltbush I have planted).  Heartbreaking,  The chalked message ‘STOP STEALING OUR PLANTS: They belong to all of us’ featured in a previous post lasted only 48 hours before being painted out when other graffiti was removed.  Painted out–when a wet rag would have done the job. I was at a railway station the previous day thinking that in just over 200 years this continent has gone from being inhabited by far fewer people with land management practices which, by modern standards, were extremely low impact–to a place so thoroughly covered by roads and railway and concrete and buildings and… I don’t think I am entitled to give up because of these small losses.  Entitlement is an interesting thing to think about. So I went home and pricked out more saltbush into the empty pots.

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I mentioned my angsty moments to an exquisitely thoughtful friend, who offered the perspective that this was a harsh way of thinking about it.  She’s right, of course.  She told a fabulous story about one of the Australian permaculture thinkers, who planted a fruit tree as a street tree and had organised for the council to fund this.  The tree was stolen.  They planted another.  It was stolen.  they planted another.  It was stolen.  They took to just putting a tree out on the footpath, until one day it wasn’t stolen and they planted it.  He evidently told this as a success story about how to get fruit trees out into the neighbourhood!  What a great perspective. At least it makes me laugh in the face of plant theft.

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I made two other sorties out into the neighbourhood in that week.  Having saltbush big enough to plant now it is raining is a great development.  There have been gains and losses.  In the gains department, someone has mulched near a beloved tree my friends and I have been building up understorey for.

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Our efforts have really paid off here despite early plant losses to dogs, dryness, vandals and accident.  The mulch looks like it might be from the council chipper.  No matter where it is from, clearly this now looks like a spot where some mulch might be helpful, where previously I made my own from street tree leaves and we wheelbarrowed in mulch council had abandoned some distance away.  Now there is decent soil under this tree and the new plants have a much better chance.  There is a wattle seedling coming up and some of the saltbush have begun to self sow.  Now that is exciting!

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Over a week I believe I planted nearly 60 plants out and about.  Plants out, rubbish back in.

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In one of the spots I have been planting out (beside the statice), a concrete pad has appeared.  No plants have been destroyed while this happened, but it doesn’t inspire confidence, as I have no idea what the next step will be.  So I chose a new barren spot under a bottlebrush tree and planted that out.

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On the next trip I decided to plant a little triangle where a lot of bluemetal got dumped.  Some weeds managed to come up just the same, and they were poisoned by council.  That weeds could grow struck me as promising.  I pulled out the dead weeds and out came this spider, menacing me with its front legs.  I spoke reassuring words and then dug holes for the saltbush.  I have some in bigger pots (which is to say, they come with their own little patch of soil).  They will need it.  The bluemetal was deeper than I had believed and I can only hope the plants can get their roots down into the ground below.  I was heartened when my friend offered an explanation of why this might actually work–gravity and water are friends!

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So–plants go out and poisoned weeds come home for disposal.

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These pots have been in constant rotation for ages now, and it feels good. 

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Previously, I’ve been slower and less successful at propagating–so I feel as though my skills are a whole lot better and I’m acting on my intentions more.  In the places where it is working, having plants is creating soil as my friends and I coax these plants along and as they create something that can hold fallen leaves in place so they can be mulch and the soil can build fertility.  Thinking about how bare and sad and weedy that patch under the beloved tree was when we started and how I lost about 5 plants for every one that grew to begin with–reminds me to be hopeful.  And so do all these seedlings coming up under an established saltbush in the garden.  I thought it would be too cold for them to germinate–but maybe not.

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If saltbush have a lesson to teach, perhaps it is ‘when your life’s work is to grow in harsh conditions, put down roots fast and deep, before poking your leaves out into the sunshine.’

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Autumn and winter activity

I found more caltrop growing in the neighbourhood in a spot I have been keeping an eye on (I found some there last year).  Out it came!

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The autumn propagating season continued.  This time, fine leaved, purple creeping boobialla.  I know, it isn’t very purple.  There is a lot of mystical thinking in plant naming to my way of thinking.

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Here they are, next to the baby saltbush.  Hopefully they will grow.

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There was a gift of late figs from an old friend who came to visit.

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Pretty soon they were fig and ginger jam…

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And since then as the cold weather has real ly begun happening, rhubarb harvest!

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Japanese Indigo ready for the freezer (yes, that is the whole crop unless you count the seeds, which are still the real crop at this stage).

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And many more limes, thrown from the tree in gale force winds.  There may yet be more marmalade!

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Solace

It is not too late to add your contribution to India Flint’s Solace project, should you wish to.  Here is further encouragement on India’s blog.  Here is the invitation to the project–which explains it all rather beautifully… and here is SweetPea’s collection of inspirational blog posts about worldwide contributions to the project, should you need inspiration.  SweetPea’s blog is rather spectacular.  I commend it to you.

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In the meantime, I’ve been taking solace in guerilla planting and native plant propagating. Earth hours are going well. I feel as though I should make some pennants that say ‘salt bush berries’ and ‘kneeling in the dirt’.  I still might.  It certainly is a source of solace in my life in the face of all the planet has to contend with.

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Ruby saltbush has kept coming up.  In fact, I think my success rate has increased as I have become more careless.  I thought over the way it comes up under existing bushes and just gathered up berries straight from the bush and threw them onto the top of the tubes where nothing had germinated along with leaf litter and saltbush leaves and whatnot.  So many seedlings this way!  Pricking these tiddlers out has been working, so I pricked out yet more.  28 more!

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I haven’t had so many of the stash of plastic pots in use for years.  My potting mix is basically compost turned by our chooks, sieved to get out the lumps, so there seems nothing to lose by potting up more.  Garden and kitchen waste goes out to the chooks, and eggs and compost come back. It is a fabulous arrangement.  Last week my Dad gave us masses of his guavas, and there was a separate collection of fallen mushy or rotten fruit for the chooks.  What a sweetheart.

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Meanwhile, it’s seedlings out into the neighbourhood (two different types here)…

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And rubbish from the neighbourhood back home to be dealt with appropriately.  There is less of it each time I go out to the new patch. It might not show, but the patch of planted and mulched earth is growing larger.  Nothing has been lost on this patch yet.  It seems there is not a lot of traffic of people wanting to walk across or dogs keen to dig it up. And we had rain. All good.

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One morning this week I thanked the chap from the council who was watering the council plantings.  We talked about the plant thefts and he thanked me for replanting those that were abandoned.  He asked me if I was the one who had planted the saltbush on this new patch as he had noticed it appear, and warned me that it might all get taken out if Council decided to do something in that spot–but when he had asked, they had no such plans.  I said I was prepared to take the risk. I managed not to explain that I think my time is better spent just planting than asking the council nicely–they haven’t been responsive in the past and quite a few of my plantings are doing well without their permission.  He had also noticed someone was weeding the spot where he was watering, and he explained a few things about why some plantings are thriving and others are not. It seems the council have some knowledgeable and dedicated workers and the contractors are not as diligent.  And I was happy to hear he thought myoporum (boobialla) was a suitable thing to plant in tough contexts–as that is the main focus of my cool weather propagating programme, as you know!

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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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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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