Thursday, 24 April 2014

Lambley Dumble and side cutters.


Over the last year or so I have fallen in love with salvias. 
This shrubby one is called Anthony Parker and it grows over a metre tall and wide with those gorgeous spikes of purple flowers.


This one is called Russian sage and has grey leaves and long spikes of lavender flowers. It's true name is Perovskia Blue Spires but I
still put it in the salvia 'basket'. 


This one is called Royal Bumble. It's red flowers are on quite long stems and I have taken many cuttings from this original plant. (I also love the name.)

I am unsure of the name of this one simply because I have moved things around a bit ( who would've thought!) but once again I have propagated it very easily and I love the arrow shaped leaves.
The pink cosmos that I have written about before,
remind me of my Aunty Dell. She had them all over her garden in Ballarat and they are flowering their heads off here right now.....


There is another salvia that is not in flower at the moment but I adore it because of it's name. It is called 
Lambley Dumble...another gorgeous dark violet. They are so easy to grow and if you can be bothered cutting them back after they have flowered in Summer , they will bloom again in Autumn. I usually cut them all back in Winter.......love them!


We have just arrived home from seeing Mum and Dad again. 
Bill took Dad to a doctor's appointment to check the progress of his foot and hip after his fall a couple of weeks ago.  His sore hip seems to be giving him the most grief. Definitely not a candidate for a hip replacement though which is good news. It will all repair in time.
 Mum is still patiently (not ) waiting for her surgeon's appointment in early May to determine whether a hip replacement is possible.
 This is how we left them yesterday in good spirits. Mum had just had her toenails cut 'professionally' and Dad did his with the' side cutters' out of the shed!!!! ( Sorry Len, not the tin snips...I got it wrong). Tin snips are the only implements I recall from growing up as a plumber's daughter. Mind you I still wouldn't have a clue what side cutters are used for either!




 I just noticed this gorgeous flowering gum today. All the left hand side appears to be dead but the rest looks beautiful at the moment.
And we are loving the bright green grass that is everywhere right now.


This granny block number 4 could be my favourite so far......mmmm, still wonky though....

Sunday, 20 April 2014

Coriander, clumps and chocolate




Most of my garden days are based purely on when it takes my fancy. 
Today was different though....I needed to plant the tubes of herbs into the Kitchen Garden. These ones in pots are fine but the tubes dry out very quickly.
The Kitchen Garden will have to be relocated when our building starts, but for now it will be their home.


We have added huge amounts of compost to the bed and each time I dug a hole there today, a worm  appeared.....very happy about that!





I also uncovered another clump of daffodils poking their noses through. I dug them up and separated them too. This time there were 145..!!! No wonder they had stopped blooming. That little space is definitely too small for 145 bulbs. Once again that would have started out as a group of 5.




Not long after the fire, this clump of white belladonna lilies ( also known as Naked Ladies ) started to throw out some green stems, in spite of being cooked and black.




This is not a good photo of the glorious creamy white flowers but as you can see, there were only 6 blooms. They are too tightly packed to bloom properly just like the daffodils.



 So today I lifted this clump too, separated the bulbs and replanted them around the rose garden( in groups of 5). There were 45 of them!!!! All from just one original bulb from Bill's Aunty Betty.


We have had our little watch dogs here for Easter...well, one watchdog anyway... the other one seems to drift off on the job!

And speaking of Easter........



I think we all start with the ears don't we?????


Oh the sheer joy of it...!!