It's been a while

Well it's been madness here! We have genuine honest to God frogs in the pond, egg-producing chooks and raspberries.

I'm so looking forward to Easter, by then I'll be down to only one job, studying will be under control, I'll have holidayed and it will suddenly seem doable again. At the moment I'm struggling with two jobs and two courses, plus a couple of out of work projects.

Last week I got the health stuff out of the way; the tests themselves were unpleasant, but the results were pretty good. We have a theory about the iron deficiency, and we're treating it with iron supplements, so I'm back to where I was beforehand but with a diagnosis.
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Acid mulch and compost

The acid bed (blueberries, Japanese iris and rhubarb) is causing a lot of thought at the moment. The plants not only want acid soil, but also want lots of moisture; so I need acid mulch. Coffee grounds would be perfect, but my easy supply is no longer easy, so I'm searching for other options.

A week or two ago someone posted on the local freecycle with coffee husks looking for a good home, which sounded perfect except... (Why is there always an "except"? :) ... coffee husks are way to light to mulch with. I tried to work out how to make it work, but I've given up and they're going straight through the compost and I need a new acid mulch plan.

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The comic relief of the coffee husk compost has been totally worth it. They're incredibly bulky and light, so I carried a huge black rubbish bag over my shoulder on the bus and through town. They overflowed the compost bin until thoroughly soaked, and looked like fibreglass once wet. They will hopefully fill the gap in my composting once I leave my current job and the leftover fruit bits that come along with it.

In other news two of my chooks have big butts, another sign that they'll be laying soon. All very exciting.
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Lots of little things

There are baby fish in the pond and legs on the tadpoles! It feels strangely springlike for midsummer.

The big task for the weekend was reorganising the compost; using the last of one pile and turning the other. The compost got used on the main group of tomatoes, which have baby tomatoes showing; on the gooseberries, which did well this year and deserve encouragement; and on the lemon tree which produced a nice crop of lemons and needed a feed.

I took advantage of the compost around the tomatoes to express optimism by planting some vines at the feet of the tomatoes:
  • Melon 'Tigger Moon'
  • Buttercup squash
  • Apple cucumber
I'm not convinced they'll get enough weeks of hot, but I might as well take advantage of new plantable space.

The same need to squeeze things in lead to me fitting some more lettuces in around the sweetcorn (which is still not thriving) and some more basil in amongst the rest.

Sadly I'll need to replant the fennel seeds from last week as the chooks took advantage of the compost rearrangement to get into the vege garden briefly and scratched up the baby plants. Otherwise not too much damage I think, surprising as they had access to silverbeet.
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Sprouting seeds in rainwater

If it wasn't raining so hard I would take photos of all the beautiful seedlings pushing their heads above the soil. Although if it wasn't raining so hard perhaps they wouldn't be growing so well.

After a few days away I came home to bush beans unfurling, little groups of kohlrabi (so obviously brassicas) and cilantro and dill (already feathery). The beetroot need thinning once I can get outside again, and the last few peas that haven't caught hold of the netting will need propping up against the wind.

Oh, and I have one meal of black currants and one meal of gooseberries left to be picked.

The garden is a constant joy at this time of year, every day there is change and growth. Each meal can have something fresh in it – particularly if it's silverbeet! :)

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A real Wellington weekend

It feels like the house will blow away, and I'm worried about the damson plum in the front garden. The roses are losing petals in small snowstorms (the photo is my first ever Graham Thomas flower) but there are more buds for later

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The vege gardens are coming along well; the peas and beans are nearly done, the rocket is looking well, and the corn has germinated and is growing like crazy. I'm trying to wrap my head around how much change there is in the main vege gardens, they look so different week to week as I take out some big tall plants and replace them with seeds or seedlings. I kinda like this as the shape of the garden and the view on the pond will keep changing.

The pond is the big drama at the moment; today the liner is being replaced with a non leaking one, also this one will be EPDM so it should be much more robust. I ordered one group of the pond edge plants yesterday, and hopefully will order the rest in the next day or two – so the pond should be done very very shortly.

The other big changes around here are the chooks; they're loving free-ish ranging, and clearly look forward to me coming home from work and letting them out. The vege garden protection is getting more settled, the trick seems to be a visible low firm barrier (e.g. a half width of plastic mesh) coupled with a couple of wobbly looking string lines so the chooks don't feel they can land half way.
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Highs and Lows

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The weekend started up a ladder, then on top of the pergola rearranging the female chinese gooseberry. I've disentangled her from the willow and now she's now draped across the supports, so if the willow branch goes she'll survive. Next week I'll feed her; which will mean pulling back the decaying branches around her roots, putting a bag of zoodoo, some blood and bone, and a couple of grow tabs down, before putting the branches back.

I've never really understood why the female was planted at the shady end, but with a little bit of spoiling she should start doing as well as the male.

In the photo as well as the pond and the chinese gooseberry there are the squash (planted by the base of the male), three Guinée roses, and the two Adam elderberries planted last year. The elderberries have survived remarkably well given the earth moving equipment that hung out there for a while.

The chooks kept me busy, having worked out how to get over the low fences on the raspberry and blueberry beds, so there was quite a lot of chasing followed by some fencing improvements. I'm trying to work out what is enough for them, I've added a couple of strings to the top of the 65cm fence around the raspberry bed taking the total height to more like 85cm.The chooks can definitely fly that high, but they don't seem to like the fact they can't land on the string so it's working so far.

I also took out the last of the spinach and corn salad, and shortened the row of carrots (carrot soup!) which left me enough room to put in a punnet of spinach and another of silverbeet. There'll also be room for a few more rows of beans, which I'm planning to plant fortnightly. The last bit of planting was a punnet of cornflowers in the blueberry bed to replace some pansies.

Watering everything is turning into a bit of a mission, particularly as I haven't found the energy this weekend to put in as many watering lines as I'd hoped. The squash, tomatoes, and black-, boysen- and goose- berries are still being watered by hand. The rest are either on watering lines or can be reached by the sprinkler. So quite a lot of hose dragging. I did manage watering lines for the herb garden and blueberry bed though, both of which seem to be working well.

On the down side I'm anaemic and overworked and spent a lot of the weekend napping, so not as much progress as I'd've hoped. I have the next two days off work, so I should be able to make a little more progress, perhaps even get more of the front path weeded!
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The chooks are out

The chooks left the chookery for the first time today, very very cautiously. It's been a really hot day so they spent a lot of time hanging out under the trees, but now it's cooled down are exploring the bank under the plums.

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Sometimes the way they move in a group reminds me of fish; it's not just that they stick near each other it's the way they move in sync.

As well as running plastic mesh around the garden to keep the plants safe, I got heaps of planting done:
  • Grapes – Golden Chasselas, Albany Surprise, Iona and Steuben
  • Squash – Rampicante
  • Beetroot – Bulls' Blood seeds
  • Bush Beans – Roquefort seeds
  • Florence Fennel – Orion F1
  • Melons – Tigger Moon and French Charentais (inside)
  • Watermelons – Moon and Stars (also).
I also got the places ready for the last group of tomatoes, which will go in this evening or tomorrow depending on the weather. Not to mention topping up the pond and watering just about everything.
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