May 2025

S M T W T F S
     123
45678 910
1112 13 14 1516 17
1819 2021 22 2324
25262728293031

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

August 2nd, 2019

tielan: (AVG - agents)
Friday, August 2nd, 2019 08:29 am
So has anyone in fandom done a Miss Th(i)or photomanip with Natalie Portman yet?

(And can you imagine the dickboys utterly shitting themselves at Mjolnir being a perfume bottle? Because I absolutely can.)
tielan: peaches on the branch (garden 02 - peaches)
Friday, August 2nd, 2019 11:07 am
Honey (one of the chooks) hadn't been laying for a few days which is unlike her. And then one day I was home when she got out and just vanished. And I found where she'd been laying the eggs: in the compost bay!

Eggs

On the other hand, we think Hainan has laid an egg somewhere else...we just don't know where...

--

An interesting read about backyard fruit by Australian gardener Jackie French: how not to grow backyard fruit. Basically, climate change is wrecking the way that gardens seasonally work – as proven by her garden in 2019. Still productive, just not as much as usual.

Mind you, she lives south of me, in the Araluen Valley which is southern NSW and inland a little, where the soil is LEGENDARY fertile and the winters are much sharper than up here in Sydney. The summers are also less humid, and possibly not as hot. So she does a lot more pears and apples than we can do up here, where a more mediterranean climate calls for citrus, and sub-tropicals.

Weirdly, the last season worked beautifully for all my early-flowering stone fruit in Sydney. If we get the same rains in late September and early October, then my nectarines and peaches crop should be pretty spectacular, even though I trimmed all those trees down quite significantly this autumn.

I definitely need to manure the apples and the plum – this weekend, I think. Maybe the cherries, too? I think last season’s dearth of crop was due to wrong weather conditions rather than a lack of nutrients but I’m not entirely sure about that. Hm. Definitely potassium for the cherries and plum, then manure – although debating whether to run it through the chook pen first.

I’m wondering if the ridge of green lawn that marched along the run of the sewerage pipe is because the old (probably clay) pipe held some residual moisture in the midst of a drought season that kept that line of grass verdant when the grasses around it faded. Also wondering just how difficult it would be to rig a greywater pipe from the kitchen sink out to the fruit tree garden. Because there’s so much rinsing-off water that just goes down the drain to the sewers and it could be used just as well to water the fruit trees through the dry spells...

Still need to speak with a plumber about the runoff from the roof. And possibly a roofer about the gutters and eaves.
Tags: