Showing posts with label ian is gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ian is gardening. Show all posts

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Reseda odorata 'Machet Ruben' (Mignonette)

 Reseda odorata 'Machet Ruben'

(Resedaceae) 

I have not grown this spring flowering annual for a number of years and came across it in a seed catalogue while ordering summer vegetables.  August here is the month when you can start seeds indoors in a bright location. Germination was quick and they were ready for potting on in no time. While most gardening books say it can be difficult to transplant into garden beds, I had success with placing three or four seedlings close together in 175 mm pots which was to be their flowering 'home'.

 I placed the pots along a low wall in full sun to help kickstart them during the normal cold early  spring days. Growth was slow at first but they responded to some liquid fertilizer and they soon became bushy plants to about 30cm with flower spikes appearing in late September at which time I moved the pots to bench height to better enjoy the sweet perfume released from the flower spikes in late afternoon. You don't have to stick your nose up close either as the fragrance is in the air from a distance away. It is described as ambrosial so no wonder the French in the southern perfume industry region called this plant Mignonette or 'little darling'. 

Bill Simpson in his book Growing Annuals (Kangaroo Press 1988) described the flower as having orange red bell clapper stamens protruding like grapes from insignificant white-yellow 6mm wide flowers accompanied by smooth spoon shaped plain green leaves. The leaves wilt quite quickly on hot days or when the plants are lacking water so the ideal location is in a semi shaded garden position with moisture retentive soil.

It is a North African plant in origin and it must have caught the eye of 19th Century naturalist Charles Darwin who used it to study self-fertilized plants published as The effects of cross and self fertilization in the vegetable kingdom.

Mignonette is not showy but as perfumed flowers go it is up there with the best.





Thursday, October 9, 2014

National Hat-Day

 The 'Piping Hot' straw
October 10th is National Hat Day and is an initiative to raise awareness of mental health issues affecting one in four Australians.
The word hat originates from the Old English word haett which is linked to the Norse for 'hood' or 'cowl'.
A hat which has a dark colour under the brim, such as my favourite straw, will absorb a little more reflected UV light. A brim width of 80mm protects neck, chin, ears and face.

 A chin strap is essential if you don't want it too blow away in the slightest breeze. Rain or water is the enemy of the straw, though in general, a shelf life of a few years is the best you can hope for.Great for the garden or beach.
 The SPF50 Legionnaire
Practical, machine  washable but very daggy looking so best as work-wear or for fishing not really street-wear.

 The Akubra
Australian classic with iconic status but not for city slickers.
 The Drizabone Sou'wester
Wet weather oil-skin essential with ear protection and chin strap.

Hat-Day-Media-Release-Facts;

Saturday, September 27, 2014

Spring in black and white

 
  Ranunculus this spring are not having a great time as they have succumbed to powdery mildew from the showery weather.
Aeonium arboreum 'Schwartzkopf' is at its best in late winter and early spring as the foliage turns a glossy black.

Ipheion uniflorum, white spring star flower forms a carpet of little white stars amongst grassy leaves.
Euphorbia ammak 'Variegata' hails from Yemen and Saudi Arabia.
Local hero Commersonia fraseri (Brush Kurrajong) in full flower now along Mullet Creek

A burst of fresh new leaves from my stock of Phalaris arundinacea var Picta


Keeping it simple: a palm tree mosaic
Wedding Iris, Dietes robinsoniana, has been in flower for weeks and I am hoping for a good crop of seed

Friday, December 13, 2013

A 44 gallon drum







I have this old 44 gallon drum in the garden to use when washing the soil off the roots of plants and it is aging nicely with a wonderful blue surface.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Sun damage on plants

Some pics of garden plants after the "hottest day ever recorded" here (45C/114F) of a week or so ago.
Plants with broad upward facing leaves faired the worst and these now show a distinctive beige or tan patch on each leaf which may take awhile to outgrow, while others have simply gone to ground like Agapanthus which appears as a dishevelled mess of bleached leaves.
Succulents simply boiled alive until their leaves collapsed and now they appear curiously twisted and deformed.
I am just waiting for some rain and milder days so I can get back to work.
2017 update: Same again this summer.

Friday, October 15, 2010

yet another weather event

I am trying to come to grips with the various meteorological explanations for the increased rainfall patterns we have been experiencing. From what I can gather it is the result of the unusually high sea temperature in the north of Australia at the moment. When the resulting warm moisture laden winds move south and hit a cold band of air coming from further south, heavy rain eventuates and strong winds also occur. The good news is that some dam levels have gone from under 20 percent to capacity levels and bumper crop harvests are expected. Cooler temperatures have slowed the germination and planting of summer crops in the vegetable garden. My eggplant seedlings have hardly moved and the corn is shy of germinating at all. The strong wind today set me back by weeks when a sudden gust of wind overturned all my trays of newly planted seeds. Gardening life is never easy......

Friday, April 30, 2010

Persimmon

Write me down
As one who loved poetry
And Persimmons.

Masaoka Shiki (1867-1902)
Masaoka Shiki
Japanese Poet


Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Beth Chatto's Gravel Garden

Beth Chatto's gravel garden in high summer
Elmstead Market, Essex, UK
(I need something to remind me of summer after a cold grey day here with everyone wearing scarves and winter black)

Friday, April 23, 2010

another Chilli Pepper post

Jalapeno for breakfast anyone?
or in the evening Dante's Martini from Hell.......
Take 2 & half ounces of gin, dry vermouth to taste, crushed ice, olive stuffed with chilli variety of choice. Mix gin and vermouth and crushed ice in a shaker.Pour into an ice cold martini glass, garnish with chilli olives............


Friday, April 9, 2010

Collectors' Plant Fair 2010

Florez Nursery at Collectors' Plant Fair 2008
The 6th annual Collectors' Plant Fair featuring 40 specialist growers from all over Australia will be held at 'Woodgreen' 27 Powells Road, Bilpin, New South Wales over the weekend of April 17th and 18th.