Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Front garden makeover update

 

There's a lot to be said for rainy mornings. For one thing it means the gardener gets the morning off from hose-pointing duties, as Huey the rain god turns on the heavenly sprinklers for a few minutes.

And so it was this morning, but in addition to thanking Huey for the favour, I was reminded yet again that the best thing about rainy mornings is how nice gardens look when they are wet. 

This November morning I enjoyed the perfect type of rainy morning: showers. So it rains for a few minutes then it stops raining. That means you can go outside and not get wet but you can enjoy the garden, maybe even take a few photos of something that catches your eye. 

So here we are in Garden Amateur blog land, checking out the latest photos of our front garden makeover. Lots of unexpected flowers, lots of colour and lots of pleasing progress. 


In the foreground, the creeping thyme plants are spreading rapidly and joining up. It's hard to know how far apart to plant them, as "online research" only confuses you with all the options. Some say 60cm apart, others 80cm, a few say 100cm, the full metre. I chose 80cm, and as the plants are already joining up, I should have gone for the metre!



There are three varieties of creeping thyme in the garden. Of them, the "common" creeping thyme (8 plants) is flowering its head off very nicely, while the other two varieties are growing well but showing no signs of flowers. I'm happy to let the mystery be on that one.



By far the star of the show at the moment is the Australian native violets, Viola hederacea. These are remnants of the old front garden, where they thrived in the shade of the wattles and ferns. Impossible to dig out or control, they have merrily spread themselves throughout the new garden and are flowering so prettily. A very unscientific straw poll of comments by neighbours passing by agrees that the native violets look wonderfully pretty, and that the mauve creeping thyme flowers are the perfect complement to the native violets' white & purple blooms. I didn't plan it that way, honest. Just a happy accident.



Wait till the neighbours see the orange-blossomed dwarf gum tree spring into bloom this summer! The healthy little thing is covered in several of these missile clusters ready for launch. This is one of "Pam's plants" that are highlights in our garden. With certain plants she makes "I want one" style comments and I am happy to oblige. In the back garden Pam's plants include frangipanis, flannel flowers, Spanish moss galore and a white hydrangea – happily all doing well – and now out the front there's a dazzling dwarf gum tree to entertain passers-by. 

So that's it, the front garden makeover is looking great right now. The harsh reality of a hot and humid Sydney summer lies ahead, but right now in a warm, moist yet sunny spring in this lovely climate, gardening seems, dare I say it, almost easy.


Friday, October 13, 2023

Front Garden Makeover Time!

 

Let's see ... my last posting here at Garden Amateur was News Year's Day this year. So it's way overdue that I keep the old garden blog rolling along, and finally I have some news to report.

Pammy and I are giving our front garden a major makeover — the first one since we redesigned the front garden way back in 2000.

We're both very well, only slowly getting on in years but more importantly getting on in life quite rapidly, too. And we're enjoying our front and back gardens as much as ever. 

Our front garden was once a lovely thing, mostly native, but the main planting there had become huge, overgrown and was rapidly dying at the same time. So it was time for a major makeover: pull out everything, replace it with completely new plantings. Totally different look.

Let me show you some BEFORE photos, including the overgrown disaster, then we can settle in to show you our brand new, low maintenance garden makeover.

BEFORE      


2009, the front garden in its lovely heyday.
The bluey-green spillover plant is a Cootamundra Wattle
groundcover form. The grey centre planting is a native
Correa alba shrub, the little green hedge is native
lilly pilly 'Tiny Trev'. And there's a native yellow
gum (Eucalyptus leucoxylon 'Rosea') street tree
drooping in a branch top left. Many passers-by would
stop to ask what was what. We never imagined it
would grow so abundantly, but it was great while it lasted.


2018, and the Cootamundra wattle had taken over. The Correa alba
was dead, the Tiny Trev hedges were alive but almost invisible,
and my main job was to cut back the wattle to stop it accosting
innocent civilians walking by on the footpath.


2023, it had all got too much for me, so we hired the wonderful
Howie from GetUp Gardening and Landscaping Services, an
inner-west Sydney gardening guy I found online, to come in
and remove everything. Howie did it all single-handedly in a
day and a half, and I chose him because (a) I liked him and (b) 
his quote was very competitively priced. 

After Howie cleared everything away, our front garden looked twice
as big, and it was time for me to get out of my armchair and do
some proper gardening.


AFTER


Looks kinda bare, doesn't it? That's how it works with garden
makeovers: all the gaps between plants look too far apart, but
I am hoping my research is right, and everything will grow over
the next two years to cover the garden with foliage and colour.


Right now, the main attraction is the coloured redwood mulch,
the same mulch we started with back in 2000.


The planting plan is simple. A row of Camellias at the back,
in the shady area right next to the house. There's a single dwarf
gum tree in the middle, and everywhere else will be low, spreading
groundcovers that I am hoping will spread and join up to form
a low-growing, low-maintenance alternative to lawn.



The Camellias are the 'Yuletide' variety, with single
red blooms featuring a big, bold boss of yellow stamens.
They're a low-growing hedging type that should flower
in autumn and early winter. They're in a tough spot
that is shaded entirely by the house in full-on winter
months of June to August, but they also get blasted
by the afternoon sun in summer. There's no guarantee
they will work here, but they're my plan A, and I'll
think up plan B only if I have to.



The tiny-leaved groundcover is Corsican mint, which is planted
close to the camellias in the shadier zone.



Pam had her heart set on an orange-flowered dwarf
gum tree, and it took us a while to find one. They're
a popular plant in Sydney and sell quickly, and so we
waited until new stock arrived at Sydney Wildflower
Nursery
in Heathcote, a great source of native plants
in the Sydney region.



It was only when the little gum tree went in, this morning,
that Pammy and I considered the makeover 'finished'.
The label says it could reach 4m x 4m, we are hoping it 
goes no bigger than 3m x 3m, so we'll wait and see.



Creeping thyme is the main groundcover planted. There are
three varieties with different flower colours. This is the 'ordinary'
creeping thyme, with pinky-purple flowers, and it's showing a
few blooms already. There's also a crimson form, and another
called 'Bergamot' with more strongly purple flowers.



Speaking of flowers, this is a photo of the dwarf gum in full glory,
downloaded from a retail nursery website. We'll be pleased if
ours looks this spectacular over coming summers.


And you undoubtedly have noticed little spots of green
here and there popping up among the red mulch. Our old
garden was home to several very annoying weeds, and
I am taking on the mighty task of hand-pulling out all 
types, except one. Native violets.

We're keeping the native violets partly because they fit into the planting scheme of low-growing groundcovers, but also because it's just impossible to control native violets by hand weeding. 

As we are heading into a tough El Nino summer here, the hot dry weather will probably prove to be the native violets' nemesis. In the meantime they are growing vigorously, just as these pictured weedy ones on our side concrete path are doing this morning.



And until next time, when I have some other gardening news to report to you, I hope this blog update finds you all well and happy and enjoying your time in the garden.

It's hardly a happy time in the world at large right now. It's terrible in so many places, in fact. 

But that is why my garden is so precious to me. Of all the places in the world I could be in at the moment, I am where I want to be, at home in my garden.

Best wishes to you all.

Jamie


Sunday, January 1, 2023

Happy New Year!

 Happy New Year everyone, wishing all gardeners, readers and online passers-by the very best for 2023. May it be a much, much better year than the one just finishing.


Frangipani 'Serendipity' is enjoying the late arrival of the Sydney summer.


It's been quite a long time since I posted anything here at 'Garden Amateur' (more than a year in fact), and over the course of 2022 I am pleased to say that a lot has happened in our garden, but nothing much has changed, either.

For this Happy New Year posting I was going to include some more photos of the most eye-catching plants in our December 2022 garden, but when I checked on the previous photos from my last update from November 2021, they were almost identical, so just one photo this time, of our very colourful frangipani. 

And that's when I realised nothing important has changed here. It's still full of colour and all the key plantings seem to be healthy. 

The good news is that Pam and I are just like our plants: still healthy. Somehow we've managed to dodge the Covid virus and are enjoying the good but quiet life. I am such a homebody that "staying at home" is my preferred lifestyle option, anyway. Pam's much more social than me, and she's enjoying having restrictions lifted a bit. But homebody me? I'm happy in my garden and my kitchen.

Our major news this year is the sad passing of Pam's lovely 93-year-old mother, Val, who slipped away peacefully in her sleep back in July. How we all would like to go after a good and very long innings.

Val was a truly green-thumbed gardener of the old school, who could snip off a cutting of almost anything and have it thriving in a pot three months later. 

Val had often said that she wanted to be buried in our garden as she loved being here. I think she was serious, because she didn't like it much when we explained that the authorities might not be so keen on that idea. So we've found a nice place for her to spend a well-deserved eternity of peaceful rest at a proper lawn cemetery that has lots of lawn and native trees nearby.