I think I’ll buy my veges, thanks

6 02 2012

Over the several decades I’ve lived on this earth, I’ve attempted to grow veges a number of times. But it’s always ended in disaster of some sort — too much or too little water, bugs that want to thwart my every attempt, a degree in chemistry required to get the soil balance right, the cost of the seedlings, fertilisers, insecticides (whether natural or not), etc. And the time to handwater the plants, stake/tie them up, pull off the dead leaves, talk to them nicely, etc. I’ve tried. I really have. But I’ve think I’ve given this vege growing lark my last effort.

I’m just not cut out to grow veges. Even the simple ones. Like tomatoes. Hell, tomato plants will sprout even where someone has thrown down the remnants of a half-eaten sandwich. But they won’t grow for me.

Last year — about August or September — I bought a punnet of eight little tomato seedlings for the princely sum of $3. I got home all excited. I made little removable collars for them from old plastic water bottles as the last lot of tomato seedlings I tried got eaten by slaters or something nibbling at the base thus causing them to fall over and snap off. Dead. Not this time. This time it would be different. This time, I’d protect my little tomato plants and watch over them and water them and talk to them. And I did.

The collars were very successful and soon I had nice thriving tomato plants. So thriving that they were lying prostrate on the ground. Off to the hardware store to get some stakes. Twenty, one-metre stakes should be enough for eight little plants, surely? I tied the tomatoes to the stakes very gently, but I used twist ties, so after I saw one tie had killed off a branch because the twist tie had cut into it, I took all the ties off and tore up scrap fabric into inch-wide strips. I gently re-tied the plants, and added more stakes as they were putting out all sorts of branches that needed supporting.

I applied Wettasoil to the soil to help retain water near the roots, and I watered them every second day (walking several times to and from the nearest tap with a watering can), and more often in hot weather. They were out of the wind in a sheltered area, but got full sun for quite a bit of the day. They were looking good!

Then one day I noticed that some of the under leaves were dying off. Oh no! I’d cut out something about troubleshooting tomato issues from the newspaper a while back, and was able to identify the problem. The solution was to apply some tomato dust (what is this stuff? pixie dust?) to the plants. I did that and they seemed to come good again and had some nice new green growth.

Still they kept growing and I eventually used up all my 20 stakes and more strips of fabric to tie them up. I even saw some flowers on them. So all was looking good. I can do this! I can grow tomatoes! Summer was coming and I was SO looking forward to rich, dense, sweet tomatoes from my own garden.

Summer came… summer came some more… and more… and nothing. No tomatoes. Just leaves. Lots of leaves and branches and some flowers, but no tomatoes. Then I spotted a tiny little green fruit! My first tomato!! Then I spotted another one — that’s two! After another week, I spotted a third. But that was it. No more. Three pathetic little green fruits from EIGHT plants!

Summer continued on and I continued watering my tomatoes every second day (or every day when it was very hot). And those three little tomatoes stayed green… and small. I had no idea when they were meant to fruit but I knew I’d planted them at least 4 months ago. Surely they should have fruited by now?

Then we had a really hot spell. And guess what? Those three little tomatoes went from green to a mottled orange and basically cooked inside their skins. They sure don’t look very edible. And they only got to about 4 cm (1.5 inches) diameter too, even though they are a full variety, not a cherry/grape tomato variety.

So, after spending money on Wettasoil, stakes and pixie dust, as well as the eight seedlings, and putting in effort to water them by hand, after five months I’m ‘rewarded’ with three inedible tomatoes. Three. From eight plants.

I can buy a kilo of tomatoes at the farmers market for around $6. Sure, they won’t taste as good as the ones you grow yourself, but in my case that’s a crock — ANYTHING would taste better than these pathetic tomatoes I’ve grown.

I give up.

The best tomato I could grow

The 'biggest and best' tomato I could grow (about 4 cm -- 1.5 inches -- in diameter)





Not often you see this in February

6 02 2012

February is the height of summer here in Western Australia. High temperatures; strong, dry easterly winds; extreme fire danger; total fire bans (including any hot work, BBQs etc.). Or, if you live further north, cyclones (destructive winds, flooding, etc.).

FESA is the agency that coordinates all the emergency responses and alerts the public to anything they need to be aware of. They have a web page where all the latest alerts are posted, and I have it bookmarked as it’s a site I check regularly. This web page is updated every 5 minutes, so if you are in danger, you have the latest information on which to act. Since November, there’s always been SOMETHING on the alerts page — I live in a big state, after all. (BTW, there’s an Android app and probably an iPhone/iPad app for FESA alerts so you can get the latest alerts on the go.)

But today — 6 February, slap bang in the middle of summer, fire season, and cyclone season — there was nothing!

It’s not often you see that!

Nothing to report

Wow! FESA has nothing to report! That's a relief.





Trees had a haircut today

6 02 2012

We have two very large and very old trees on our property. They are the only substantial trees that would’ve been left after the old farmland was converted into acre blocks. And the previous owners (and original builders) of our house preserved them. They are lovely.

But I’ve been a bit concerned about their safety. So it was time to get them assessed by an arborist to see if they needed ‘trimming’ for both safety and fire risk reasons. The tree guys came today and about three to four hours later they left after giving the two trees a BIG haircut!

I felt for the trees — this was probably the first time they’ve ever been assaulted like this — and I was also concerned for any birds that may have used these trees as nesting sites. Likewise any possums (we saw a Western Ringtail possum on the fence at the front of the house one night). But the peppermint tree had branches that were close to the house (a fire risk), other branches that were growing into each other, some that were overhanging the driveway, and several dead branches that have probably been there for years. The tuart tree had a huge branch overhanging the neighbour’s fence (I figured it was cheaper to get the trees lopped than to replace the fence!), another huge one overhanging the driveway, and several other branches that were particularly heavy or growing in such a way as to unbalance the tree after those big limbs were removed. And those big branches I was concerned about always moved a LOT when we have high winds.

Here’s the peppermint tree before they started and when they’d finished:

Peppermint tree before its trim

Peppermint tree before its trim

Peppermint tree after its trim

Peppermint tree after its trim

 

And the tuart tree:

Tuart tree before its trim

Tuart tree before its trim

Tuart tree after its trim

Tuart tree after its trim

The guys were very good — they were polite, they wore all the safety gear appropriate to the work they were doing, and a big one for me: they cleaned up after themselves! In addition to the big mulcher coming in to chomp up the branches, the guys raked and used the leaf blower to get the last of the twigs, small branches etc. You’d hardly know they’d been… except for the missing parts of the trees, of course.

If you’re in the Bunbury area of Western Australia, I can highly recommend Kings Tree Care.

Oh, I did see a lone monarch butterfly looking very lost near the peppermint tree, darting this way and that. I suspect it lost its home 😦 Hopefully, there were no birds that used the lopped branches as their permanent home.

One other thing… I asked about blowing the bark mulch onto the garden but the chief arborist told me it wasn’t advised as it would be too acidic and would kill the plants. It seems such mulch has to sit for 3 months to a year before you can put it on the garden. Which was a shame, as I would’ve liked to see the tree branches returned to the soil from which they’d sprung.





2012 FMQ Challenge: February

5 02 2012

Nothing like throwing us in the deep end! 😉 This month’s FMQ challenge was from Diane Gaudynski, and it was feathers!! Feathers aren’t that hard to do, but they are terrifying for most beginning FMQ’ers — me included — which is why I was surprised they were put so early in the year. However, there could be a good reason for that — I reckon if beginning FMQ’ers can handle feathers, they’ll have the confidence to tackle pretty much anything.

Fortunately, I’ve been doing free-motion feathers in some shape or form for the past 12 months, and nearly all my feathers have been based on Diane’s method. I find them very therapeutic to do, as her method means you don’t have to travel over existing lines or think about ‘where to from here’. I struggled with feathers until I purchased and read her book.

So to this month’s challenge… After a string of horrendously hot days when going into the sewing room would’ve been like entering an oven, finally we had a most glorious day today, with a maximum of about 25C. It was time to follow Dian’s instructions exactly and practice my feathers!

I ended up doing three practice pieces on the one long quilt sandwich — one using a variegated Guterman Sulky rayon thread, one using a dark Robison-Anton rayon thread (so you can see the stitching in the photo!), and one using a neutral Madeira rayon thread. Despite using these different threads, the back shows the quilting much better than the front!

All quilting was done on my HQ Sweet Sixteen.

Here are some of the photos I took after I’d finished (click on a small image to show it much larger):





Is this what they mean by the eye of the cyclone?

2 02 2012

Having experienced a few cyclones when I lived up north, this isn’t the eye of a cyclone.

But it’s a weird radar image from the Bureau of Meteorology, just the same. It looks like there’s some sort of alien force field centred on Rockingham and Mandurah. Everywhere else is copping fair amounts of rain (left over from what was Cyclone Iggy), but not Rockingham and Mandurah. Very strange…

 





Some of the horses

22 01 2012

Some of the horses I see on my morning walk. This paddock has about 13.

The ‘headbands’ are used to keep the flies out of their eyes and thus stop infection. The eye parts are shadecloth-type mesh.





2012 FMQ Challenge: January

7 01 2012

I had fun practising free motion leaves, the first ‘lesson’ in the 2012 FMQ Challenge.

I think I improved, and I enjoyed trying some thread enhancements I’d never done before.

I used my Handi Quilter Sweet Sixteen to do the quilting, and except for the final practice piece, all practice sandwiches were done on off-white sheeting, with some offcut cotton or bamboo batting (I can’t remember which as I made these practice sandwiches ages ago!). The bobbin thread in all cases was a soft pink Deco-Bob.

Here are my practice pieces, with a little about each. Click a picture to see it in full size.

Practice piece 1

My first attempt; dark green rayon thread:

Front:

Back:

Practice piece 2

I enhanced this piece with some echo quilting; same dark green rayon thread as first piece.

Front:

Back:

Practice piece 3

I elongated these leaves so they were more like eucalypt leaves, and made them stand out by flattening the background with very tight bubbles (a la Susan Brubaker Knapp’s approach). Dark green rayon thread with an off-white Deco-Bob thread for the bubbles.

Front:

Back:

Practice piece 4

To avoid getting into a ‘leaves are green’ mindset, I used a purple rayon thread (Robison Anton) for the base leaves. I then went around them loosely with a fluoro orange thread (Mettler?), then again with a variegated metal thread with copper, gold, red, and green in it (Guterman?). I then used a lighter green rayon thread (Mettler) to echo the leaves and make them puff out a bit more.

Front:

Practice piece 5

Still sticking with the ‘leaves aren’t always green’ theme, I decided to do some elongated leaves in a blue and tan variegated cotton thread (Superior?), then went around them with an aqua blue variegated thread (Rainbows), then I used a silver metallic thread (Wonderfil) for the stems and veins of the leaves ONLY, then followed that with tiny bubbles in the same silver thread. I quite liked how this turned out and call it my ‘Blue Gum’ piece!

Front:

Triptych of practice pieces — #3, 4, and 5 (right to left); each section measures about 5 x 6 inches.

Practice piece 6

My final piece. I decided to get away from the off-white fabric and used a large scrap of bright pink cotton I’ve had for 25+ years! I just stitched basic leaves, but in silver to show the effect of metallic thread (Wonderfil) on a plain background.

Front:

Back:

Grayscale:

I changed the photo to grayscale to show the stitching in metallic thread as the bright pink fabric doesn’t photograph well.

So there you have it — January’s challenge completed!





2011 blog stats report

1 01 2012

WordPress.com compiled a summary report of this blog’s stats for 2011. It’s here: https://sandgroper14.wordpress.com/2011/annual-report/

I like that the number of visitors to this blog would have filled the Sydney Opera House 19 times over 😉





Etsy Treasuries #75 to #118

24 12 2011

I’ve been very slack about putting up screen shots of Etsy Treasuries my items have been featured in. In fact, it’s March 2011 since I put up a gallery!

So here they are (click on a small image to show it full size):





We drove 700 km — for a steak dinner!

4 12 2011

I’ve got a birthday coming up in a week or two, but as it’s really close to Christmas and my Mum’s 80th birthday, we decided to celebrate my birthday early. How? By driving 700 km for a steak dinner! Actually, it was a 756 km round trip (for those in the US, that’s about 400 miles.)

Was it worth it? Yep! We did it last year too, though then we stayed two nights. This time we stayed just the one night, so we drove 4+ hours down to Albany, checked in to the accommodation, went out to dinner, slept, checked out of the accommodation, and drove 4+ hours home again! We were gone about 28 hours all told.

Other than the fabulous meal, wine (we took with us a 1997 vintage Penfolds Bin 389), and company, it was so nice to view the landscape on the drive down and back. It made a pleasant change for our eyes from focusing on a computer screen (or sewing machine stitching area) all the time. Of course, it’s summer, so the landscape was pretty yellow/brown. Some wheat had been harvested, but not all.

We stayed at a serviced apartment right at the bottom of the main street of Albany, directly opposite the new Entertainment Centre and below the old post office building, which has such great castle-like turrets! The apartment is one from Albany Harbourside Apartments. There are pictures below, but I forgot to take a picture of the kitchen/dining facilities in the apartment!

Dinner was at Rustler’s Steakhouse. We started with a single serve of four beef and field mushroom croquettes with a plum sauce that we shared. Then I repeated last year’s meal by ordering the rib eye steak on the bone, medium-rare, with blue cheese butter. My husband also had the rib eye on the bone, but with a mushroom sauce. Our steaks were just fabulous. They were cooked to perfection, had plenty of flavour, were tender,  and had a lovely (but not overpowering) char flavour. The blue cheese butter complemented my steak perfectly. It was a big meal, but we got through it 😉 Before and after pics of my steak, below (and with my husband’s bone that I gnawed on — he’s not really into bones!). Sorry about the quality of the pics — I took them with the camera on my phone (still not used to it), while holding the phone above my head, and with no flash!

After we let dinner settle for a while, we split a home-made lemon meringue pie for dessert, which was served with a very subtle and delicate chocolate honeycomb ice cream.

All in all, a great 28-hour break away from normal life!

(Click on a small picture to see it full size)

BTW, we saw a few animals along the drive to and from Albany, other than the usual suspects (cattle, horses, sheep, various native birds), including: a snake, a king skink, several bobtails goannas, a very fast and scared rabbit!, kangaroos, some emus, a paddock of ostriches, black alpacas, donkeys, etc.

And we also spotted a billboard advertising a shearing company called: “Peeling with Feeling” 😉