Banana Plants, the one at the back has it's first sapling, weeds in the foreground were looking to take over! |
Since then, I've added an arrowroot plant to the garden. Unfortunately it wasn't the type I'd expected. This one is not the Queensland arrowroot, but rather an idian one. It will still make a nice addition, but not what I had originally intended. A tumeric plant has also been added. I have used tumeric in cooking plenty of times, but had never realised until researching it, that it is a type of ginger. So my little garden now has Tumeric, Thai ginger, and Galangal. All I need now is a Cardamon plant to round out the ginger collection.
I'm thrilled to have also added two peanut plants to my garden. I've been looking around for whole raw peanuts that haven't been treated in any way in the hope of being able to use them to grow my own, when to my greatest surprise my husband spotted growing plants at a local Bunnings Warehouse while looking for an electric whipper snipper (ok, the whipper snipper section is nowhere near the plant section, but you can't blame any gardener for detouring past the plants first!).Peanuts have self pollinating flowers, and after the flower is spent and has died back the plant grows a shoot down from where the flower was, and into the ground, here the peanut forms. From different websites I've read regarding growing peanuts, a bush (they grow to around 50 to 60cm high) will produce up to 50 peanuts. To harvest they normally pull the bush out of the ground roots, peanuts and all and turn it upside down for the nuts to dry out for a couple of days before harvesting them. I'm hoping my first two will turn into many more down the track.
We've also replaced our plum tree. We bought and planted one last year when we put in our peach and nectarine trees. It never really seemed to take and in the spring when it didn't get new leaves I had to face the fact that it was definitely dead. We were given some good advice when we went looking. The first one I had selected at the nursery was not suitable for our subtropical climate, we wouldn't have had enough cold hours to encourage it to produce fruit. The gardener at the nursery was very helpful and looked up which would be best variety for us and that's the one we finally bought. It looks a much healthier and is a larger tree than the old ones and we know it's suited to our environment so hopefully this one will survive.
I mentioned the electric whipper snipper earlier, and yes we did end up getting one, to go with our new electric mower. Our old petrol mower has died and parts are unavailable to fix it. I always struggled with putting petrol in it. Our petrol cannister would leak everywhere, even when I used a funnel it would run all over the place. I worried about using a petrol mower in a garden where I've shunned any unnatural or non organic fertilisers and pest control, so this time around it's electric for us.
One of the wheel barrow loads of weeds removed from the garden! |
I'll leave it here for now & get this posted! I'll try to put some images of the new plants up on my next post.
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