A
s I write this we have just returned
from the Perth Garden Show. The
current show format is very good and
presented an excellent view of what
is popular in the Western Australian
gardening scene, including cooking
one’s home-grown produce. There
were also many opportuni• es to
chat to local garden personali• es,
a number of whom will be coming
to the Nannup Flower and Garden
Fes• val in August.
I must admit I went with a small
shopping list which included Yuzu
Citrus, Citrus Junos, a favourite in
Japanese cooking. The juice, peel,
zest and leaves provide a beaut and
unique Citrus fl avour and odour. Well,
I achieved my goal and the small
gra• ed tree has now been planted just
in • me for some benefi cial showers. I
love some of these less usual Citruses
to add to our collec• on! Incidentally,
it seems that gra• ed fi nger limes are
recommended to yield be• er and
earlier numbers of fruit than the
cheaper plants grown from cu•
ngs,
or so I was told by one expert Citrus
grower.
Of course there is a higher cost to pay
for gra• ed plants. I certainly can vouch
that our small number of fi nger limes
have been very slow in their growth
with the excep• on of one fast growing
bush. Two days later since wri• ng this
piece, our ducks, and I’m guessing it
was the 4 excess drakes, savaged the
Yuzu, snapping the top sec• on off
and leaving the lower, wire-ne•
ng
protected scion stem! Such is life. My
experience suggests that regrow will
occur in due course.
While up in the Metro area we also
had the opportunity to visit our
friends, whom I’ll call D&M here, and
their fabulous food plant gardens.
They have over 500 various edible
plants on their corner block and had
off ered me a Blue Java banana pup.
This variety is said to be cold-resistant,
so it may well be more suited to our
Nannup winters. Saying that, only
yesterday I discovered that both a
Cavendish banana in the greenhouse
and one outside in the food forest are
displaying their fi rst fl ower buds! Will
they con• nue to develop during this
late autumn phase? The Blue Java has
been planted near the Cavendishes
to help create a small banana grove
hopefully providing mutual shelter
to each other. These plants are
heavily mulched and generously
watered to help provide good growing
condi• ons. D&M also gave me a large
po• ed ‘longevity spinach’, Gynura
procumbens, which is now planted
in our large wicking bed. What a
pleasant and kind surprise. They said
the leaves are acceptably edible . I’m
always a li• le scep• cal about diff erent
tastes and sugges• ons but I’ll await
it’s growth with interest.
A few recent rain showers have been
very welcome here in mid April and
have certainly freshened the garden
up. Collected rain water is ideal for
so many plants and may even contain
traces of aerial nitrogen transformed
by lightning into simple compounds
to support plant growth. Now is
• me to check out rain water storage
op• ons, even using recycled, clean
plas• c barrels, as an interlinked
supply system to the garden beds.
Now is the • me to ensure that the
soil in raised or wicking beds has
been supplemented with good ac• ve
compost. I mainly subscribe to the
no-dig/no-• ll approach, trus• ng that
earthworms and other soil inhabitants
will gradually work mulch layers down
into the soil structure. I do add more
worms from my ac• ve worm farms
into these beds, and also ensure that
they are kept moist enough. It’s not a
good idea to leave soil surfaces bare or
fallow for too long. Our friends D&M
have transformed much of their urban
yellow sand soil by con• nually adding
a thick mulch layer of compost and
shredded plant material. Incidentally
they’re quite happy to use shredded
Eucalyptus stuff as the mulch layer,
arguing and eff ec• vely demonstra• ng
that worms and other creatures do an
eff ec• ve conversion to a good, dark
organic soil. I’ve seen the results of
their labours and it does work!
Now is the • me to plant various
Brassicas,
beets,
carrots
and
especially diff erent pea varie• es to
take advantage of the s• ll warm soil.
Garlic corms should be planted now,
following the custom of plan• ng
round about ANZAC Day. They need a
rich, moist soil. Use good Australian-
grown corms, and certainly not that
imported, bleached garlic.
Check out your local shops and market
stalls for good stock; it’s certainly
worth it in the long run to plant good
corms. Perhaps look out for some of
the purple varie• es as a change? The
larger, milder ‘Elephant garlic’ corms
are also more available these days and
it’s certainly worth plan• ng a few of
them, again to provide variety.
F
OOD
G
ARDENING
WITH
D
R
B
OB
L
ONGMORE
May in the Garden
Garlic. Imaged sourced from:
https://www.google.com.au/
Nannup Telegraph May 2019
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