These are the flowers we had in the garden in late summer 2020, taken between 24 and 25 February 2020. They're not all overly pretty, but the
purpose of the photos is to record what was in the garden at the time.
Summer has 5 days to go, but you wouldn't know it. The strangest thing is how unusual this
summer has been. While further north and east there have been record droughts
and bushfires,
here it has been comparatively cool and wet. For the first time I can remember the grass is
green at the end of summer. Here a comparison from a couple of days ago and the same time
last year:
I've been spending a lot of time attending to irrigation and fertilization, and it may have
paid off. Some of the plants that seemed to be dying have now stabilized, such as this
rosemary bush and the Coleonema
pulchellum:
The Box Elder is still tiny, but the autumn look is gone from its leaves, as it was from the
birch. And we even have another volunteer birch on the other side of the house:
Hopefully it won't suffer as much in the coming winter.
One herb I certainly don't need to worry about is
the Epazote. It has completely taken
over the herb garden, and I probably now have enough of it for the rest of my life:
I've been trying for nearly 5 years to build a hedge of the things, based on their behaviour
in Kleins Road: plant a twig and watch it grow. But here it seems a real problem. Out and
spread about 1 kg of fertilizer in the area, in the process noting:
Why are there those brown patches under the bush? They're nowhere else. Is that an
indication of some soil problem, or the Buddleja drying out the soil? The second photo
might suggest that: the irrigation repairs that I made three weeks ago don't seem to have been very reliable. OK, fix that, water in, hope
that the thing survives.
And then there are strangenesses like
this Persicaria odorata (daun
laksa, Vietnamese mint, ...):
It looks like some kind of Solanum, and I
can't make up my mind whether I like it. The flowers point down, so there's not much to be
seen. But for this year, there's nothing to replace it.