Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Smart Garden Watering Website- http://www2.smartgardenwatering.org.au/

This website that we looked at during class is quite a useful tool.

Yet, for the extreame green thumbs, or environmentally concious this website gives people a good insight to how to create a water friendly sustainable garden, by looking at all aspects of the garden. It looks at creating a waterwise garden, ways you can help manage existing gardens, irrigation systems and plant selection as some main topics.

The website also has some negatives: if you didnt have a good idea of what the website is trying to promote, it would be extreamly hard to understand what the point of the website is. Also, the website does not seem to be made for the every day person, yet it seems to be made for the keen environmentally friendly and extreamly water concious gardener.

The website only seems to have a small target audience, with a website that does not seem to be easy to navigate, and is not something quick and easy to just look up information, rather it is for someone that is looking to promote their own garden or to make sure that they are doing all they can to make sure they have a waterwise garden.
http://maps.google.com.au/maps?hl=en&tab=wl

hopfully this link works, it shows where my house is located, and the location i talk about in my previous post. also if you look at memorial drive, you will see the street trees i also have talked about

Subjective view of gardens in and around my home- 20/5/2011

Where I live, in the south eastern suburb of Narre Warren North, it is situated in a unique area. The view on one side is looking over the suburbs of Narre Warren and Berwick, which is very developed and full of estates and street lights. The other side looks out over rolling hills of Narre Warren East over towards Belgrave and the suburbs surrounding Cardinia reservoir. It is a unique contrast living here, when you can drive 5minutes one direction and be in suburbia, but if you drive 5 minutes the other way, it is as if you’re in the country side. It really brings to mind the phrase, ‘the best of both worlds’.
 I also live on a long road, which goes all the way up a hill, yet unlike the street trees found in the inner suburbs which consist of many of the same species of tree, my road doesn’t not have these ‘street trees’, rather each property has different species of trees which they have decided to plant.
 There are all different types of native and exotic trees, many different types of eucalyptus trees and if you take the time to take notice of them, it can give you many different ideas of what type of plants you enjoy and what plants you think do not look good at all.
In the main street of Narre Warren North it is called Memorial Drive, which is a very old street over 60 yrs old and it is lined with big old oak trees creating a canopy along this road. It reminds you of the old streets in the city, even though its 45km away from the city. In summer the canopy is so dense that it is completely shaded and it is just nice to drive past and take notice.
There are many people that walk around the local area, yet it would be interesting to know how many of them actually take notice of the diverse area of flora that is around the local area. Personally I find it extremely pleasing that my area has this type of diversity in plants, and really gives me an insight to what type of plants I enjoy looking at in peoples gardens, and the different uses for certain plants in different gardens.


Poor photo, but hopfully you can see where it crosses from farmland to housing estates from the view from past my backyard

Home Vegetable Garden - 19/5/2011

At home, I have a decent vegie patch. It’s had a good summer crop and produced lots and has only just stopped producing recently. Because of this, we haven’t pulled much of the old crops, and have only planted a few broccoli, lettuce, leek, and pea seedlings. Because a lot of the vegie patch is overgrown and has heaps of weeds in it, I’ve decided to take Chris up on one of his suggestions, to cover a plot in mulch and compost and plant broad beans and other legumes. With the mulch and compost it will break down over winter and create a fertile soil along with the legumes it will nitrogen fix the soil, which will create an even more fertile soil ready for a spring crop.
Also, by doing this hopefully it will mean that I wont have to weed the vegie patch, because it will create some sort of a short term, no dig garden with pea straw on top to help insulate the compost make sure that it breaks down quickly ready for spring.
Also, by turning half the vegie patch into a no dig dormant garden, it will give me more of a chance to plan areas for spring, and maintain the outside parts of the vegie patch.


Overgrown Vegie Patch

Basic idea of layering on no dig garden

Monday, 9 May 2011

The Importance of Mulch

 As everyone in Horticultural Plants has seen with our vegetable plots, mulch can play a large part in maintaining a garden. Our vegie plots were getting taken over by weeds that were growing so fast that every week we had to maintain it. The importance of mulch to depress weeds and insulate plants can play a major part in a plants ability to grow in the garden.

Mulch can be made up of organic matter (such as grass cuttings), or artificial (such as plastic), yet the main purpose is the same, to insulate plants and surpress weeds.

At home, our front garden is fairly new being only two years old, yet we have only applied mulch once at the start. We used two different types of mulch, one type was darker, more decomposed mulch that we got delivered from the tip, the other type was tree shreddings from out next door neighbour.
The mulch from the tip turned out to be effective, yet after a while began to turn into fertile top soil because it was more decomposed, and weeds started growing on top of it. While the other mulch was made up of more wood chips with leaf matter mixed in, and had taken much longer to break down and has been extreamly successful mulch with not many weeds being able to grow at all.

Even though almost all mulch is benificial to plant growth, there are also things that need to consider, such as the amount of organic matter that will decompose, the main objective of the mulch, and the type of nutrients the mulch will provide to the soil.

One subject i would like to research, would be the negatives behind mulch, and types of mulch that shouldnt get put on certain plants, and is artificial mulch more benificial. Hopfully one day i can find out.

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

Advanced trees Vs Amature trees

For our Information Literacy group assignment, our group has decided to chose the subject 'Are Advanced Trees Worth it?'. It is a good topic considering that many councils and urban landscapers are using more advanced trees to create more of an instant garden or landscape. Even though advanced trees look great, and do create this instant garden, not many amateur gardeners would be able to afford advanced trees because they are so expensive.
At work at the advanced trees nursery, i asked one of the guys the same question, 'Are advanced trees worth it?' and what benefits that buying advanced trees are. The topic is very subjective, because it depends largely on the quality of the plant, large or small to determine whether the plant is worth buying in the first place. For an advanced tree to be worth buying, it needs to be well maintained, with good roots, good caliper, good structure and needs to be in good proportion. The plant needs to be able to grow roots quick enough to anchor itself into where it is planted, to be able to survive the elements such as wind. For advanced trees to be able to do this, they must not be affected by root circling or j roots, because these will essentially cause the roots to strangle the plant, and the plant will be unable to grow roots outwards to support itself, instead the roots will continue to grow around in circles as it had been in the pot. If the advanced tree has been managed correctly, it will be able to grow roots quickly and be able to begin to grow in its new environment very quickly.
Buying small trees there are financial benefits, yet the trees need to be managed correctly to be able to grow in shape and correctly. If young trees and left to grow randomly without pruning, they can quickly become 'leggy' and grow into strange shapes and can become lopsided which could cause the plant to drop branches, and not grow into a healthy plant and wont live up to its potential.
If you are knowledgeable and willing to maintain the small plants you buy, than small trees are well worth it because many species generally do grow quickly. If you want an instant garden with not much maintenance than high quality advanced trees are the way to go.

Monday, 2 May 2011

18th April, 2011- native weeds

During a recent lecture we discussed plants that have become weeds in the Australian environment, and that there are many native plants which have become weeds in certain areas. After this discussion, it made me more aware to look around my local landscapes and try and determine which weeds in the area are exotic, and which ones are native. In my front yard, we had planted two grasses called Pennisetum alopecuroides and they are really nice looking green grasses which grow  1.5m high and 1.5m wide, yet in the year that they have been growing, they have multiplied to about 20 separate plants in the front yard. Even though they’re a great, attractive plant to have in the garden, they have started to cause a little bit of problem, but they have been fairly easy to cull and keep under control, it can also be seem as an unwanted extra job. It also got me thinking while I was at work, (I work at a wholesale advanced tree nursery called Speciality Trees in Narre Warren East) there is a lot of weeding and weed maintenance needed to be done in the nursery, so I wondered whether there were any native weeds that they had trouble keeping under control. I asked one of the workers, and he said that there actually was a problem with some of the native plants that are planted around the nursery as being a weed and germinating in many of the plants pots. I’m not sure of the actual species, yet it was a type of she-oak and he showed me an area which hadn’t been weeded in a while, and surely enough there were plenty of she-oak seedlings which had started to grow in the pots of the trees. Being able to realise that not only exotic plants are seen as weeds has opened up my eyes to the diversity of trees, and the potential of plants becoming problems in certain areas. It also makes me think more about plant selection in certain areas, and the plant selection of different plants within the landscapes around my house, and the plant choices of the council.