WELCOME to my BLOG

Hi there!

I’m slowly working towards some simplicity within the home, but hey! It’s a lot of hard work!

I love having a go at growing my own veges and always use herbs fresh from my garden. I try to plant from seed whenever I can and have learnt to save and share my own seed for the following year. I make Award Winning preserves and pickles; and my husband brews Award Winning boutique beers as well. I love to stockpile and try to limit quick trips to the shops. I dabble in bread making and enjoy making my own stocks too.

I enjoy feeding my family good hearty meals, nothing like those tiny restaurant stacks you have to look for on the plate. My husband maintains our vehicles and machinery and we both enjoy fabricating on a small scale mostly relying on metal & timber recyclers for any materials needed.


While I don’t always have time to reply to comments, I love reading them. I hope you enjoy your stay and I hope you learn something new because I love sharing what I learn, and I'm always looking for another new skill myself.

Cheers!

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Spelt n Sweet Potato Scones



Spelt n Sweet Potato Scones

These were super yummy....super light AND delicious!  
Preheat oven to 200 degrees celcius...

In one bowl add...
2 cups of spelt flour
1 1/2 cups plain flour
7 tspns baking powder....and sift 3 or 4 times
add to this 55g of softened butter and rub butter into flour.
add 1/2 cup coconut sugar (or other sugar) and blend.

In another bowl mix the following...
1 egg
1 cup (preferably cold) steamed sweet potato flesh..... (I usually fill the steamer with either sweet potato or pumpkin, then bag it into 1 or 2 cup bags and pop in the freezer...For a quick defrost, lay your bags flat to freeze, then store them upright in the veg basket in your freezer....it takes no time to defrost when some scones are on the planner)
1/4 cup yoghurt
1/4 cup milk

Now add the wet mix to the dry mix and blend until combined...
Roll onto floured board, the mix will be rather wet....keep floured so it doesn't stick.
Cut rounds using an inverted glass, dipping the glass in flour with each cut.
Place on baking tray and cook until golden brown, usually about 18 to 20 minutes in hot oven.



Do you ever make sweet potato scones? If you try making this recipe, do come back and tell me how they went. I'd love to hear your feedback.

I'm off to Jamberoo today for the Jamberoo Weekly Artisan Markets...I hope to buy some lovely Blood Limes grown locally at Jamberoo Valley Farm.......you can read about the Blood Lime Orchard here.

What's your plans for today?

Friday, June 28, 2013

PB Choc Chip Cookie Dough Bites


Thanks for all the wonderful words for my last post, It was a true joy to hear from you all....and yes, I was right....He was a rooster, (he proudly began testing his voice just yesterday), but he got kindly and quickly dispatched today and popped in the freezer. I'm picking up two more roosters from someone else tomorrow and I'll do the same with them.

************************************************

I've been trying to go a lot healthier these days....We have bad hearts, diabetes and kidney troubles in the family just to name a few....
So I figure the healthier I eat, the healthier I should be.
(If I can just keep away from all the Quick Fix-Processed Foods, I'd be fine)

I recently discovered a cookie dough recipe on my facebook page that was reasonably healthy...and I know that although I'm trying to be grainfree at the moment, I also know that they have choc-chips in them, but I do want the rest of the family to enjoy them too! I'll just need to go steady with how many I eat.....
Did I mention there is ......
No Flour !
No Oil !
No White Sugar !

Peanut Butter Choc Chip Cookie Dough Bites....Yummm!

For a triple batch which I made; see the red adaptions....

1 1/4 cups canned* chickpeas, well-rinsed and patted dry with a paper towel 

2 full cans, rinsed and dried quickly
2 teaspoons vanilla extract  6 tspns
1/2 cup + 2 tablespoons (165 grams) natural peanut butter 495grams
1/4 cup (80 grams) honey   3/4 cup
1 teaspoon baking powder**   3 tspns
a pinch of salt if your peanut butter doesn’t have salt in it  3 pinches 
1/2 cup (90 grams) chocolate chips  3/4 cup

* My can was a 400 gram can, 240 grams without the water, and I used all but a few tablespoons

** If you need grain-free baking powder, you can use 1 part cream of tartar + 1 part baking soda + 2 parts arrowroot.


Directions:
Preheat your oven to 350°F / 175°C.

If your making a triple batch I suggest blending the chickpeas smooth first, then transferring to a mixing bowl (electric as well at this stage would be even better)...then continue by adding the remaining ingredients and blend again until smooth, then fold in the choc chips.

Combine all the ingredients,  except for the chocolate chips, in a food processor and process until very smooth. Make sure to scrape the sides and the top to get the little chunks of chickpeas and process again until they’re combined.

Put in the chocolate chips and stir it if you can, or pulse it once or twice. The mixture will be very thick and sticky.

With wet hands, form into 1 1/2″ balls (I used about 3/4 of a tablespoon per ball). Place onto a piece of parchment paper. If you want them to look more like normal cookies, press down slightly on the balls. They don’t do much rising. Bake for about 10 minutes. I thought they took much longer than 10 minutes, more like 15 to 20 depending on your oven.

Yields about fourteen 1 1/2″ cookie dough balls.
*** Don't even try with regular peanut butter! They'll come out oily. You MUST use natural peanut butter. 
   

Remember....they are Cookie Dough Bites...so they aren't as firm as a cookie, rather doughy inside...but they ARE delicious....
I enjoyed 3 for desert tonight! What a treat!                                  

Peanut Butter Choc Chip Cookie Dough Bites

Thursday, June 13, 2013

We've got chickens...

and ducks...and rabbits.....

It all started with me wanting chickens for my birthday...a dear friend offered me his pets if I had the space....so for weeks I worked furiously on getting my yard to accommodate for them.
I tell ya! My life has changed in so many ways since having the extra animals in the back yard. Yes we live in town, yes we have 2 dogs that would love to eat them....but it's working!

Here's our adventure so far......

We began by converting Mum's shed into the chicken coup...with panels removed for ventilation.....

 and a viewing hole in the door so we can see if there's any escapee wannabees before going inside....

Roosting and nesting ....Plan A.....

Dividing the yard....

Please note that all our resources were on the property except the wire mesh which we sourced at the local recycling center connected with the tip.

That fancy door....was for my purple runner beans......After hubby halved it; it's now converted into the main gate. We decided it best if we followed the path of the pavers...that way our 2 four legged hunters (Rusty & Cindy) couldn't dig their way into the chicken pen....It's working so far....

All hands on deck getting the wire mesh installed...thanks boys!


It started with 2 rabbits from my mate Richard....which we had been keeping in a cage in the front yard...I named them F1 and F2 (Fertiliser 1 and Fertiliser 2)


Then we thought one got out...but turns out he was only visiting.....
so he went in the cage too.
After 3 days...we now had 3 rabbits....and the cage was getting smaller and smaller.....
Meet F3...
 

Soooo...then Richard asks me "If you want my chickens and ducks too, you're more than welcome, I need to clean up my yard!" .....I knew it could work, because apart from F3, they had all lived together rather happily.
And that's how all this construction began in my backyard....

Headcount: 5 humans, 2 dogs, 3 rabbits & 2 ducks.....
So here are the ducks.... 

and here are the chickens....all reunited again.....
Headcount: 5 humans, 2 dogs, 3 rabbits, 2 ducks & 4 chickens...




I then decide to source some fertile eggs from two local schools....and incubate them using a friends incubator.....from 36 eggs, we get 10 chickens hatched healthily....
Headcount: 5 humans, 2 dogs, 3 rabbits, 2 ducks & 14 chickens...

One chicken is born with what I think is brain damage, so quickly put to sleep....
and then there is Daffy.... Daffy had clubby curled up feet and I knew that this would definitely be a problem if he/she was to get older and become heavier...Daffy couldn't walk properly and I couldn't see any perching future for the little one either....so with internet at my ready...I researched the possibilities.....after all, Daffy could be an egg layer, I'm thinking it's worth the research....

So...Daffy got new shoes (double sided sticky tape) for a week or so...changed regularly when they fell off....and it's worked...

Apart from one toe, Daffy is growing up to be a lovely hen.....
Apart from one toe being curled sideways (which you can't really see, because she is stepping in poop)....Daffy keeps up with the rest of the crowd, you'd never know she had to wear special shoes when she was tiny.....hehehe

Oh...did I mention that Hubby thought it would be good to buy some older birds....not much older, but 2 to 4 weeks older than our babies....so a road trip bought 10 chickens home...apparently they should all lay blue eggs....I was told they are Golden Blacks...

Hubby named this one Moe.....cause it has a mohawk on its head....lol

Headcount: 5 humans, 2 dogs, 3 rabbits, 2 ducks & 24 chickens...

Moe is also growing up to be a fine looking lady....She also wishes she could get back in under my passionfruit vine...No more scratching Moe !

We've been lucky so far not naming any boys....as the boys will all be despatched quickly and put in the freezer....I'm thinking this one is a rooster, cause I seen him mounting a hen the other day...

Am I a rooster...I think I am...
Another road trip brings us 6 Welsh Harlequin ducks (left) from my cousin in Bundanoon....2 female, 4 male....the boys were dispatched a few days later and put in the freezer.


Headcount: 5 humans, 2 dogs, 3 rabbits, 4 ducks & 23 chickens...
Yep...1 chicken missing, because it decided to go for a day trip over the fence...and Rusty got her... The chicken is now buried under the apricot tree.... Naughty Rusty :(

Early days; we also got offered this lovely little bantam and her boyfriend from a local school....We named her Jenny, but had her boyfriend for dinner....He was way too noisy to even keep just one night.......
See how Jenny only has two tail feathers in this picture....That's because she decided to go for a holiday over the neighbor's back fence....lucky he was home to remove Jenny's butt from their dog's mouth....She hasn't gone on holidays since, and her tail feathers are all grown back now. 

Jenny
Headcount: 5 humans, 2 dogs, 3 rabbits, 4 ducks & 24 chickens...

Of Course anyone who has Silkies knows that they are prone to being clucky and broody....so Miss Bad Hair Day decides she's going to sit on a clutch of eggs...
I was kindly donated 8 eggs for her to hatch from my mate Ross...these eggs being Isa Brown chickens.....Thanks Ross!

Meet Miss Bad Hair Day and her 5 babies out on the town....(one is hiding under her)
I've been told that Isa Brown day old chicks can be sexed by the colour of them...
I've got two red chicks and 3 white chicks...so I'm thinking I have 3 more boys for the freezer when they start to crow loudly.

You can also see in this photo that the chicken run is almost the full width of our yard...lucky chickens!


Headcount: 5 humans, 2 dogs, 3 rabbits, 4 ducks & 29 chickens...

Update on Plan A with the chicken roost and the nesting boxes....
I think were settled with Plan D and E now.....
The roost was built from dowel stands that DS21 brought home from work...we now have lots of dowel.

The nesting boxes were built from two sets of steel shelving that were in the shed originally.
I simply laid one on its side...cut the shelves from the other one in half and pop-riveted them in place to make the middle shelf for the upper nesting boxes.
The timber slats to keep the straw encased...that's from an old timber blind.


  


....and when the weather fines up and I'm not building extra garden  beds....I have the nursery/sin bin in the making.....
I have enough steel mesh to enclose this area, the frame is made, I just need to work out a door/frame and its all set.
Soooo sorry, for the life of me I cannot get this photo to rotate....
Pffft, never a dull moment in blogger...and I thought it was going to behave itself today



That's it for now...just wanted to catch you up on all the goings on around here.
I'd love to hear what you think of my new additions .......
I know I have too many for my block, but remember I'll be culling the boys as they grow their voices...

I'll be back soon to show you my garden bed expansion....off to have some breakfast then do some serious dirt relocating....
Happy blogging!





Saturday, April 27, 2013

Mum's eulogy



In memory of Joyce Clarke
28.04.1934 to 01.09.2013
Photo taken in 2009 (age 75)
It's Mum's birthday, she would have been 79....... I've mentioned before how dear I miss my mum, and for those who have lost a loved one dear to you.....You know how I'm feeling....
There have been many firsts since my mother has passed away in September last year....

But this one...this first....is her birthday and I'd like to share with you the eulogy I wrote honouring her life...
********************************************************

Where do I start? There’s so much I could say …and what parts do I leave out?           I hope I don’t keep you too long…but here goes….

Joyce Isabel Cady was the first of five born to parents Richard and Edeline Cady on 28 April 1934 at the Brooklyn Private Hospital in Kiama.  Joyce found her calling as a Nurse’s Aide, working in Obstetrics and the Psychiatric Ward in Goulburn.

After giving up nursing because of her allergies, Mum moved back to the Kiama area. In 1954 Mum married my father Horace. Everyone knew him as Nobby though…  At that time Dad had not long returned from active service in the Korean War. … 

What I didn't know was that 8 years earlier, my father had married another lady…also named Joyce. I found this out while researching the family history. I gently approached Mum with the subject, having no clue how she would react because I never found documentation that he had divorced the first Joyce. 
She said in a quiet calm voice…
”Oh yes, he told me that there was another woman named Joyce, but that I had nothing to worry about.” 
“I had already fallen madly in love with him, so I just accepted what was, and got on with it.”.....and this love glowed brightly throughout their entire marriage.

I guess she thought the strapping young soldier, (my father) was quite a catch and worth the risk. Trustingly, he had told her that the relationship was a mere marriage of convenience, and that they never lived together very long..... and it was over before he went to Korea. 

As any family historian would do, I investigated further, wondering if there may be a half brother or sister out there somewhere. 

It was to be an eventful and rocky start to their marriage because Mum fell ill and had her gallbladder removed while on their honeymoon. How romantic!
In the early years of their marriage, Mum had trouble conceiving and sadly delivered two stillborn babies, both at full term. It wasn't until about three years ago, that I found that these babies had been buried in the Albury Pioneer Cemetery. When I told Mum I had found her babies, she became rather quiet with many unhappy memories flooding back….she recalled how upset she was to have lost her baby (Robert) the day before Anzac Day, only to have her newly wedded husband leave her to join in the Anzac March and two-up festivities. 

On top of the heartache, she was never allowed to hold either babies she lost, and assumed they were discarded as hospital waste. Sadly, this was common practice in those days….I can't imagine the darkness of this 50 year assumption. After more discussion, we realized that Dad must have ‘handled things’, as the babies burials must have been paid for. One was even named. Only Dad would have had the means to pay for the burials of the babies. But it was never discussed and I know that troubled Mum, wondering why her husband would make these arrangements without telling her. I often wonder what things would be like, if Robert had lived...... Would I even exist?

As my father was a soldier before life with Mum, she learnt very quickly that she had also married the Army. The next ten years or so would prove that while they lived at 3 Sub Depot Army Barracks in Bandiana.

While living in Bandiana  in 1956……Mum gave birth to her first daughter, my sister Susanne at the Wodonga District Hospital. Not long after Sue was born, the young family moved to Englehart Street in Albury and it was to be a long and difficult 9 ½ years before they would conceive again successfully. That’s when my brother Richard came into the world.

Between the birth of Richard in 1965 and 1968, Mum, Dad, Sue and Richard moved to the family home that we know as 34 Lindsay Street, Wodonga. Every house in the street was Army. Over the next few years, Mum and Dad tried again to conceive.... as they felt another child would make their family complete. 
After several miscarriages, they decided to adopt a child. 
This is where I come in……....

I can thank my lucky stars that in 1969, Mum became ill and was too sick to complete the adoption. Mum has told me on several occasions that they had the adoption papers in the house. After seeing several doctors they were blown away by the news that Mum wasn't really sick, when in reality, she was just pregnant…..With me! … 

I guess you could say I was her most troubling pregnancy, with her spending more time in the hospital than out. The troubles I caused her when I came into the world two months early didn't stop there. Dad was also in trouble with the matron, as he had remarked; “bi crikey, she’s small”….The matron stiffly turned and said to Mum, “What does he expect for a 2 month premmie?”
Both Mum and Dad used to tell me that I could fit into a child size shoe box.  Hard to imagine now hey!

When I was four, Dad had his first major heart attack. The worries for Mum with a husband with a bad heart must have been horrible. Somewhere in there Dad retired from the Army due to health conditions brought on by being in Active Service in Korea. 

It was only in recent years that Mum let slip here and there, the degree of Dad’s nightmares. Over the years, Mum must have kept a lot of things bottled up inside her heart.

I’ve always called her the Peace-Keeper of the family and she definitely stopped some big wars between us kids over the years...... With Dad so ill, what he didn’t know, couldn't hurt him.

In 1974 we moved to Rutherglen and into the Old State Bank Building. Looking back, I can see how Mum was virtually a single Mum, but with an invalid husband who didn’t leave the house much. Despite the difficulties, we had some great fun with different activities on the weekends when Mum would take us yabbying…or if it was the right season, we'd go picking mushrooms.  

I don’t ever remember Dad being well enough to go kick a football with my brother…and that’s so sad…..but I do recall him taking me down to the local footy oval to teach me how to ride a pushbike without trainers.

Most weekends involved hunting and gathering some sort of food. Whether it was yabbying, picking wild fruit, or buckets of mushrooms or even shooting rabbits.
When blackberries were in season, we also made many trips to the Stanley forest near Beechworth to pick wild blackberries.

Mum taught me to rub the green fruit onto your hands to lift the stains from your skin. I know this works with Mulberries, but I can’t recall if it worked with the blackberries. 

Trips to Beechworth, often involved a packed esky and we’d enjoy a quiet tea on the edge of a little creek, just off the main road into town. We also picked up rock lichen in the surrounding hills, which Mum would use to dye the wool of her sheep. Lichen dyes wool a lovely bright shade of pale green.

Mum turned any gathered fruit into the most delicious preserves and jams around. She was a good cook, and loved cooking pickles too. Desserts and home baked bread were specialties of hers too. Growing up around Mum’s kitchen, we were often volunteered to “STAND AND STIR”, if Mum needed help.  I guess Mum had her share of “STAND AND STIR” while learning from her Mother too…..Just a few months ago; I got her to stir sauce for me while I quickly did something else. I even get my boys to STAND AND STIR occasionally for me now too.  I know Mum was very proud of me for taking on all the old family recipes. It’s a nice feeling to know that you’re keeping things alive.

After Dad had another Major Heart attack while up a ladder, Mum and us kids packed up the already sold house, and moved everything over to our new home in 5 Booth Street, still in Rutherglen. This was across the road from the old timber Sawmill. Mum always said that we didn't need an alarm clock because the saw mill started up every day at 7am on the dot.

The lengths that mum went to while we were growing up was above and beyond what makes a good mum. Even while caring for an invalid husband, she always had time to run us around.  I remember one year, I made this huge poster for an art competition for the Winery Walkabout Long Weekend. Well; Mum drove me around to all the wineries so that I could take a photo of them to put in my display. She never once questioned her time or the cost that would have been involved. I won the competition that year and my poster was displayed in the window of the local solicitor Rod Ambrose.

Maybe that was the same weekend our goats ran loose in the main street of Rutherglen. I remember hearing an announcement come over the loud speaker with Tony Gillman saying “ Could Joyce Clarke please come and collect your goats, they have escaped and have been running wild in the crowd” You see; Mum rented the empty block that backed onto the Main Street.  

My mother was a very generous member of the Rutherglen Community.  She was always willing to help out when a young girl found herself pregnant too. She would ring around and gather whatever was needed. While packing them up though, she’d give me a stern…."Don’t you ever find yourself in this type of situation, because I won’t be so nice"....so when I finally fell pregnant at the age of 21, I went to my sister and told her first….I was horrified at how mum would react, so took Sue along with me.

Mum drove us everywhere. We used to go to Lavington for roller-skating on a Friday night. Richard had Judo in Albury too, and I doubt that Dad was well enough to take him. At 16, I was selling Nutri-Metics at night, and mum was always taking me to demonstrations. Never once, do I remember her complaining about all the running around.

1987 must have been Mum’s worst year. I watched as she grieved for her husband. Dad had his final and fatal heart attack. We found him outside the old dunny down the back yard. I think because mum had it torn down so quick, some folks actually thought he died on the loo.

Those that knew Mum, knew that her main passions were Bingo and Craftwork. She reveled in her own Craft Shop called Calico and Hessian and for a number of years, even Dad got involved. I remember Mum doing a leatherwork course to add to her many skills and list of crafts. But it was Dad that eventually took over the leatherwork craft.

Over the years mum has put her hand to Knitting, Crochet, Macramé, Leatherwork, Dying and Spinning wool from her own sheep, card making, bread baking, soap making, gardening, Lapidary work with Opal, and breeding meat birds…and that’s just to name a few…..So you see, it’s in our blood to be creative, us three kids are all creative in some way.

Even after she moved from Cooper’s Court- Rutherglen,   up to Oak Flats (600km away) to help out with Nan Cady…..Did she give up her role in the craft shop in Rutherglen….No way!....She had me send her craft by mail to be put in the shop on consignment. I guess she couldn’t bring herself to make that final break. After all, the ladies connected to the shop are friends from a lifetime.

One of mum’s favorite gadgets was the telephone. Keeping in touch with friends and family by phone was very important to her. I know she loved talking on the phone, because her bill used to come to us.

Mum lived with us for almost 9 years before passing away. In that time, she was as involved with her grandchildren’s lives as much as she could be. She had a brag book, which I had to keep up to date…she showed off those photos to anyone that was willing to have a look, especially at bingo.

Distance was never a problem for mum and up until about 18 months ago, she could still do the 600km drive to Victoria to visit family and old friends. Driving wasn't the problem, it was with walking to her car and getting in and out that was hard. She struggled daily with pain…..With these long road-trips; Mum could rattle off the location of every fruit tree from here to Rutherglen. 
I don’t think she ever stopped thinking I can do this….I can still do that…..but my husband; knowing her limited mobility... had this ongoing but fun debate with her about the cost of apples as opposed to the cost of fuel and the effort involved hunting for wild fruit.

I’ve watched her body grow old, but her mind was always strong…..I’m sure quite a few of you have heard her tell her favorite joke about the prostitutes and the police handing out oranges. She loved telling that joke. Ask around...you’ll find someone she’s told it to here.

When she lived in Coopers Court, another move in Rutherglen….she was a member of the Rutherglen Fishing Club, and while her body didn’t allow her to go fishing much once she moved up here...She was satisfied to be able to watch from the car. It was the same with gardening….I would set up a chair for her in the shade, and she’d watch me tend the garden. I think she enjoyed the company too.

Once she had her unit built in our backyard  we decided it was in her best interest to have quick contact with us in the main house if anything went wrong. Let’s just say that modern technology wasn’t mum’s thing. We tried different phone setups, we also tried walkie talkies, but somehow she managed to reprogram her hand piece so that it would NOT communicate with the other one...With this total disagreement with technology, we decided on a wireless doorbell. We had the doorbell beside her bed, and one where she sits in her lounge room…..and if she rang the doorbell, it would then ring in our hallway where everyone would hear it. 

It was a great idea, and worked wonderfully…But remember how I said it was for emergencies, or if something went wrong……..It got to the stage that when the doorbell rang, we’d almost roll our eyes, wondering who’s turn it was to go see her….Talk about the boy who cried wolf…..We even teased her about it, but we dreaded that doorbell because it ended up being to ask, “What color wool should I use next?” OR…."Look what I made" .....or even …. “Is the Wrestling on today?” 
She loved watching the wrestling with Andrew and knew most of the wrestlers by name.

Sometimes it’s the little annoying things that we easily recall…..like how Mum had hand gestures for things….I don’t know why, but she often just gestured that she needed a drink..instead of just asking for a drink….or she’d wave her empty drink bottle around while watching television with us, hoping someone would catch on and ask if she would like a drink. She had lots of little hints like that, subtle but not subtle…..Maybe we joked about her free-use of that doorbell too much, because I would go hang the washing on the line, and I’d hear this almighty THUMP THUMP THUMP a few times…..This was her banging her walking stick on the floor in the unit….I’d go see what she wanted, and she would play the “I have no idea what you’re talking about"…."Oh that! I just had a cramp in my leg."

It’s those little things, and big things too, I will miss….She’s been a big part of my daily life for 9 years and my mother for 42. I was her day to day carer and confidant. But more than that, she relied on me to pick her up if she was down, she trusted me to keep her safe.  She depended on my strength. I promised her a long time ago that I’d let her go if the situation presented itself….In the hospital, we had a few talks about her going to be with Dad, after all, 25 years is a long time to be on your own……

With her body failing so quickly; It would have been selfish of me to fight for her to stay….
I love my mum, and I’ll miss her terribly. 

Narelle Pearce
in honour of my mother 


Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Jean & Graham's garden - Truly Inspirational

Do you have fruit trees in your garden? Are they old enough yet to prune? I recently had to visit a lovely garden owned by good friends Jean & Graham. While there for the morning, my good friend Richard (also my Garden Guru) had to prune the apple trees for Jean.


Wow oh Wow oh Wow! As soon as you drive up the driveway, you know there's something extra special about this suburban block of land in Oak Flats. To the right is a lovely feature angled rose garden; I was rather excited to be given the opportunity to go back there when they are in full bloom. The grape-vine is first to greet you on the left, followed by the lovely bushy fig tree. There's plenty going on beneath the fruit trees too; along with Comfrey and other herbs.
  
Still on the left of the driveway is the kiwi-fruit, asparagus, cherry guava, almond and other edibles.



After the rose garden, still in the front yard...younger children are accommodated with a huge trampoline...The pumpkin are growing happily in and around the legs of the trampoline...and the quaint little flower garden is a great space for the lady of the household to grow all her 'girly' plants. Overall, the space works brilliantly.

As you stroll down the side of the house...you can't help but wonder what awe-inspiring views await you when you reach the back yard. You've just passed more edibles including lemon verbena and elder-flower. 

Narelle found herself speechless as she came round the corner....feasting her eyes every which way....with camera in hand, where does one begin to take photos? I can tell you now....We found it hard to limit the amount of photos used in this post....and I'll just leave you with a small list of the photos taken that day.....

When you first walk through the garden...it's obvious that anyone can be totally gobsmacked by the vastness and creativeness that has been used in the design of this garden. Well done to Jean & Graham for all your hard work....It sure is worth it.

Hi Jean
No words can explain the beauty, appreciate the work and inspiration one gets while wandering around in this garden....I've decided to keep all the photos as large as I can...due to the amazing detail in each one. 

Everywhere you look, there's another type of plant....and another....and another........


Lovely tall corn...ready to harvest...see below!
L to R: Here's Richard, Anna and Jean
checking out the skyscraper tall corn.



Bagging your apples early helps eliminate fruit fly




Out the back: The chickens enjoy the width of the yard...
but fenced off from the dogs.
Plenty of pollinators 
Graham pruning the thorn-less blackberry
 
Choko vine shading the henhouse



Rockmelon - very sweet



Richard, helping Graham prune the blackberry
Jean's Goji Berry

Some of their harvest a few days after my visit

Bounty of Corn, Cucumber, and Carrots

Dehydrated fresh chillies

Sweet Sweet Rockmelon







Many thanks to Jean & Graham for allowing me to visit their garden...I'ts made me re-think my entire back yard....Just wait till you see what I've done....




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