14 September, 2020

how do you like them nettings?

Working from home means I can take a lunchbreak and sort out my apple tree, which is beset on all sides by the teeth of rodents.

This apple tree in the corner has never fruited. And I figured that it was because it was in such a sheltered spot that it didn't recognise the seasons. But last year, I pruned it quite heavily, hoping for a good harvest. And in mid-August, I found that two of the grafts were full of little fruiting spurs!

Apple quartgraft

I was so excited! APPLES FROM MY OWN TREE!

...and then one by one they started...disappearing.

The blossoms were gone, not fallen or died, just the tops eaten clean off!

Time to do some sleuthing! Going out one night, I found slugs all over the tree, climbing up to do damage to my flowers! ARGH! I disposed of the slugs I found, treated the tree for slugs (grease banding, salt banding, copper wire), but the blossoms continued to vanish! Nooooo!

Considering the tree, I realised that a lot of the higher-up leaves had been chewed off. Rats, perhaps? Or mice? I started netting the tree against rats, and now - now! - I have a few blossoms that will hopefully cross-pollinate to set fruit.

Apple quartgraft

I just have to keep on taking the netting off during the day and replace it in the evening. Once it has blossomed and set fruit, I can leave the netting on all the time, it's just getting to that point that's tricky, because the bees and pollinators need access to the flower to do their thing. They also need access to all the pollinating groups at the same time.

At any rate, the two early grafts of the tree are probably an Akane and a Golden Dorsett. I say probably because the label long ago fell off and now I don't actually know which fruit they are! There's at least one Granny Smith in there, but I unfortunately cannot remember the last one, and although I bought it from Fruit Salad Trees; it was at least 6 years ago and I don't know if they carry records that long.

Apple quartgraft

In other news, the early stone fruit along the front driveway have been netted. Crops look promising this year, although the curl leaf blight has struck again - I don't think I sprayed it early enough. Except that I'm not sure it lost its leaves early enough this year to spray. My friend Steph has a herb (horehound) that she swears stops the leaf curl, so I'll have to collect some off her, maybe?

There are flowers happening on the 'dual plum' tree. Although really it's a plum/plumicot tree: Mariposa plum and Flavor Supreme plum-apricot hybrid. Actually, the flowers are only happening on one side of the tree. Which is a little frustrating. And I don't know which side it is, either! Guess we'll find out when they ripen...

Don't know if the cherry will blossom, let alone fruit. It wasn't very good last year, which might have been the dry season, but this season is looking a lot wetter and more hopeful - back to the La Nina pattern, which is a warm and wet spring to early summer over here on the East Coast.

Apple quartgraft

I've done some grafting, which is going to be an exercise in interesting. This time, I took photos to remember what graft is where! That's a post in and of itself, I think.

09 September, 2020

Wintjiribin to Ngoonungi (the cold windy to becoming warm) - a.k.a. "Spring"

I'm going to adopt the Dharawal calendar for the seasons, I think. They've been here tens of thousands of years, if not longer, and while the climate is definitely changing, I think the shift in mentality is better than the calendar seasons from the northern hemisphere. Yes, the Dharawal are a little south of here - south side of the Harbour - but there aren't records of the Kuringai peoples here. So, according to the Dharawal, we're currently in Ngoonungi (cool, getting warmer) and the time of Murrai'yunggory — a time of bats/flying foxes? Makes sense looking out my window where we've got a light cool rain happening...

08 September, 2020

new chooks!

So after the loss of our lovely new girls, Tja-tse and Sussy, back in July, we're getting another couple of chooks. These are 'refugees' from the new dog that arrived at their place and beset them on all sides with barking and teeth, and the neighbours up the road came and offered them to me because I already had a couple.

So, well and good.

Except that I already messaged a breeder to breed us a couple of laced Barnevelders... So I'll need to upgrade the chooken house a little sooner than expected. Because four chooks will barely fit in to the current chook house, and six defintely won't. And the feathers are undoubtedly going to fly as they work out the pecking order. Oh boy.

Alas, I missed a couple of pre-built chook houses of the right size by a matter of days. So I'm either going to have to buy new or put something together.

The chook yard will have to be extended, too. I have the posts in, just haven't gotten around to reattaching the wire, or putting in the gate. And the gate will definitely need to be put in...

So many little things to do, and not quite enough time available for them...