17 January, 2026

dear diary: 17th January - rain clouds have come and have blocked out the sun

The title is from a song I learned at school back in 1988. I recall it being some kind of indigenous song, presumably about the rainy season.

We probably will not have that kind of a rainy season this year, but the next two weeks are supposed to be cool(ish) and cloudy and rainy, and so it seemed appropriate...

OBSERVATIONS:

We have a week or two of rain – quite a bit of it today – and then some light showers for the rest of the week and into the next week.

The spout over the water tank is too far over the collection hole for the water to go smoothly into the tank when there's a heavy rain. It needs to be cut back. I basically need to cut it back, maybe later today.

I'm concerned about the Illawarra flame tree still; it doesn't seem to be releafing up the top. Is it the drought conditions, or something else? And who do I call to look at it?

The possums are going over the roof at night to get to the persimmon tree now. I think they've managed to get inside the net and eat some of the fruit. I need to better seal that up – possibly with a piece of metal netting so they can't easily get out.

I scattered some B&B over the spaces and didn't hear anything from the possums for a while – so maybe that's a way to keep them out.

20260117_150546

ESPALIER APPLES are flowering late – at least, the Golden Delicious did. Not sure it will fruit, though – and if it fruits, no idea if it will manage to produce.

HOUSE:

We had a local guy come by to talk to us about installing solar batteries for our house. The price he quoted (roughly) was less than half of what the last lot tried to sell us a battery system for! But I need to follow up with him this week.

We're looking at 20-30kW, although B1 wants max battery options – entirely off-grid. I want longer-lasting. I've explained my reasoning for battery-ness to her:
1. We need something in place now. The sooner the better. If we have spare capacity, we can fill it and trade it right now.
2. Longer-term – in the 10-20 year bracket, I expect the battery to fail, as many electronics will in the coming decades. They'll be expensive to replace. What I want is the very old-school nickel-iron batteries – the one that Nikolai Tesla came up with and which can still be working 100 years later. They're higher maintenance, but they're really robust, and they last. And no, I don't expect to be existing 100 years later, but I'd like something that is built for the long-term. We lucked into the house being solidly built (in spite of all the asbestos and the tendency to mold) and there's a few things we didn't do as wisely when we should have, but them's the breaks.

ACTIONS:

Cleared out the collection hole for the water tank – it was full of jacaranda bits left over from when the jacaranda shed earlier this summer.

I repotted the APRICOTS – I bought a new APRICOT from Flower Power Glenhaven – and potted it out into the large plastic terra-coloured pots...

And then I discovered a sale on some big metal pots that have a watering bit in the middle and are on wheels. And bought four of them. I think. They were pricey, but four metal pots with a water reservoir, on wheels! You try and resist it.

Anyway, I will need to repot the apricots again – I might leave it until winter, though.

And the other two pots can go for the ICE CREAM BEAN and the SOUR CHERRY.

Mixed up a bag of compost a bag of garden soil (both cheap version), and some blood and bone – brunnings, I think, possibly Yates? - to make some soil for planting out leafy greens, spring onions, and finishing planting out the APRICOTS.

CHOOKS:

Sad news. Carambar was taken from us, and in a very violent way.

A neighbour's dog got out and started harassing our chickens while we weren't home. We have fences up that generally keep the chickens in and most attackers out, but we think that Carambar got so panicked by the barking that she launched herself up over the fence and then had to run away from the dog. The dog pursued Carambar under the house where the neighbour (both the dog-owner and another, helpful neighbour who called me when he first heard the barking and squawking) couldn't follow them and then had her at his mercy for about ten minutes.

When I got home – I'd been called by the helpful neighbour as soon as he heard the kerfuffle, he had to ask for the dog-owner neighbour - they'd gotten the dog out, but Carambah was still under the house. I went under and got her out - she was all the way tucked into the far corner of the underhouse. She was bitten all over her head, and when we took her to the vet her wing was broken. We had her put down, because there was no guarantee she would survive and she was in terrible pain.

We've had an issue with this neighbour before – she's in her sixties and has two very young, very energetic and bouncy spaniel-types who are too strong for her – a couple of times she actually lost control of them while walking them, resulting the dogs bounding into our yard and barking at the chickens.

She paid for the vet bill, but we're just angry and sad, because the chickens are at least a little bit pets as well as producers, and as the helpful neighbour said the next day, “it shouldn't have happened and was entirely preventable”.

Anyway, we're contemplating getting a few more chickens – perhaps the next time our broody girl is broody. And also a fence along the back.

Otherwise, Siyao and Gladys are still laying, Goong is broody. We're going to bury Carambar this weekend, and cordon off the lower front yard for the chickens. B1 really doesn't like leaving them without green areas to peck at.

Have set up the lower grassy area for the chickens to run about in. The problem: they're going to eat the carrot seeds and then poop it out everywhere and it will spread. We're already having so much trouble with the lower lawn and the grass – it doesn't grow there anymore. And B1 doesn't like clover. (I like clover. I love clover. In fact, if I had my druthers, I'd be using now to grow clover instead of letting the chooks eat all the grass. But B1 really wants them to get to eat green stuff... UGH.

COMPOST:

The compost built back in November has cooled down. We're going to rebuild it with the contents of the compost next to it, and with Carambar. It already has Kerry further down. At some point, I'm probably going to have to dig out the one with Haami and Daofu in it, and either remake it, or distribute it out.

ETA: Just came inside from rebuilding it – although really, it was more 'layering on top': paper shreddings, comfrey, Carambar, more comfrey, more shreddings, coffee chaff, sawdust, stonefruit prunings, cardboard, and a wet sack on top.

PREPARING:

I've set up a watering system (connected to the carport collection barrels) for the triangle garden. The aim is to plant some of the BRASSICAS there in the coming winter.

Just took the chook tractor off PLUM-STONE and laid down some B&B. Will cover with sugar cane mulch this evening and leave for a few days before planting out in it.

SEEDING:

LETTUCE(Mignonette, from Segolene and Sebastian) – in BATHTUB and APRICOT beds
SPINACH – bunnings packet type – in CREPE-APRICOT

Added a dollop of seaweed solution to most of the seedling water trays.

Of the brassicas planted, most are exceedingly productive...but the heirloom types are not...

20260117_120537

BROCCOLI:
Aurora (F1)
diCicco
CAULIFLOWER:
di bassano (F1)
snowball early – only one sprouting
CABBAGE
Matilda chinese cabbage (F1)
golden acre – none
verona purple – a few sprouting

I think the heirloom types are going to need careful herding along, possibly in a separate tray, and with more immediate notice

PLANTING OUT:

ONION – spring – in CREPE-APRICOT – purchased spring onions, I think.

HARVEST:

POTATOES. I got at least a couple of kgs of potatoes from one of the front pathway vegepods. Mostly small and medium sized – no really large ones. That's okay – they're easier to eat in smaller numbers, even if they're more tricksy to wash and cook. Now I need to work out how to store them...

FEEDING:

Honestly, I'm just running around feeding everything B&B right now. Need to do more of the biological activator stuff from Lee, also seaweed solution.

Tossed a light layer of B&B on the PLUM-STONE, letting today's rain seep in, then will cover with mulch tonight.

PRUNING:

Pruned down the PLUM in the backyard, also the APRICOTS in the front. Need to get a ladder/structure and do the DUAL STONE in the TRIANGLE garden. The chipper worked pretty nicely with the smaller branches I have, but I stlll have some larger ones that my home chipper won't manage. Going to try taking them to the local mulching day, where you can get branches and stuff chipped, but also collect some materials.

THOUGHTS:

January is in fact a very busy time in the garden. So many things to do, and such a lot of stuff to plan for.

In particular, the Sydney Edible Garden Trail requires entering.

02 January, 2026

dear diary: January 2026

OBSERVATIONS:

First half (well, really three-quarters) of December was hot and hot and hot and hot. We are definitely in the thick of climate change and it's terrifying. We've already had 45C days here in Sydney, and not enough rain to compensate.

Most things have fruited, now it's just a question of getting it before the DAMN POSSUMS do. Possums plural, because I chased at least two of them out of the back yard the other night, and as revenge they ate ALL MY PLUMS.

NOT. HAPPY. JAN.

By the end of December, the weather cooled down significntly – enough that I needed an extra quilt on the bed to sleep through the night. It was almost too cool, but that provided a nice buffer for planting out a bunch of brassicas.

That said, I may have planted out the wrong brassicas. These are the ones that should be planted out in March or thereabouts...

At this point, a lot of focus will be going into getting things ready for the Sydney Edible Garden Trail – getting beds filled with plants.

Also need to remember to ask people if they can anchor for me while the SEGT is on.

CHOOKS:

The chickens aren't coping with the hot weather, to the point whereB1 wants to bring them inside.

Here's a funny point: we have a front porch, it faces west and south, at one point, I mentioned that maybe we wanted to turn it into a sunroom in winter or something, abd B1 pooh-poohed the idea because it would heat too fast and too much.

Guess where she wants to put a 'spare room' for the chooks...?

For our use? Hell no. For the chickens? Yes, please!

Bubby is back to laying after being broody for...over a month. Well over a month.

Sis and Gladys seem to cope the least well with the heat. Carambar is big but somehow not overheated most of the time – well, she's not laying, and Goongbau (“bubby”) is much the same.

They mostly spend their time in the tunnel in the backyard, where there's a stretch which is covered by greenery and shielded by the donut peach. We and they generally do pretty well around there.

COMPOST:

Probably dried out – I simply haven't had the time to water it, which means it's probably stopped composting.

Maybe I'll turn it sometime later this week and water it. Sometime. Later.

PREPARING:

Need to start working out which beds the BRASSICAS are going in this winter and prepping the soil now!

SEEDING:

Nothing is growing. Nothing.

Early Jan:

Okay, a few things. Some of the water spinach is sprouting, but I don't know how long it will last when it doesn't have water and only the hot summer sun.

I've sown a row of a 'roots' mix of radish, char, lettuce, and possibly carrots in the APPLE-CREPE, along with a row of carrots (F1 kuroda).

Planted out the CORN (Silver Gentleman) – also found some glass gem seeds! I can try them now, or I could leave them to next year... Hmf. Not sure there's enough time right now.

Planting Jan 2026

BROCCOLI: Aurora (F1), diCicco
CAULIFLOWER: di bassano (F1), snowball early
CABBAGE: Matilda chinese cabbage(F1), golden acre, verona purple
note: Aurora and Matilda are 'winter' varieties, so I don't know how they're going to do through the Jan-Feb heat. I've ordered some of the other varieties, but they'll take a week or so to come.

PLANTING OUT:

I planted out the water spinach, and two tomatoes (no idea what kind they are) after the possums ate the sprouts of the last one. I have a bunch of what look like capsicums grown from seed. Don't know how we'll they're doing.

I also put the PASSIONFRUIT in the ground – most likely a banana passionfruit, grown from seed, I think, I have no memory of how I got it, though! It's planted at the chicken coop entrance, because they're going to need something broad and spreading and shady to shelter under if the neighbours cut down the tree. It got some claybreaker in the bottom, charcoal (damp, not sure what they're in), a scoop of chicken poop (from the run), a scoop of blood and bone, and a bucket of water.

HARVEST:

Not much right now. Like, almost nothing. Oh, wait, I harvested some GARLIC from the small vegepods on the path – not all of them. Some weren't large enough. But some most definitely were!

Garden Christmas

Okay, and before that, I harvested all the dorset APPLES, and then had to pick all the other apples (gala and golden delish) because they were riddled with fruit fly. I've put them in the chicken coop for eating.

The ones I picked that were good were sliced and dried.

December garden December garden

The PLUMS on the former FOUR-STONE were doing well, at least after I got rid of all the half-ripe, half-eaten ones that were clustering. I had at least a dozen fruit, slowly ripening...and then the bloody possums took 'em! All of them! Quite gone!

The golden PEACHES didn't do as well as I hoped – they weren't very large. I think the weird weather did them in.

Otherwise the PERSIMMONS are netted, and I'm hoping they'll keep going okay...

FEEDING:

Fed everything in the APPLE-CREPE and CREPE-APRICOT beds with blood and bone.

PRUNING:

Got the chipper working again – huzzah! Now need to change the blades and do some of the thicker chunks (if they don't get stuck).

December garden

Might need to borrow James' chainsaw again. I don't feel like asking Joe to come over for something so small as a few branches.

THOUGHTS:

Cleaned the gutters of the jacaranda leaves. In the middle of a downpour. Do not recommend.

December garden

Need to ask people to assist on the Edible Garden Trail weekends.