-----In 2004 we bought a falling-down house and 30 acres. This blog documents our progress-----

Saturday, January 26, 2008

orchids in the bush nearby

A quick blog hello to Leah and Julian, who have a cottage near Dunach not too far from us. Thanks a lot for getting in touch.

They recently went bushwalking near the giant Quartz Reef which is very close by our place. Here's an a photo of a greenhood orchid that they found near it - apparently there are about 60 other types of orchid that grow round there too.

We've not managed to visit in wildflower season yet, but I've heard it's meant to be beautiful and this photo from Julian is proof. Can't wait to see it for myself. :-)



Greenhood Orchid talbot
Originally uploaded by jkexpress

our new garden edging

A few weeks ago we did a little Ebay splurge and bought some reclaimed edging tiles from a Gloucestershire manor house.

They're ultimately destined for the garden at Amherst, but in the meantime I'm using them here. They make a much nicer edging for around the chicken run don't you think?

backyard 19th Jan

(PS: you can see no chickens as this photo was taken at dusk - they'd taken themselves to bed!)

We also had far more than I expected, which is brilliant. Here are all the leftovers that I need to figure out how to use:

leftover edging tiles

Gosh we're going to have a fun time scrubbing the dirt off them when it's time to send home. *sigh* Still, it will definitely be worth it. :-)

Thursday, January 24, 2008

architectural models

On my recent visit to the V&A museum I visited the Architecture Gallery for the first time. It wasn't as big as I thought, really just the one room:

Architecture at v and a

However, what it had was delightful. Here are a few photos of my favourite models. We are *definitely* going to have to make the model of Amherst into something like this, I love them.

My favourite: inside this even had furniture!
Architecture at v and a

Some others:
Architecture at v and a Architecture at v and a

Wrought iron at the V&A museum

I'm a big fan of wrought iron, and so one of my favourite parts of the V&A museum is their iron gallery.

I had a chance to visit it again on Monday and this time I took pictures. :-)

It's just so beautiful, the sad thing is I expect there's hardly anyone left who has the skills to do this sort of work nowadays. If money were no object I'd have this sort of ironwork on the fences and verandah at Amherst...**ah, dreams***


Ironwork gallery Ironwork gallery

Ironwork gallery Ironwork gallery

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Photo-history of the gum trees

I am in awe at how fast the gum trees lining the driveway have grown.

Here's a photo taken last weekend, when Mum and Dad went up to water the orchard:
dad walking down the drive.jpg


They're recognisable now as trees, small trees but still, they're trees!

Hard to believe that this is what they looked like when we planted them back in October 2004, less than 3 and a half years earlier.

024finished tree with irrigation pipes

They were only about the height of a pencil! We coddled them yes - they got cages, they got irrigation pipes set up, they got pea straw; later they even got shadecloth to protect from the wind & frost. But they started off TINY.

By September 2005, they'd grown to just over knee height:

view of driveway with trees (Sept 2005)

Over the course of that summer they shot up to about chest height. Here they are in April 2006 swaddled in their shadecloth to protect from the frosts soon to come:

trees with shadecloth roofs

It was a tough winter that year and most of the trees hit the roof of their cage, so started to bush out rather than go up. (We later took the roof off and put side extensions). Here they are in December 2006:

gumtrees along driveway with dam

By October 2007 they were all doing well and most taller than a person:
Amherst September & October 001

And finally, by mid January 2008, here Dad is with one of the biggest that's over twice his height!
dad with a tree thats grown.jpg

We have peaches!

Wow wow wow.

a peach tree with peaches.jpg

I would never have dreamed we'd have fruit already - considering how last year we were happy just to see the trees had some leaves, given they were getting constantly nibbled at and constrained by the wire. Dad was so right about putting in the fence.

Here's the same tree from a distance. A very happy tree I think. :-)

peach tree with driveway in background.jpg

(Notice too in the distance there are trees. They are the gums lining the driveway that are huge! More on them in a sec)

Here's a few other tree shots. I'm just so happy that we have some that are thriving.

happy tree in orchard.jpg

happy orchard tree 2.jpg

persimmon tree.jpg

Orchard fence is finished

Well, almost finished. It only has a temporary gate at the moment, but close enough as it'll probably be years before we get something permanent.

Here you can see the fence clearly, and also how we've interspersed old tree trunks with the poles.
orchard fence closeup.jpg

The old trees were from some that had long-ago fallen on our property. They're Ironbark which is incredibly strong (hence the name) so they're not going to rot away anytime soon. The posts need painting perhaps to make them match the trunks, but overall I like the effect... I think it'll be even better when I get creepers growing over some of the poles, etc.

Up close the trunks have a lovely pattern:

closeup of old tree in fence.jpg

The other thing I like about the fence is that from a distance the wire fades into the background (at least when it isn't wrapped in shadecloth):

looking across dam and orchard to far side.jpg

I was so worried that having the fence would make it feel like a compound but it doesn't. When the fruit trees grow big it'll be even less noticeable.

orchard view.jpg

Glass dome supplier

Glass Domes.

For some weird reason an ad for a glass dome supplier came up in my gmail today. I can't work out why - the email I was looking at from my Mum mentioned a pewter jug with a lid - perhaps they'd bought an ad linked to the keyword of "lid" or something.

Anyway, I wanted to make a note of it as I've toyed with the idea of getting a display case or dome for the architectural model of our house.

Of course, we haven't actually got the model yet, let alone decorated it, so it's a bit premature to think of buying a display case... but one to remember. :-)