A BIG SEASON

In a big rush, in the last month I like to plant (August), we got this year’s trees finished.  1200 in total for 2022.  The final big planting day was both horrible and beautiful.  Horrible was the weather, which was wet and windy, with everything mud-coated.  Rain-catching coreflute discs that I now use instead of... Continue Reading →

A NEW ARMY

Each year I worry I won't get my army of new plants into the ground. Each year it's a huge relief when the main planting begins. This year we were waiting for the new windbreak fences to be completed, so we did individual paddock trees and little triangles first and finally started the main windbreak... Continue Reading →

DRONES IN THE MIST

I was fascinated at the sight of a table full of drones among the local wines and handmade firepits at the 2014 Murrumbateman Field Days. Suddenly these flimsy machines could be owned by individuals, not just used by governments to drop bombs. I failed to find a real excuse for us to own one, although... Continue Reading →

A THEFT

For my last birthday Craig gave me a new pet, a wonderful planter with insect-eating plants. It was made by his old friend Dave who has shifted from researching spiders to growing "interesting" plants. During the spring and summer we sat the planter out on the verandah table and watched as the sundews collected tiny... Continue Reading →

BOGGINGS, BREAKDOWNS AND STUFFUPS

The wheels whir. There's no forward motion. Damn. Another bogging. The problem with having machinery is you rely on it. And then it bogs or breaks. This last year has been a big one for breakdowns, most spectacularly when the wheel fell off the truck on Dog Trap Road. Craig was quite surprised when he... Continue Reading →

WASHING DAY

At the start of the planting season, I'm so excited to see my new young plants. I spend a lot of time sorting them, checking them out, figuring out where exactly I'm going to put them, and admiring them fondly. At the end of the season, I'm equally excited to see my piles of empty... Continue Reading →

HOLDING THE EARTH BACK WITH STICKS

A few years ago, I went to a workshop on erosion control, which gave me a number of tools to use against soil erosion.  One of them involves using logs and brush to make multiple leaky weirs, which slow water and sediment moving down a slope, allowing the silt to drop out instead of being... Continue Reading →

GETTING SOGGY

I know we’ll need all the water we can get for another summer of heatwaves, coming in just a few months. It’s also perfect for this year’s tree planting that the soil moisture is good. However, the flooding is beginning to become just a little tedious – especially the creek.  When Mullion Creek goes up... Continue Reading →

MINI FENCES

I have a love-hate relationship with fences.  A good fence is essential for stock management and control.  On the other hand, I hate having to get over barbed wire, as I’m not good at the seamless leap over.  Barbed wire is particularly important if you have cattle who like to lean on them.  Sheep don’t... Continue Reading →

A HITCH HIKER

While we were collecting last year's corflute covers and drainage discs down in last year's Big Gully planting, we found the young trees mostly well grown, a few bowled over by wombats, a few being chewed on by insects - those I'm hoping will provide food and attract birds in the future. The thistles were... Continue Reading →

FUN WITH BARBED WIRE

Bloom of rust on an old disc I love the texture of old rusty iron, the subtle ripples of its surface where air has nibbled it away over decades.  I love the red-orange colour which is earthy and natural, a far cry from primary colours and shiny galvanized silver of new metal.  I have quite... Continue Reading →

FIRST TREES

After months of weed control, plus stripping tree covers among the Stinking Roger and Saffron Thistle, we’re finally into the planting season, despite being still surrounded by the post-drought thistles.  My mini-forest sits outside our bedroom door reminding me to keep it watered and fed.  Mini forest The retrieved covers are stacked high in the... Continue Reading →

SURROUNDED

Living at the farm, I’m often reminded that we are surrounded by other life that insists we make way for them.  Hundreds of cockatoos have been screeching at the bottom of the garden for weeks, while they strip the walnut and olive trees.  Moths beat at the windows at night, flies do the same by... Continue Reading →

PICK UP STICKS

Since the drought broke, we've had lots of rain and most of it was gentle enough to soak into the ground without causing flooding. The most recent lot, though, was a reminder of what it's like when the river and creek both swell and take over the land around them. A reminder of how the... Continue Reading →

LOST IN THE GRASS

After the drought ended in February last year we were so excited to see the green tinge creeping across the landscape.  But of course, a lot of that was weeds that had been allowed to germinate in bare ground – left bare by the drought.  Because the ground cover was still fragile, it was necessary... Continue Reading →

TAKING STOCK

Since the end of the drought there has been a spate of sheep and cattle thefts ("duffing") particularly by thieves using empty caravans to stuff suddenly valuable animals into. It's suspicious if an apparent grey nomad has a trailer that bleats or moos. That's not the sort of stock-taking I'm doing. With my mother's death,... Continue Reading →

A FAREWELL

In May, during the Covid lockdown, my mother Barbara Hamer, died. While she was much luckier than many others have been at this time, (a painless fade, with family to support her), it is still a loss. She was always busy, tending to rush full tilt at life expecting it to get out of the... Continue Reading →

EARTH DAY

When the whole world is sharing a pandemic, I thought it would be nice to share some of the beauty we're "locked down" with, including the dragon's breath sunset above. Our friends George and Rosie from Berkeley also gave us some wonderful long lens photos of birds and kangaroos,  stars and sunsets. And of course,... Continue Reading →

TURTLE IN THE HEADLIGHTS

There's not much competition between a long-necked turtle shell and a heavy duty truck on a gravel road.  Sadly the turtles (chelodina longicollis) don't know that, and set off as soon as the rains came looking for romance in alternate ponds and dams. This one I saw after dodging dozens of excited frogs flaunting themselves... Continue Reading →

RAIN GREED

We got 40mm, plus a few beetles, in our rain gauge. It’s not enough. While we were getting monthly rainfall in the single digits, I found myself begging the clouds for a single millimetre to take the edge off the damage from the heat, and maybe keep a few things going that would otherwise die. ... Continue Reading →

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