Showing posts with label The Snake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Snake. Show all posts

Monday, 30 June 2014

Snake Surgery

The size of the grounds of Chartwell fall into an in-between category. They are too small to be sub-divided into paddocks to hold livestock or to plant crops commercially, but are too big to maintain as a single continuous formal garden. Currently, we are busy with efforts to revitalise the long formal flower and shrub bed to the west of the house, which is called ‘The Snake’.

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(Above): Aerial view of the ground, showing GH[in red] (the steep section called ‘Goat hill’), V/C[in blue] (veggie and composting), CC [in yellow] (area earmarked for a chicken coop), PJ[in orange] (area set aside for a BBQ and outdoor dining area, called the potager, a plant nursery and formal vegetable garden) and the formal flower garden areas in yellow marked SN (the ‘snake’) and 1, 2, 3 and 4. The south part (lower block) of the snake in front of the house is being tackled in conjunction with the planting Bianca is busy with in the L-shaped bed (marked ‘1’)

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(Above): The refurbishment of this part of the garden, which I will refer to as ‘Snake Surgery’, started off a couple of weeks ago when Bianca removed all the border rocks from the south bed and placed them in temporary storage for re-location. Some of these specimens are real ‘monster’ boulders! What a job!

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(Above): The yellow line indicates the approximate position of the front lawn edge along the snake. Her next move was to remove all weeds, ‘undesirable’ and overgrown plants and shrubs, with the exception of the few healthy developed shrubs. The trellis on the right separates the north snake from the south snake.

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This weekend I learned a new expletive (swear-word): ‘crocosmia’. I am that sort of gardener who likes all the pretty flowers, and generally don’t take into account the effects a particular plant may have on its neighbours and the environment. I can now see that these masses of ‘pretty’ flowers were, in fact, invading the snake and have become invasive, throttling the performance of other neighbouring plants.

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(Above): Some of the root-webs which we separated from the topsoil layer. There were approximately millions of crocosmia corms (bulbs) and tons of roots of varying thickness and strength, and the haul amount to a number of waste-wagons full of vermin.

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(Above): The double-dig of Operation Crocosmia involves digging out one-spade depth in rows until the full bed-width (excluding existing healthy shrub-clad parts) has been dug out and placed on the treatment sheet on the lawn.

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(Above): The excavated digging is then broken up by hand into clear soil and unwanted root mass and flower bulb components. This refurbished soil is then tipped back into the ‘clean’ area of the bed.

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(Above): The refurbishment effort in the Snake starts taking shape, with the lawn edging to be defined by using these cement pavers seated on a bed of hardfill and possibly a bit of mortar filling. We will only tackle the final accurate edging job when processing of both snake beds has been completed and a well-defined outline can be determined.

Monday, after a relatively dry weekend, sees more rain falling, and consequently no further work is possible under the muddy conditions for the time being.

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Crocosmia: They are commonly known in the United States as Coppertips or Falling Stars, and in the United Kingdom as Montbretia. Other names, for hybrids and cultivars, include antholyza, and curtonus. The genus name is derived from the Greek words krokos, meaning "saffron", and osme, meaning "odour" - from the fact that dried leaves of these plants emit a strong smell like that of saffron (a spice derived from Crocus - another genus belonging to the Iridaceae) - when immersed in hot water.

Monday, 13 January 2014

Goat Hill revisited

People usually give “pet” names to parts of their property, so that others will understand the location of a particular subject of conversation. Just so, we have developed a couple of such names, mostly quite coincidentally rather by conscious aforethought.

Kents Road

The MAIN LAWN is not really a pet name – it is really a statement of fact.

The ORCHARD is the area where a number of fruit trees are located, so I like to call it the Orchard, although it probably falls far short of the definition: “An orchard is an intentional planting of trees or shrubs that is maintained for food production”, but we probably comply with half the definition.

The SNAKE: This is a long curvy fairly wide flowerbed which separates the lawn directly in front of the house from the main lawn. Clayton referred to it as this no-name viper, so the name has stuck in my mind.

The SECRET GARDEN: When they first moved in, Brynn explored the gardens (as is the habit of any five-year-old). Being of short stature, she crept between some of the shrubs and discovered, al-la-Alice style, a “secret” garden on the other side! I’m not entirely sure whether these are the accurate facts, but I claim them in the name of poetic licence.

The VEGE PATCH and the HEN RUN are demarcated, but, as yet, they are not fully functioning agricultural centres of excellence. Clayton and Tyler have propagated a mealie-patch as well as a number of rows of fairly good-looking tomato plants.

That leaves us with GOAT HILL, previously referred to as Binnie Hill (a female “Billy” goat to be hired for plot-clearing purposes). The advent of the goat is still a future project, so the brambles and vegetation remains uneaten. Because of Goat Hill’s apparently daunting terrain, I had not previously ventured past the fencing which separates this 2,000 square metre natural wilderness from the  main lawn, kept trim by Clayton and Tyler.

Had this been South Africa, I would have only entered under the supervision of an expert snake catcher, crocodile hunter and general wild-creature-tamer. Tangled bush and long grass and all that stuff, you understand… But this is New Zealand, and a New Life, so Brynn could lead the way for me!

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From about half-way down a fairly steep incline, this is the view (0549 and 0551) towards the wooden fence, a little way beyond those trees at the top. The surroundings are quite pristine and natural -- brambles, grasses and stuff…
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The slope gradually flattens out near the bottom of Goat Hill, where we find a mini-forest in which I imagined we might encounter Harry Potter. If that was so, then he was out to-day, probably gone to the movies…

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Granny and Brynn explore the forest:  With a  bit of clearing up of dead branches and so on, a log or two for seats, and we have a wonderful sheltered and quiet retreat in nature to read a book, contemplate the purpose of life, or simply perhaps just relax in a hammock. But, before the relaxation, there is that little bit of input to be made on our part (including clearing a reasonable footpath through the long grass from the top! – that will be a separate blog one day, hopefully in the near future.)

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Clayton, a-la-gumboots, surveys the state of the woods from a flat area.

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The gum-boot gang lead the party back up the incline of Goat Hill from the Potter Forest. Maybe we can start writing best-selling novels?