Sunday, September 30, 2007

The Prodigal Blogger

Well its been a long time between drinks! I'll not try to catch everyone up on the last month, just try to get things going again with the blog.

First off, a water saving measure. The running loo. Being a veteran of the leaking loo now, I correctly diagnosed the problem (worn inlet valve rubber grommetty thing) and, after a certain amount of colourful language aimed at a stubborm split pin, managed to dismantle the works, replace the rubber thingy, reassemble and bask in the glory of my toilet maintenance skills. While I was there I popped in a toilet cleaner thingy too.

Yesterday I bought a lemon tree. It came with 2 lemons in situ and a heap of blooms. The trouble was that I had no idea what to do with it. The wind was blowing a glae and I had no clue where to put it. I eventually decided to build a planter box for it out of a few sleepers I had kicking around. Here is the result.

I am pretty pleased with the result. I will put some herbs around the outside once the lemon is settled in. The wind has given it a bit of list at the moment so I think I will pop some stakes in and give it a bit of support against the gales.

A few sleepers and some hoop iron (and a crap load of nails) and there you have it. Not a bad looking planter box. A few bits of random (and warped) timber to make the bottom and 4 of the chook house pavers to lift it off the ground. A layer of newspaper in the bottoms, a barrow load of lawn clippings, a barrow load of dirt, and a bag of compost completes the package.

Yesterday I also visited the worm farm (it was in Pialigo where the nurseries are in Canberra). Actually to be mosre precise I wsa going to the worm farm and dropped in to the nursery and bought the lemon tree on a whim. I'd like a lime to go with it, but they only had 'tahitian' limes. According to the tag though they are susceptible to frost. I'll have to do some research and figure out what lime trees are the most frost resistant.

Anyway back to the worms. I bought 1000 worms and a bag of 'worm topper' from a very helpful lady at the worm farm. I'm not entirely sure what the worm topper is but you basically toss a cupful on top of a heap of food when you feed them. Anyway, I have the worm farm situated now beneath the big red-ish tree. Here is a photo.

I've been listening to more of the lecture series on my ipod. I've finished the Shakespeare lecture series and the Classical Mythology lectures. Now I have moved on to 'Famous Greeks'.

I just got back from a brilliant movie. 'Stardust'. It was very enjoyable indeed. I recommend you all run out and see it straight away. A brilliantly executed fairy tale (not that there were any fairies you understand). But a real feel good movie and tremendously fun and entertaining too.

For those of you who have been following the drama, Greg popped in after the movie and after an hour and a half of battling with the PC managed to solve the problems I had trying to log into the Dawn of War online servers so that I should be able to join the other guys in playing cooperative online games of Dawn of War with my mates.

The big news of the week is, however, is that the curse may be broken. Up until now, I have been great at building infrastructure, but terrible at getting anything to actually grow. So today I was overjoyed to spot a seedling growing in my seedling trays. Ok so 1 out of 144 might not be a great strike rate but at least its not 0% anymore! I am calling it my $500 cabbage. I'm not entirely sure how much I've spent so far on the veggie garden stuff but it sure makes that one cabbage seedling a pretty expensive cabbage hehe. Ben has a couple of trays full of seedlings an inch high and a careful comparison of our two techniques has revealed that the secret may just be in watering them. Who would have thought that right?

Anyway this has inspired me to plant out a third propagating tray of seeds. This time 5 different types of bean from the 'magic bean mix' packet.

The last thing I did in the garden today was to make the lid for the chook nest box. I made this out of a small sheet of plywood I bought for the occasion, some bendy timber I had, some random screws from the salsa jars in the shed, and some old door hinges (complete with old paint) I have carried from residence to residence in a takeout container along with other sundries such as a door lock and an old drawer handle. This will end up as the handle to lift the lid of the nest box shortly. Ok the odds and ends battens, that I used to join the lid pieces together, look a bit odd but they are functional.

I've also got a lead on some chooks. One of the consultants we use at work , and with whom I've become friends over the last few years, learned of my chook house adventures. She has a friend who breeds orpingtons (the Queen Mother's favourite breed) and Isa Brown-Barnevelder crosses. So big-bottomed egg-layers all. The only proviso is that I must call one of them 'Val' after the consultant. Which just makes it funnier really.

Finally, its worth mentioning that the walnut tree that was given to me by Raechelle (one of a pair she brought from the old walnut at New Norfolk) is starting to shoot with spring green bits. Here is a photo of the walnut (the tree is healtheir than my photography skills).

The last thing I will mention is the flurry of lamb roasts that seemed to happen today. I bought a roast lamb to cook tomorrow. I was talking to Rae on the phone and she mentioned that Nan was at Mum and Dad's place today and that they had roast lamb for lunch today. Ash went out to get a roast lamb while Rae and I were chatting. So it seemed like everyone was up for roast lamb today.

Ok I think thats enough news for a prodigal blogger return post.


Monday, September 3, 2007

Gloomy Drawers

Had a day off today as my neck was very sore. Has been getting stiffer and sitffer over the last week or so. My massage lady was very inconveniently away on holidays, so I'll just have to suffer for a while.

I bought a drawer for my pantry cupboard on the weekend as a bit of an experiment. So I installed that today.

Here is is out of the box



And then installed




And now closed!


Its just the ticket so I think I will have to get a few more. It dramatically increases the pantry space I have by using the space more efficiently. They are $80 a throw so I just got the one to try it out but it looks like some more weekend project action coming my way.

For those who know what I'm talking about, I have just made a big pot of gloomy stew and I'm about to sit down to a bowl....so thats your lot for the night.

Sunday, September 2, 2007

Paving the Way For Spring

Well the weekend was too short but a beautiful one and the start of Spring. I went for a ride both days. Faffed around in the backyard a bit and didn't get enough of the housework done.

Yesterday I 'paved' the chook house. I just need to get a diamond cutting disc so i can cut a bit out of the corner of four pavers to fit in the corners around the star pickets. Next weekend I hope to be able to pick up some sawdust from the sawmill for the floor. With a bit of luck Ben and I can pick up some when we go to grab some sleepers for Ben's garden beds. I say 'paved' because its pretty uneven. I didn't bother smoothing it out too much, but as Dad said "the chooks wont mind". One step closer to chook house completion.

As I mentioned I went for a ride yesterday. Just a short one though (about 10km) instead of verdoing it like I did last weekend. Ben had a BBQ today and I rode to his place and back again. It was a great day (actually too hot in the sun for a while). Plenty of food and good company. I made some chicken burgers.

  • 500gm chicken mince—stick it in a big ol' mixing bowl
  • a 'block' of noodles—these are the asian cooking noodles. crush them into small pieces and soak them in hot water until they are done. drain them and toss them in the bowl
  • a big bunch of coriander—chop it into tiny bits (think the consistency of the parsely for tabouleh, though you don't have to be as fastidious as for tabouleh)
  • mix it all up and form it into patties—use plenty of flour as the mix is pretty sticky
  • cook them (or even better, sit in a camp chair with a drink and watch Ben cook them)
  • Into a nice round white roll, bang a pineapple ring on top and a good slug of sweet chilli sauce (you can put some greenage on the bottom too)
I've been looking for a decent lunar calendar on the internet so I can do my planting the Druid Circle way.

I had a great heap of things I was planning to do in the back yard and got barely any of them done. Compost bins, worm farms, more veggie beds, digging out stumps, finishing the chook nesting box, etc. Oh well, there is always next weekend. Got some great books out of the library though. Organic gardening, solar greenhouses, backyard poultry and a book on composting. The last composting book I got out of the library was a bit too complicated frankly. I really don't need to know what all the bugs and microorganisms that help in composting are called. This book is much better, it just says how to get them happening. A much better approach. I had a worm farm at one stage which I've somehow misplaced in the move to Canberra. I've also mysteriously lost my camping backpack. I think I loaned it to someone at some stage. Actually I have a vague feeling I loaned it to someone so they could lend it to someone else. Whatever actually happened I haven't seen either since I moved to Canberra.

Broadly speaking, the next few weeks I'd like to build a compost set up and get a worm farm happening. I've started popping my food scraps in a bucket ready to compost/worm. Its actually very hard to get in the habit. I keep throwing things in the bin and then remembering I should have put it in the composting bucket. Just goes to show how much we (society I mean not necessarily my erudite readers) are ready to send everything to the land fill. Very humbling. I also want to get some more beds ready for the veggies and get some pink eyes in the ground and start up a few more beds of veggies now that the weather is starting to look a bit more promising. I've also got to get some beds ready for the tomatoes that will be coming in November after Melbourne Cup day (assuming that the cup will be run this year). When the propogation supplies arrive I can get a heap of herb and veggie seedlings in.

Ok thats your lot.