The complete CRN edition of RWG is available on http://www.cpod.org.au/ , just click on 2RRR to find this week’s edition.
Wildlife in Focus:Black Faced Cuckoo Shrike. Is it a cuckoo or is it a shrike? Why are we talking about this bird today and do you have the sort of tree to attract this bird to your garden? Listen to ecologist Sue Stevens talk about this bird and hear it's call.
Bird call provided by Tony Bayliss from the Australian Wildlife Sound Recording Group. www.awsrg.org.au
Vegetable Heroes:Spinach or Spinacia oleracea. Oleracea is latin for edible. In Cool temperate zones, you can plant spinach from April until September. In Arid zones, you’ve hit the jackpot because you can plant Spinach all year round. In temperate zones you had from February until the end of May, and in sub-tropical zones, from April until the end of July. These times are only a guide, and personally, I plant some vegetables and see how they go even though it might be a month or two out of their supposed best planting time. So, I have some Spinach seedlings coming up in my garden right now, even though I’m in a temperate district.
| Grevillea "Pink Ice." |
Pansy Spreading Lavender has medium-sized flowers with faint whisker markings. Pansy Spreading plants have a better branching habit that the standard pansy, (according to the growers) and flowers that recover quickly after rain and watering. Tip: All annuals flower more if you tip prune the flowers that have finished.
Flowering Time: Autumn through to late Spring.Weeks to Flower: 6-8 weeks after planting .They're also extremely cold-hardy, easily surviving sub-zero temps.Plant any annuals, and Pansies are no exception, in fertile, well-drained soil. Full sun is best, but they'll also take part sun. Give them a drink of water soluble fertilizer (the aqua blue stuff or for the organic gardener some seaweed solution and worm tea mixed together.) at planting and keep the soil moist, but not soaked. Plant them farther apart than normal pansies -- remember, they spread.Mulching between the plants before they spread is a good way to prevent weeds until they meet up with each other.
Otherwise you could plant spring bulbs, like daffodils, between these pansies now and enjoy a layer of colour next spring.
REAL WORLD GARDENER Nice blog!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing information about plants.
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