Revival

A message from Brigid ....

I have been a blogger since 2005. At the height of my blogging busy-ness, I had "a small stable" of blogs on different topics: social and political commentary; desert spirituality; food; waste and ....

A few years ago I called time and ceased blogging altogether - although there was an occasional post. I had called it quits. I am an aged woman these days with a couple of serious illnesses. I am not allowed to drive. I am no longer active in organisations. I think it fair to say that I am housebound. I am active on Facebook, although I am not there as often as once I was. I have decided to embark on a re-entry into the blogging world ... beginning with The Trad Pad and, possibly, a return to my food blog, Oz Tucker. I have always used a lot of photographs on my blogs ... and I miss not being out and about with my camera.

The Trad Pad has been my blog for the lovely things of life. The controversial or political has seldom intruded. Occasionally, the spiritual has found its way in, but I kept spirituality for the blog, Desert. I don't yet know if I will revive that. I will stick pretty much to food and the lovely things of life. If I have some regularity with those two categories, I feel that I will be doing well. I hope that, with this blog new friendships can be formed and old friendships renewed; new lovelies discovered; new reflections can enter into the meaning of modern life. I would love to hear from you - particularly if you have suggestions for new topics to enter into the conversation. So, it is a new year. Let's see what it has in store, what it can bring to us. And I hope that those who share the spirit of The Trad Pad can spread the message of a world of beauty, the creativity of humanity, and the joys of simplicity and tradition. ~~~ February, 2017
Showing posts with label Gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gardens. Show all posts

Sunday, February 07, 2016

Building community is a beautiful thing! The folks at Ballarat Community Garden are doing it with tomatoes and learning to make Passata


Picture above from here
together with how to make passata if you can't get to the class
listed below at Ballarat Community Garden.

The post below is from Better Together -  Passata Day

Saturday 28nd February 2015, 9 a.m. sharp-till ?

Once more into the Red! Ballarat Community Garden will be hosting a passata (tomato bottling) day on the 20th of February. Come learn how to preserve tomatoes and enjoy a day of work, fun and community. We'll have a meal and share a good time! Participants will take home approximately 6 litres of tomato puree.

The cost will be $20 dollars which will include a 10kg box of tomatoes, tea & coffee. Please bring a plate to share for lunch. Payment must be received by Deb Ramsey (0401 824 110) by the 16th of February. Numbers will be limited, but children, friends and family are all welcome to come and help. You will be responsible for bringing glass jars or beer bottles. You will need to have your own safe, undamaged lids for jars, but we will provide bottle caps for beer bottles.
Things to bring:

  • Plate to share for lunch.
  • Large pots will be vital so please be sure to bring those. Vital! (Stainless steel please, as aluminium may leach.)
  • Anyone who has a camp stove or gas burner and bottle please bring those along.
  • cutting boards and knives are vital
  • aprons and pot holders
  • funnels
  • large stirring spoons
  • ladles
  • pouring jugs
  • Stick blenders would also be very welcome.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Some of the food plants in my garden - late September


My peas look gorgeous in this container -
the white flowers which will soon produce peas
are most satisfying

I have quite a few broad bean plants in the ground

This mint - the plain old mint - is in a pot.
But I also have some in the ground in a place
where I hope it takes over and chases the weeds away.
Ditto for some After Dinner Mint.
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My Spring Garden - late December 2013

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Dell's beautiful garden at Ballan

This morning I had a most wonderful Sunday drive in Ballan.  I've been living in Ballarat for eighteen months but had only ever been through Ballan on the train ... and you don't get any idea of what a beautiful place it is or the size of it.  I had brought the camera.  As I came into town, I noted a very beautiful garden and after touring the town and snapping some other sites, I came to the garden below.  I was snapping away on and around the footpath and the nearby creek, when I turned the corner and looked towards the verandah where a woman was standing.  I spoke to her. Asked if she minded the garden being photographed and the photographs put on a blog.  No, she didn't mind.  One thing led to another in conversation and she invited me in and gave me the COMPLETE personalised guided tour.  I was in heaven ... and click click click went the camera.

The woman is Dell - and this is her garden.  It speaks for itself.




I can't show all of the photos I took.

You can even select to see them as a full screen slide show.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

2013 winner at the Chelsea Flower Show - Fleming's Nurseries rendition of Phillip Johnson's Trailfinders Australian Garden


I am over the moon with joy that Fleming's Nurseries (they hail from Monbulk in the Dandenong Ranges east of Melbourne) have taken out the champion garden at the Chelsea Flower Show in London.  The picture above is Phillip Johnson's design.  Below is the design fulfilled.

Fleming's have been exhibiting at Chelsea for two decades.  The mind boggles at the dollar investments - and the human resources investments - they have made.  And now Fleming's have hit the jackpot, the pinnacle. It is being said that, for the first time in the history of the Chelsea Flower Show, the judges were unanimous in their decision to award the grand prize to the Australian garden.


And here is Phillip Johnson speaking about the design and the garden


Saturday, March 16, 2013

A garden, a giant cabbage and a Trad Pad

I love this grow yer own garden ...
befitting a Trad Pad
Wisconsin, 1895.
Just one thing?  What was the keeping quality of the cabbage?

Sunday, October 03, 2010

Blogging the beautiful: Floriade and Canberra gardening.


Didn't make it to Floriade this year?  Not to worry.  Just drop by MacRambling and take a peek at her beautiful photographs.  The ones on the post can be clicked on to get really drooly big pix.  Talk about blogging the beautiful.  And she has a companion blog, MacPlanting: a Canberra garden journal.

You might then like to pop over to A Growing Delight  and so hello to that keen blogger and photographer, Frances, who also has some marvellous Floriade photos.

Other blogs 'doing' Floriade:






Thursday, September 23, 2010

A kindred spirit: Vegetable Vagabond


Trad Padders, isn't it a lovely feeling when we meet a kindred spirit - someone whom you want to ask home to play, have a cuppa, pull up a chair for a chat.  Thanks to my dear friend Belinda, of Belinda's Place, I have discovered Kate living at Cygnet, in Tasmania.  Her most recent post is called A Brief History of the World - and it is brilliant.

And if you pop to this post, you will find not only a post about fibre weaving but inspirational pictures of the most wonderful fences straight (or crooked) from nature.

Of course, Miss Eagle is a sucker for anyone who loves and lives community and works at it - as clearly Kate does as her blog links attest.  So please pop over and say hello and say that Miss Eagle sent you.

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

In search of the rushing, gushing Yarra River - Part 1

I had a lovely day out yesterday.
It was full of the unexpected and pleasant surprises.

Large tracts of Victoria are under water at the moment.
A vast contrast from the worst drought since white settlement
and the deathly bushfires of last year.

The radio said that the Yarra River was expected to flood
at Yarra Glen.

I didn't want to wait till the Yarra actually flooded.
I wanted to see the Yarra gushing and rushing
with the water of the yet-to-be flood.

And I did.

This is the story of my day in search of the pre-flood Yarra.
The map at this site will give you a bit of an idea of where I went.


As I left the outer eastern suburbs of Melbourne behind
and hit the Melba Highway,
everything was green
and there was water, water everywhere.

Dams were full to the brim.
A few drops more and they would overflow.
Water was lying at the edge of the road
and the Yarra billabongs were spreading.

The photos above and below were taken
from Skyline Drive looking back to Yarra Glen.


Looking for Sugarloaf Reservoir Park was quite an exercise.
I think there is a job going begging in the Victorian public sector -
Commissar of Signage.
I find the signage poor in and around Melbourne -
sometimes beyond belief.
It doesn't compare with the signage in Sydney -
where the traffic moves so quickly
and the layout of the city is so convoluted
one would never survive without clear signage.

I turned off the Melba Highway at the appropriate sign.
Not to see another sign on a major road for the rest of the day.
I later was told I did not go far enough along
the Yarra Glen to Eltham road before turning off.

I had two sets of "clear" instructions
neither of which delivered the desired result.

After wandering hither and yon -
yes, I didn't have a clue where I was -
I found Sugarloaf in the distance.
The photo below is the result.

My camera is fairly humble -
a Kodak EasyShare DX7590
(5.0 mega pixels and 10X optical zoom) -
and I am an even humbler photographer
(for this read ignorant and unskilled).

If I were clever,
I could probably customise settings
but I am not clever enough to figure all that.
Given these limitations,
I was rather pleased with this photograph.
I was a great distance from the water,
and I couldn't tell how well the zoom
was handling what I was asking of it.
I consider myself fortunate to have
recorded not only the water
but the dam wall and, somehow, the CBD in the distance.


Once I discovered this back part (well I think it was the back part of the reservoir), I followed a road which ran alongside the high Melbourne Water perimeter fence. So you don't lay awake at night wondering, I have to tell you that there is a fair degree of security around our water storages.  I went past all sorts of signs and many, many locked gates.  And after this journey, I eventually came to a half-open gate.

In spite of warnings to trespassers, I - lost in search of a pre-flood experience - entered.  I went down a bitumen driveway and came to a large concrete area.  At one end of this was a multi-story building.  But I couldn't resist walking across to the fenced off section at the other side of the concrete apron.  And there I was - high above the Yering Gorge.  And the water was rushing and gushing.

Camera was quickly put into action and, just as I had taken these, a man came to see what I was doing.  I explained to him about looking for Sugarloaf, the poor signage, seeing the Yarra in flood, etc.  And he gave me directions....


....and I did make it to the Sugarloaf Reservoir Park....

and here is some explanatory signage

Click the above photos (3) to enlarge and make legible.

The picture below is of a section of a narrow peninsula jutting into the reservoir
which is covered in low blooming wattle.


and then there was the getting out -
and, if the getting in was a mystery, so was the getting out.
And it had its adventures too...

.... I found a castle in the hills.
A modern version - but, I think, a castle nonetheless.

One finds all sorts of things on roadsides in the bush.
The quaintest are usually letter boxes.
This is the most curious.
One can imagine baskets left there
to receive the bread, the parcels.
But...what is the story with the picture frame?

Hopefully this is a successful partnership.

Bush flora.

Driving down the bush road,
I spotted the beautifully rusty wheelbarrow.
I could not resist.
Pulled up the car right in the middle of the road,
because - with the Kodak zoom lens - I thought 
I could get a picture from the road.
Next thing, a woman came into view.
I walked over and explained how I had found the wheelbarrow -
or it had found me.
Introductions done -  she is Deirdre.
Her cottage garden is small.
She would like to plant her favourite daphnes
but there is no room.
Nillumbik Shire Council has some tight controls.
The amount of land given to non-indigenous plants is limited.
Deirdre has planted out a number of wattles -
but these are wattles indigenous to the area.
As well, the shire dictates the height of houses.
Deirdre's house fits well into the landscape -
almost hugging the ground in comparison
with the bush around.

I told Deirdre about my Yering Gorge adventure,
and she told me how her Bend of Islands home
overlooked the gorge and took me to the verandah
so I could photograph her view.

Yering Gorge in the Bend of Islands -
photographed from Deirdre's verandah.

And, across the old white bridge above,
I exited the Bend of Islands
through some beautiful green Victorian bush.

The story continues to-morrow
with the rushing, gushing Yarra River
at Warrandyte.

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