Meet our first home-grown lemon!

Posted in Plants and Gardens on July 13th, 2011 by Coffee

And isn’t she a beauty?! Firm, glossy, yellow skin, just like it should be, and the zest tasted just great in our dinner last night. Juice to be used today.

But home-grown might be stretching things a little. Home-ripened is possibly a more accurate description. When we bought the tree it had about 5 green lemons hanging off it. Excellent! I think all fruit trees should come pre-loaded. But there are a couple of baby lemons that have appeared since we’ve had the tree home and re-potted it to a bigger pot. We just have to keep remembering to shift the tree around to keep it out of these very gusty NW winds, but put it back out in the sun when they’re gone.

Plot B2: Complete (for now…)

Posted in Plants and Gardens on July 10th, 2011 by Coffee

Apart from a few very welcome interruptions by visitors here and a party there, the daylight hours have been spent continuing the garden plot building. Except for an extra interruption when the sieve of legend finally called “time” about 4 barrow loads from full and started joining up a few little holes into bigger holes, kinda defeating the purpose of the sieve. It had also developed quite an impressive bow.

A reasonably quick re-string later and we were back in business, and we were back to grass level again. But the sieve’s just not the same. The first stringing had just got a nice flex and feel to it, honest. It was just better!

It was only slightly disheartening to watch the top of the plot turn from nice soil to small stones when we gave it a good watering in. I’m sure we’ll re-sieve it sometime with a slightly tighter mesh now we’ve done all the hard work. But that can wait!

As can plot B3. At least until we’ve got some more compost to drop in there. We can’t dig out all the soil that’s in the plot until we’re ready to fill it again in case the sides fall in while it’s empty. At least that’s sounding a pretty damn good excuse to me! And I think we’ve got deck to do before we’ll get on to that. I think. Hopefully! I’ll let you know…

I’ve been digging through the seeds seeing if there’s anything that we can plant, and it looks like some carrots and raddish seeds might be worth a nudge. Stay tuned!

Cute Kitties…

Posted in Animals on July 10th, 2011 by Coffee

Another post for Beth. And us!

The kitties are sometimes just so cute, and we probably don’t take enough pics of them to use to remind us just how cute they were once they’ve all grown up. A lot of cute kitty things seem to revolve around shoes. It’s amazing what you can do with shoes when you’re a kitten. Including wedge your whole upper body into a ug-boot, which is never boring to watch. But then there’s the other games, like putting your little toy into a shoe, fishing it out, putting it in another shoe, fishing it out, putting it… You get the idea!

But some of the cutest bits are sleeping in/on/by shoes, and they’re the easiest to take pics of. There seem to me to be an infinite number of more comfortable places to sleep around the house, but apparently shoes make good pillows. Or something.

Yes, Pinot is indeed asleep, but with her head wedged upright. Guess she thinks it makes her look awake and alert, or something. Makes more sense than one of her other regular sleeping positions where she holds onto a table leg with both front paws. Go figure.

And of course those shoes are not all sitting in the entrance way, they are indeed in the wardrobe!

Now, if I can just capture the growly sounds Fidget makes playing with his bell…

Deck: Part 8

Posted in House, Plants and Gardens on July 7th, 2011 by Coffee

I’ll give this one in the deck series a number again, as I do think we made a bit of progress today. Just a bit. Until 1pm when work stopped for the day.

The biggest portion of deck by our room is finally finished, and the long run down the games room is completely finished too. My arms hurt from nailing all the planks. But it’s a good hurt! Or at least that’s what I keep telling myself!

And apparently I get a break until Monday. When we’ll see if we can get this bloody thing finished. I think we’ve now got 3 bits done out of 5 1/2. I suspect that’s 2 more days work to go, but we’ll see… Stay tuned. It’ll be over soon, I promise! But at least it’s pretty much looking exactly like I imagined it still. And Bec’s still liking it too. Whew!

Deck: Part Whatever!

Posted in House, Plants and Gardens on July 6th, 2011 by Coffee

Another full day deck building, and we’re still not even close to being done! I really don’t know how it’s taking so freaking long to get this bloody deck sorted, but it is. It’s not like we’re standing around all day picking our noses or something, but yes, I agree that it seems to be taking forever!

But at least we now have, erm, one out of five and a half bits finished and nailed off (by guess who!?) And only a very small amount left of the biggest second area left to finish. And a huge number of short boards cut and ready to be nailed for another two sides.

Sigh. But at least I managed to bend my fingers just enough to be able to push the shutter release on the camera to get you this twilight shot of progress. You owe me!

And we’re back at it tomorrow. Apparently. We’ll see. Mind you, my wrists could maybe do with a rest after nailing all late afternoon… I give it a 50/50 chance of being finished by this time tomorrow. 40% of the 50% will depend on us having enough deck timber. That’s looking like it’s going to be a very close run thing.

But on the up-side, working outside all day, every day lately means I seem to be getting some sort of winter tan without having to spend all that money on ski-field passes etc. Which is just as well, as apparently there’s no snow on the ski fields anyway!

Plot B1: Complete (for now…)

Posted in Animals, Plants and Gardens on July 5th, 2011 by Coffee

Another stunning day, another slog outside. This afternoon (after the ground had unfrozen from the frost) we managed to refill the first plot back up to its original level! What an achievement!

Put like that it seems simple, but the grind of sieving seemingly endless barrow loads of dirt was starting to take its toll by the end.

But its done. Compost folded in. More dirt in. Stomped down. Watered in a bit.

Watching the kitties discover a sprinkler for the first time was quite amusing. Fidget in particular had lots of fun putting paws and head in the streams. And then playing in the mud. Getting very dirty. Again!

Now we should really put the plot to bed properly for winter with a bit of mulch or something, but I’d probably have to get keen with the weed-eater for that, so it can wait. We’ll see how much this lot settles first. Although we do have a batch of tulip bulbs with no place to go, so maybe one end might end up a tulip patch temporarily…

Now. Just two more to go. For now. But it sounds like we’ll have a deck day tomorrow, so we’ll use a few different muscles for a bit, and let the sore ones rest. Hopefully!

Vege Gardens: Area B

Posted in Plants and Gardens on July 4th, 2011 by Coffee

It’s been such fantastic weather lately that we just cannot stay inside. So we’ve been finding things to keep ourselves occupied outside (while we wait for more deck action, of course). We had such fun digging holes for the deck that we thought we’d have a crack at some bigger holes. Much bigger holes! Big long trenchy type holes. Holes for vege plots, in fact. As someone recently reminded me, we do need to look at farming larger bits than just our four little 1mx1m plots way up by the water tank. So we’ve started with three 1.2mx3.5m trenches closer to the house.

So far over the last day and a bit we’ve managed to take all the turf off them all, and dug one out to 30-40cm deep. As with all holes around here it was pretty hard going. The jarring from constantly hitting stones takes its toll on the elbows and wrists, but we got there. We’ve even started to re-fill it with the layer of decent topsoil that we saved from the hole and screened with the trusty garden sieve, which is still providing sterling service! Now we just have to add some compost, and then screen the topsoil from trench 2 over top, mix, and then keep adding topsoil until we’re done. Easy! But potentially back breaking. We’re planning to have them as raised bed type gardens, but we’ll try just mounding them up without anything around them to start with and see how that goes.

We did look at using either timber or corrugated iron for sides to taller raised beds, but the conflicting, confusing advice about whether you can/should use treated timber, etc just got too much, so we’ll try the old-school approach first.

Whatever we do it’ll have to be fenced to keep both the wind and the hares away. But we’ll deal with that once we’ve got the dirt bit done!

Fencing 101

Posted in House, Plants and Gardens on July 2nd, 2011 by Coffee

One of the few remaining issues that we needed to sort before we can get final tick-off from the council on the house was that our effluent pit needed to be fenced off. To protect it from all the stock that we, erm, don’t have and will never have around that area. Hey-ho. Just do it anyway, don’t think about it.

Luckily we have a few waratahs and fence netting lying around the place form when someone was grazing the patch a long time ago. We figure it’s now past the time when he’s likely to bother to pick it up (and even less likely now that apparently he has no stock now), so it’s been kindly taken as a donation.

So we smacked up a little fence ourselves.

Sounds easy, but it took a little longer than we thought, and we learnt a few things along the way, like:

  1. The ground around here is stony. Bloody stony. Of course we knew that already, but everything we do reminds us of that. Luckily we had a big mallet that Mum had procured with a load of tools which had previously been kindly donated to the cause. And we had a set of 2 steps that got us just up high enough to bang in the waratahs. We only had to bang in halfway, remove and bang in again, repeat, for 4 times with one post. Must have been a big rock in that area!
  2. No 8 wire fence likes to stay where it’s been previously. Trying to get it straight again after it’s been in a loose, messy roll for a year or so is actually quite hard, especially when it’s had weeds etc growing right through the roll.
  3. No 8 wire is actually bloody hard to cut, and pliers won’t do it. Luckily we managed to borrow some decent cutters from friends down the road.
  4. And an old favourite: Make sure you don’t stand right in front of someone banging in posts in case the head of your mallet falls off. (Luckily I wasn’t!)

It’s only a semi-temporary fence anyway, as until we get all the ground evened, and the piles of crap left by the drain-layers right beside it dealt with it’s a bit dangerous to put a good one in. Let’s just hope it passes the inspection!

Deck: Part 6

Posted in House, Plants and Gardens on July 2nd, 2011 by Coffee

Yesterday we continued the slow progress towards actually having a deck. And by the end of the day we did indeed have some actual deck!

Yes indeedy! About 7 boards worth! Doesn’t seem like much really, but we did have to get all the joists installed first, and there was a bit of faffing about with some of the tricker bits for supports around the pillars… Hmm. Still doesn’t seem like too much, but the builder’s doing a good job of getting it all nice and perfect, with mitre joins along the runs etc.

My main job of the day was to start the job of cutting a large number of shorter boards for the “walkway” bits of the deck whenever the big, scary saw was free.

I got a fair few done in the end. So they’ll just need nailing once we’re sure of the spacing. Bec asked the builder if he liked the walkway bit, and pointed out that he hadn’t seemed too sure about what it would be like before, and he said he did indeed like it. So that’s a relief!

So hopefully by the end of next week it’ll be done. Bloody better be! Most of the slow bits have been done now, so things should speed up.

Dear Aunt Agatha: My kitten thinks he’s a puppy!

Posted in Animals on June 28th, 2011 by Coffee

That’s right. Fidget seems to think he’s a puppy!

He’s always been one for playing with toys (and I’ve always been a sucker for buying him toys), but he/we seem to have discovered a new game. We throw the toy somewhere, he brings it back to us, rinse, repeat…

Sound familiar?!

But at least playing this game with his toys he doesn’t growl. Much! If he has his bell he growls all the time. (Except when I have the mic beside him trying to capture the growl for all to hear. I’ll keep working on that!) That’s why we limit “bell time” to a half hour session or so every couple of days.

And yes, Pinot is just as cute, but she’s happier outside thinking about chasing birds. And eating bugs.