Move On or Be Eaten.
If you scroll through some of the "electronic grafitti" as our current hipster Prime Minister calls comments on facebook ,twitter and the like, you will find some review of what visitors to Australia think of Australians.
" very friendly and laid back people."
"aussies are so chill and nice".
"egalitarian give everybody a fair go."
In the main positive and complimentary analysis. However behind the social facade lies a deep and murky Australia. Not egalitarian and give everybody a fair go but a selfish give ME a fair go, I want, I need, you have, I take. I am talking country Australia where you had best protect yourself from the thieves and vandals.
Our move to the country was borne from the desire for freedom and space, to reconnect with nature and a chance to provide for ourselves with something we had grown for our kitchen table.Our new largely barren garden needed work to achieve our last goal but we set about building our new life.
It is recognised the addition of trees to a property adds value without costing too much other than time. We set about our task adding a mini orchard, trees for shade, trees for climbing and trees to attract the wildlife.
"Several recent nationwide surveys show that mature trees in a well-landscaped yard can increase the value of a house by 7 percent to 19 percent." Frontdoor realestate
"Trees add value to a property, and a mature fruit tree adds even more value than a non fruiting species." Mary Francois Deweese Landscape Architect
As time has progressed have our trees added value to our property? Certainly in aesthetics, comfort and financially in value added. Have we managed to provide an epicurian delight of fruit and jams and pickles for our kitchen table? The answer is simple, we have managed to provide a bounty but not one that we have managed to enjoy. The enjoyment has gone to the birds.
| A rainbow lorikeet samples the nashi pears. It will then move onto the next one and then the next one until the entire tree is denuded. It has many friends to help in this arduous work. |
| Sulphur crested cockatoos make light work of the apples. The apples are too immature to pick and do anything with. |
| Look at the pretty sunflowers...yum, yum, yum. |
We are onto our fourth or fifth iteration of a vegetable garden. What great lessons have we learnt here about getting produce grown and harvested for our usage and a little for our chooks?
Apart from the obvious and ongoing experimentation of what grows well in our micro climate and soil type we have learnt nature is not always ones friend. Perhaps nature is but some of natures little creatures are not.
| Wallabies. Cute and adorable but rabid, regular, voracious eaters. |
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| The vegetable garden is fully netted against the birds with a reinforced base of corrugated roofing iron to prevent the wallabies from eating through the netting to gain access. |
From the kitchen window it looked like a small black snake was lying next to the car. In fact two small snakes, how strange. It took a while and about $100 worth of new wiper blades. for us to learn this one. When you get home and park the car, cover the wiper blades as the crows come and eat them out of their mountings and throw them on the ground. The small snakes were discarded wiper blades.
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| We found lengths of irrigation pipe made the quickest and most robust protection for the windscreen wipers. |
We have embraced the frogs in all their wonderful cacophony. They are a sign of a good robust environment and they do not steal vegetables or fruit.
We have learnt to combat the micro bats living inside the eaves with a well placed camphor ball deterrent. They too create only a potential hazard with their droppings and a nuisance with the smell. They again are not thieves, just occasional and minor vandals.
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| The camphor balls hanging at an entrance point to the eaves. |
We have learnt to accept and coexist, albeit warily, with our elongated friends who again leave well enough alone as we do them.
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| A red bellied venomous black snake in the grass. |
| A red bellied black snake clears the paddling pool of tadploes. |
| A carpet python rests next to the rhubarb. When you come across this unexpectedly it is the poobarb patch! |
The chook egg thieves call occasionally and feast for a few days until our intrusion sends them on their way.
Don't get me wrong, we love our life in the country now that we have cottoned on to how to cope with the intrusion of our animal friends. But back to the descriptions of Aussies as applied to the native animals that visit....
" very friendly and laid back people."...Our place is a regular Woodstock! Free food, free music, no violence, no wonder they come in their droves!
"aussies are so chill and nice"...Put it this way, they don't mind us being here in fact we provide all this yummy food for them!
"egalitarian give everybody a fair go." They give all their mates a fair go but I wish they would leave us just one nectarine, one pineapple guava, one plum, one apple, one peach so my wife and I could share just one taste of what our fruit trees provide for them all. Is one too much to ask for?
Labels: addition of trees to a property adds value, behind the social facade lies a deep and murky Australia, protect yourself from thieves and vandals, what visitors to Australia think of Australians






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