Wednesday 12 November 2014

The Festival of Gardens

The 13th Biennial Festival of Gardens in Castlemaine and District was held over Cup Week here in Victoria and it made our weekend away extra special. A big thank you to Lucy's Grandma Sally, a Castlemaine local,  for not only telling me about the festival but providing a hand marked catalogue of recommended garden visits!. The whole experience was a treat...despite the unusual bout of Spring heat last weekend.
 
Firstly we stayed in this amazing place for three nights - The Scout Hall -with the helpful host, Jacqueline's, solicitous but not intrusive attention.

Then we visited a range of outstanding gardens with a focus on sustainability. When I get the video I took of all the gardens happening here ( a tech glitch) I will add those as they give a much better appreciation of the breadth and variety of the gardens. In the meantime here are a few still shots.

Forest Edge

Forest Edge, owned by Jill and Graham Hisscock, was so breathtaking I could not take it all in at once. It is a series of many separate garden areas, each enclosed by charming weathered grey palings and always full of beneficial insect attracting plants such as seaside daises, yarrow and feverfew.

This is one of their (many) permie (aka permaculture) plantings to attract beneficial insects. I love it when function and form come together!

One of the enclosed gardens at Forest Edge

I especially loved that their chook run enclosed a  loquat tree and peach tree for shade and fruit for the chook! Orchards and chickens are a long time productive partnership as chickens eat the rotting fruit including the  bugs that would otherwise infest other fruit as well as fertilising the ground.

Chook Run
Extensive enclosed vegetable gardens and orchards surround the house.


The Berry Garden



The potting shed

Entrance to the orchard
 

Hedgehogs

This is Hedgehogs, an "eclectic 3 acre garden" , planted by Margot and Murray Rottem.   Margot was kind enough to give me a cutting of a plant I admired (the silvery one below spilling over the dry stone wall if anyone can identify it!).
 
This amazing garden was created from scratch over 18 years where previously there had been only rock. The rock does however make lovely dry stone walls throughout the garden, (and many gardens in Castlemaine).
 
Yellow Iris and mystery plant on steps leading up to their house
 
Yellow Iris borderd billabong

The impact of a dry climate can clearly be seen in areas where town water is not available and the bores only produce brackish water suitable for stock or firefighting, but this garden flourishes close to the house with tank water applied regularly.
 
The beautiful walled garden
 
Strawberries are grown in old guttering as the roots need only shallow beds and fall free of the dirt this way.
 
Strawberries growing in pieces of guttering

A major favourite - Mossbank - did not allow photographs but they do have a website for their B&B which gives some idea of their wonderful garden   Mossbamk - Castlemaine and mudbrick structures built by Judyand Peter Sherlock.

In between all this we visited with my adorable and "box of birds"  neice (insert doting Aunt's photo #1003)

In between all this I managed to get myself some utterly gorgeous new chooks with pom pom heads (Lucy loves these, smiling, head tilted and peering up under their crests to eyeball them with a very earnest and querying  "Hellllo?" ) ... but I will save the cute chick photos for another post or I won't get anything else done today! ( I spend enough time looking at the real thing as it is) .


Then Michael and I  headed home via Blackwood to get some plants, seeds and soil additives (organic of course) from St Erth. I would highly recommend joining the Diggers Club if you are interested in heirlooms, organics/sustainability.
 
 
We bought three different varieties of berry - an Autumn fruiting raspberry, Willamette, to get a crop when our existing raspberries are finished.



as well as a Tayberry and a Marionberry - two berries which I had never heard of.

Marionberry  - titled "the Cabernet of Blackberries!"

Tayberry - a Scottish developed berry named after the River Tay
 

We also bought three unusual Heirloom varieties of tomatos (photos in the next post), a space saver Cucumber for small gardens, a strawberry that is supposed to be extra delish (look out for that one Luce!), some rock dust for improving the soil, many seed packets including a coriander variety that does not bolt so readily,  some golden marjoram (so pretty!) and two apple trees which were a free gift as a member purchasing over a certain dollar amount. And some spring onion seedlings!
Golden Marjoram

 St Erth is a truly beautiful property if you ever get a chance to visit.

Main Entrance to St Erth, Blackwood




To top the weekend off we passed bags of horse manure for sale on the roadside heading through Newbury on our way home. "Stop the car!!"I yelped in excitement. "Horse poo for sale!"

As the car was already chockers with chooks and plants as well as our luggage and the Esky (which had transported all the food supplies for my elimination diet), sadly we could only fit 7x supermarket size bags of the bargain priced 50c a bag garden gold. :( I  would have taken 20 if I could!. Herbivore manure is so very good for replenishing tired depleted garden beds and adding to your compost bin.

Michael said he had never seen a woman so pleased by a load of poo and commented wryly that most other women had a similar reaction to diamonds.

Guess  I am a simple girl at heart ...I happily inhaled the 'fragrance' the rest of the way home,  dreaming about where I would plant what and my new chicks...
 

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