Politics, Planting, Painting and Eating

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politics

Australians will be voting in a Federal election shortly. Both major parties are promising all sorts of unachievable changes, such as more doctors and nurses and aged care staff. These are going to be created out of nowhere! Political magic. One party is promising more workers for rural areas. More magic. We have the lowest unemployment rate since 2014 and anyone still unemployed, especially in Western Australia, has probably made a choice not to work.

Of course, I’d like to hear about importers, manufacturers and consumers held responsible for their use of plastics! This is not a hot topic with either major party, but it should be up there with national security, food security, education, health and housing costs. Instead, both parties promote green washing, fake change to make people feel better.

Tiny changes, such as refusing plastic cutlery and using your own bamboo implements which can be washed and reused, taking your own reusable straws and your own reusable cup are easy and would make a difference. Single use plastic bags are now banned in Western Australia. Look for products in glass containers as glass is infinitely recyclable. Use the paper bags intended for mushrooms if you don’t have fabric vegetable and fruit bags when you’re shopping. Little changes.

eating

It is so much cooler now in Western Australia and we have had very welcome rain, too. My thoughts turned to warming foods. I’ve made vegetable soup and also fritters. These are corn fritters. For a pop of colour and flavour I added finely chopped spring onion. Served with chili dipping sauce.

When I’m making cupcakes, muffins and fritters I use an old fashioned icecream scoop. This is an easy way to regulate the amount of batter used and the contents fall smoothly into the hot pan or paper cup. Easy to wash too and no spillage to clean up afterwards.

planting

The cooler weather means it’s time to plant tulips. In the past I have ordered tulips for my Mother and myself from a famous tulip grower in the east but we were both disappointed with how poorly they performed recently. This year we’ve bought the bulbs from a local shop. This was far more economical as we have to pay a quarantine fee to bring bulbs from the east to Western Australia to prevent the spread of disease.

red tulips in close up photography

I’ve planted Ed Rem Darwin tulips. The flowers are described as being intense orange – red with a yellow edge to the petal. A Darwin tulip is a cross between a single, late tulip and an early emperor tulip. I didn’t know that!

I have also planted out the cuttings I took from a pink pelargonia. I struck them in water until threadlike roots appeared on the stems then planted them in soil. They look healthy. The creeping fig and lucky bamboo I propagated are doing well, too. I enjoy creating new plants from cuttings.

COMPOST WEEK is from the 1st -7th May. I don’t make compost having created a few evil smelling piles of horrible mess in the past but I do make weed tea. I have plenty of weeds and like the idea of them adding nutrients to the garden. I use a plastic pot which has inbuilt drainage holes and a  little metal bucket. I put the pot in the bucket (it goes about half way down) fill it with weeds then add water to the bucket until it is full. For a few days after I push the now dying weeds down until all the foliage is in the water and leave it for about 10 days. Then I throw the mushy weeds into a big pot which holds my exhausted potting mix and pour the ( slightly stinky) weed tea concentrate into a bucket. I dilute this about 1:3 so I can see the bottom of the bucket. Today I poured it on food plants such as the passion fruit, blueberries and all my pots of herbs and spring onions.

Put weeds into a pot with drainage holes.

Insert the weeds into a bucket filled with water.

After about 10 days remove the weeds and pour the tea into a bigger bucket.

Dilute the tea about 1:3 with water and pour around plants.

The soggy dead weeds I put in the exhausted potting mix will become part of the soil improvement plan.

painting

We celebrate Mother’s Day in Australia on Sunday 8th of May. My Mother really likes and grows many carnations. She takes a slip off any existing plant and grows her own from it. So I have painted a carnation on the front of her Mother’s Day card. Every year we renew her subscription for her favourite gardening magazine as her Mother’s day gift. She is such an avid gardener!

Painted a few other flowers, too. I read blogs where the writers commit to doing a painting a day. I once followed a group doing a painting every day for one hundred days and made the time to complete that task but have never been able to consistently paint every day since. I paint in fits and starts. I mostly flowers.

DID YOU KNOW?

The Great Barrier Reef, off the coast of Queensland, is the largest ecosystem in the world. Made up of nearly 3000 individual reefs, it can been seen from space.

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Visiting Beautiful Brisbane

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Our last city on the eastern coast visit was Brisbane, the second best kept secret in Australia! ( Perth is Australia’s best kept secret) We flew instead of taking the train as we were still recovering from poor health. Off the plane at the Domestic Terminal and onto the Airtrain which delivered us in the centre of the city. Up two escalators and into the hotel reception area.

Well positioned hotel and a really lovely unexpected upgrade. So comfortable, delicious food and so easy to use public transport to explore Brisbane.

Our first day and off to the Queensland Art Gallery, part of the Cultural Centre. It was an easy train ride. Really enjoyed the QAG collection and spent some time talking to a guide about some of the Japanese art. This was very interesting as I’d just had a long conversation with a Japanese lady who was doing an ikebana arrangement near the entrance to the Gallery.

Chinese Art Collection Sculpture

Across the courtyard to the Gallery of Modern Art to see the Margaret Olley Exhibition: A Generous Life. It was fabulous! After I’d been around once, I watched the film about her life and then went around again. Passionate about her art, Olley’s vibrant use of colour and frequently repeated still-life themes was wonderful to see.

This is Danelle Bergstrom’s “Conversation with Margaret Olley”. It was a finalist in the 2003 Archibald Prize.

Following my Mother’s suggestion, we took the train to the Roma Street Parklands. What a surprise! This 16 hectare garden is in the middle of urban development and next to a train line. In fact the garden is created on what was the old railways goods yard, built up from soil removed to create a more efficient and modern rail system. Lush, cool gardens with wild dashes of colour and water crossed by bridges, it  also featured works by local artists. Lots of families playing and picnicking and other people enjoying the garden. We enjoyed it, too!

Friends drove us to the Tweed Regional Gallery and Margaret Olley Art Centre to see several reconstructed rooms of Margaret Olley’s house. Gorgeous views, nice lunch, interesting art on display and, of course, the exactly replicated rooms from Margaret Olleys house, a former hat factory, which was also her studio. She liked a lot of colour and a lot of ornaments!

The next day our lovely friends took us north to see the Glasshouse Mountains and the Sunshine Coast. Particularly liked Marleny but every little town was interesting. I loved the Working Harbour at Mooloolah River. I could sit watching the movements on the river all day. So many interesting little towns.

Glasshouse Mountains. Bit hazy due to recent bush fires.

Water Dragon at The Spirit House, Yandina, where we had lunch.

Mooloolah River

Train back to the City from Landsborough, well, train, bus, train due to an incident on the line. By the time we got moving again after waiting for the buses it was too dark to see anything but we’d like to return to Brisbane and explore more of the state.

The City Hopper ferry was a great way enjoy to Southbank and the skyline. The  little red dot just above the bridge is the new moon.

Our room overlooked ANZAC Square, a town square and war memorial commemorating the men and women who participated in the armed services. Very peaceful and very moving.

Also enjoyed hotel flowers and room picnics.

 

Launched in Milan in 2015, INTERNATIONAL COFFEE DAY is celebrated on the first of October. It marks the global celebration of coffee’s journey from the farm to your cup and is an opportunity to recognize the men and women  who grow and harvest the beans.

This is an easy day to celebrate. Enjoy!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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