Having harvested and eaten a few home-grown cucumbers, I am now cucumber free.
The local moths sensed the quality of the cucumber patch and laid their eggs. I awoke this morning to find my cucumbers riddled with caterpillars. They were everywhere. I cleared the patch to protect the adjacent tomato crop. Afterwards caterpillars were crawling out from under the patch mulch. No magpies came to help clean them up and I had to get rid of them myself.
The cucumbers I ate were delicious.
From 2019 I am living a more relaxed life. After 35 years I am retired from engineering practice.
You can expect me to mention retirement projects, travel and of course the beloved.
My hobbies may include nature, camping, repair, and reading.
Sunday, January 12, 2020
Friday, January 10, 2020
Kookaburra watch
Wednesday, January 8, 2020
Cucumber smile
Growing my own vegetables will not necessarily give me all the food I need.
But it makes me smile.
And a bonus - there is no plastic wrapped around my cucumber.
But it makes me smile.
And a bonus - there is no plastic wrapped around my cucumber.
Monday, January 6, 2020
Still working
As a student engineer in 1980 I purchased a new calculator. From memory it cost about $150 an expensive purchase for me then.
It was designed to fit a shirt pocket - an engineers tool. It uses reverse polish logic to minimise keystrokes; it can do calculations with complex numbers and matrices and is programmable.
I used all through my student years and then my career. I really enjoy using it. It is technology that was built to last. Of course it is made from plastic. It will last as long as batteries are available for it.
It was designed to fit a shirt pocket - an engineers tool. It uses reverse polish logic to minimise keystrokes; it can do calculations with complex numbers and matrices and is programmable.
I used all through my student years and then my career. I really enjoy using it. It is technology that was built to last. Of course it is made from plastic. It will last as long as batteries are available for it.
Friday, January 3, 2020
A bit of grass
Planted a few Carex appressa down at the creek. I grew these from seed at my house. The seeds had no special treatment - they were just sprinkled on sand and the sand was kept wet. Carex is suited to the soils that remain damp below the surface even through the dry season.
Wednesday, January 1, 2020
Year Reset
I spent today potting Acacia fimbriata seedlings into tubestock.
I had gathered the seed a few months ago, cleaned it, soaked it in hot water for two days then put it into seed trays. A great success about a hundred seedlings germinated.
I had less success with Acacia complanata. I only planted 20 seeds because so many were malformed or damaged. I was not very attentive when the seeds sprouted; only one seeding survived to be potted.
I look forward to planting them out later in the year.
I had gathered the seed a few months ago, cleaned it, soaked it in hot water for two days then put it into seed trays. A great success about a hundred seedlings germinated.
I had less success with Acacia complanata. I only planted 20 seeds because so many were malformed or damaged. I was not very attentive when the seeds sprouted; only one seeding survived to be potted.
I look forward to planting them out later in the year.
Sunday, December 22, 2019
Frog Motel
As a child in north Queensland I would find frogs hiding inside galvanised pipe fence posts. My recollection is that nearly all fence posts had a frog inside sometimes more than one.
A couple of years ago I mounted a couple of 90mm pipes vertically on a fence under a tree. They were to be frog refuges. I have never seen a frog near them.
Frogs do live at my address I hear them calling from the trees occasionally.
Listening to the radio recently I heard a representative of the local frog society recommending the vertical pipes as frog motels.
I have purchased some 40mm pipes (which is closer to the size of the galavanised pipes) to make more motels.
A couple of years ago I mounted a couple of 90mm pipes vertically on a fence under a tree. They were to be frog refuges. I have never seen a frog near them.
Frogs do live at my address I hear them calling from the trees occasionally.
Listening to the radio recently I heard a representative of the local frog society recommending the vertical pipes as frog motels.
I have purchased some 40mm pipes (which is closer to the size of the galavanised pipes) to make more motels.
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