ALL IN THE BLUE UNCLOUDED WEATHER

Bush walking just out of Taradale, Victoria

Dylan walking Gracie in a hilltop paddock in Taradale, Victoria

Long expanse of sky on a hilltop in Taradale, Victoria

On top of a hillside paddock in Taradale, Victoria

Dylan sitting on the hillside looking into the bush in Taradale, Victoria

Sitting in the sun looking into the bush in a paddock in Taradale, Victoria

Gracie the happt border collie sniffing the air

Surveying the landscape near Taradale

Teaching gracie dog tricks

Tom investigates an old gold digging near Taradale, Victoria

Looking back across the gum trees, Taradale, Victoria

Following an old bush track we came upon a metal gate which opened onto a cloudless sky. Our thrill at scaling the locked barrier only slightly dampened by the friendly sign suggesting the gate not be left open.

The sun glittered off rooftops in miniature below, I never realised that sight was uniquely Australian until our housemates remarked on it, I think they found the naked metal vaguely appalling and crude. But there is something lovely about a corrugated roof hugged by silver gums, and the bedtime sound of rain pattering on its ripples is a memory that gently drifts me back to childhood snug under the covers.

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SWIMMING FOR STICKS

Papery seed casings in the Botanical Gardens, in Mamsbury

Old historical building in Malmsbury

Old bus in someone's backyard in Malmsbury

Looking at a bus parked in a field in Malmsbuy

Parents investigating Malmsbury

A rogue water fountain in the Botanical Gardens, in Malmsbury

Gracie the border collie fetching a stick in the river at the Botanical Gardens, in Malmsbury


We spent a lazy weekend showing our new housemates the Australian countryside. We thought we’d ease them in gently by setting off from the Malmsbury Botanical Gardens which is very British before taking them down the bumpy dusty dirt track into the bush filled with all our lovely venomous slitherers. I do love a town with character, and when people have old retro buses in their backyards you know you’re somewhere special.

 

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ONE PERSON’S CLAY…

Laura and Tom moving clay at a building site for our Permablitz

Dylan and Tom moving clay for our Permablitz

Dylan, Laura and Tom collecting clay for our Permablitz

Tom and Laura collecting clay for our earth bag garden beds for our Permablitz

Tom and the wheelbarrow at the building site

Dylan and Tom  packing car with clay for our Permablitz

Unloading the clay from the car for our Permablitz, Flemington

Pushing car to have a spot for the clay for our Permablitz, Flemington

Cups of Russian Caravan tea

Pile of clay for our Permablitz, Flemington

The countdown to our Permablitz has begun and we put our new housemates to work not five days before they moved  in, after all manual labour is the building block of a beautiful friendship right?

Sadly, at our house the greater part of our subsoil languishes under a thick layer of bricks, concrete and, on preliminary investigation old rusted metal including the odd bike. The foundation of a  permaculture garden shouldn’t be built upon bought earth. We had to look elsewhere. You don’t have to look far when you are an architect.

After filling a few wheelbarrows of some quite uninspiring clay* we left the building site with Gracie dog in the back of the ute riding high on the mound. (She didn’t find it as amusing as we did.) Then a quick refreshment of Russian Caravan tea and a brief push of the vintage car that has been renting space in our driveway to make way for the mound of clay. Just your average Saturday really.

*Note: uninspiring earth is the best kind of earth for an earth bag garden bed.

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UNUSUAL PETS

Martin and Dylan putting legs on Top Bar hive, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Tom sweeping where the Top Bar Hive will go, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Martin putting bars on Top Bar Hive, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

View of hive from below, bees starting to construct honeycomb, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Martin looking under the Top Bar Hive, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Hankerchiefs blocking the bees' entrance, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Martin releasing the bees, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Worker bee flying off to gather pollen, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Martin explaining the Top Bar Hive to us, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Martin from Top Bar Hives, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Martin explainging how to remove the honeycomb from the Top Bar Hive, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Tom feeling the warmth of the hive, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

Watching the worker bees going off to collect pollen, at the sharehouse Flemington, Australia

The night before the bees arrived Melbourne rejected its first hot spring day with a crack of thunder. The morning spat and grumped as our bees arrived, but Martin, the bee man, said it was a perfect day for the bees to move in. I imagined them made sluggish with cold, they were unwilling to shed their pyjamas and buzz out of bed.

We sat around the table nursing peppermint tea while Martin solemly told us the tale of a man who paid too much attention to his grooming and ended up with a stung nose. But only after lathering on strong smelling gels, face creams and old spice, then sticking his nose into the entry to the hive to get a better look. Even two female clients of his who had long since rejected shampoo and deodorant had been chased back inside when they had tried a strong smelling chamomile soap. My hair was currently fresh from shower and lavendar fresh with a conditioner Ryan had gifted me so I thought it best to keep my nose well out of their business.

Sitting under a tree on its thin little legs, the hive didn’t look like the Winnie the Pooh hive I had in my head, more like a trestle table with a roof. But the beauty of a top bar hive is that it is so unlike a normal hive which involves pillaging the bees’ entire supply of honey and dooming the colony when the frost hits and the cupboard is bare. Commercial beekeepers strip the honey and then feed the bees melted sugar through winter, there’s something that feels so wrong about that. Top bar, Martin told us with the reverence of a man who believes in the good in his product, allows you to harvest the honey one “bar” at a time so you can leave plenty for the bees to drink up when autumn winds blow the last petals from their stems.

Soon he promises we should be able to see the bees forming a chain like little builders forming a living tape measure for other workers to fill with honeycomb. If I build up the nerve to lie under the hive to take a photo. No shampoo or moisturiser that day I think.

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