The Last Post Magazine – Issue 21: Summer 2020

Page 96

Gardening Australia’s Summer Garden Tips COOL

‘Tis the season to harvest spuds. Once foliage has lost colour and the potato stems begin to flop, lift the tubers, dry them out and store them somewhere dark. Hoe hoe hoe into weeds, especially the dreaded yellow flowering cape weed. Lift these weeds from the ground and place upside down, roots and all, under plants to act as a marvellous mulch. English lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) is flowering fantastically now, so take the time to appreciate the colour and delicate fragrance of these old-fashioned faves, and if you don’t have one – get one in!

TEMPERATE

Protect your pot plants while you’re away this summer. Mulch the top of the pots, sit them in a saucer of water (or the bathtub) and you’ll be set! Get crafty and turn old paper into gift tags or decorations that are impregnated with seeds - your very own seed paper that can be planted after it’s been used. Check the fact sheet for instructions. In the vegie patch, make sure you keep tip-pruning herbs like basil, rosemary and oregano to slow down the flowering and produce even more delicious foliage, perfect for festive feasts!

SUBTROPICAL

Fruit flies are in full force in the subtropics at the moment, so don’t let them spoil your productive party. Place exclusion netting or bags over susceptible fruits as they ripen. Give your worms a happy holiday and relocate their accommodation into the shade for the summer. Place a wet hessian sack in the top of the farm to keep these critters cool. It’s the most wonderful time of the year to enjoy the colourful calyx of the NSW Christmas bush (Ceratopetalum gummiferum). White flowers give way to stunning carmine sepals, making this a fab feature tree

TROPICAL

In the tropics, the Christmas orchid (Calanthe triplicata) is in bloom now, it’s showy, pure white clusters of flowers on metre long stems. Stunners in pots, contact your local orchid society to track one down. It may be hot, but it’s the perfect time to plant snake beans. These climbers are heavy croppers, and adore the heat so whack in a trellis, pop in some seeds and watch them grow! Give the gift of conservation with a potted aniseed myrtle, a rare native rainforest tree. Syzygium anisatum edible, highly aromatic foliage, and is an excellent small tree for home gardens.

ARID

Peaches and nectarines are starting to fruit, so if it looks like your tree has a whopping crop, it’s a good idea to thin fruit now to improve eventual fruit size and quality. Get your vegie beds prepped for another round of planting in early February and sow a crop of green manure to improve soil health, vitality and water retention. It’s a pressie for your patch Fertilising stressed plants can tip them over the edge, so if your plants are struggling through summer, give them water, compost and mulch, but don’t be tempted to give them a feed.


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Articles inside

Gardening Australia’s Summer Garden Tips

2min
pages 96-97

Living Legends

2min
pages 92-93

The Sunshine Coast

6min
pages 82-87

Bert Hinkler- letters home from the front

2min
page 78

An Uplifting Adventure…

2min
page 76

Visiting the Western Front Battlefields

6min
pages 74-75

Highback Vineyard & Honeysuckle Rise Country Accommodation

2min
pages 70-71

Robe To Recovery

6min
pages 62, 66-67

Smartphone App to Screen for Early Signs of Dementia

1min
page 60

Beating Diabetes: Is there a role for nutraceuticals?

2min
page 57

Discussing what matters most for older Australians

3min
pages 52-53

Bunbury RSL young veterans engagement

2min
page 50

World Pancreatic Cancer Day: increasing awareness and inspiring action

6min
pages 48-49

Too Many Veterans in South Australian Prisons

2min
page 46

Interview: Dr. Mark Hinton

8min
pages 44-45

Have your say and help improve veteran mental health treatment

2min
page 43

The South Australian Veteran Partnerships Hub

5min
pages 40-41

Best We Forget: The Tyrrany of False Balance in the Media

4min
pages 38-39

Rededication of AFC and RAAF Memorial – Point Cook

4min
pages 36-37

The Coloured Diggers

10min
pages 32-34

Shane Nicholson

1min
page 31

Japan supernatural: Gallery of NSW, Until 8 March 2020

1min
pages 22-23

Dancing on the Darling- Greg Champion

1min
page 21

John Bois: If I’d Gone To Nashville

2min
page 20

Theatre for Change

3min
pages 14-15

A look at America. Episode # 17. Michael Moore and the poisoning of Flint.

1min
pages 12-13

Frank’s Coffee Shop

1min
page 11

Interview: Jose McLaughlin

13min
pages 8-10
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