Author Archives: Abbie Jury

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About Abbie Jury

jury.co.nz Tikorangi The Jury Garden Taranaki NZ

In the garden this week: December 10, 2010

Alas, not from our garden

Alas, not from our garden

Better late than never - covering the strawberries

Better late than never - covering the strawberries

· The bright side of the current dry spell is that fungal diseases are not as common as usual. These tend to flourish more in times of high humidity. Despite that, it is a good idea to get a copper spray on to citrus trees as flowering finishes. We will not stay this dry and a copper spray can prevent premature fruit drop and a tendency to drop leaves.

· Pinch out laterals on tomatoes to keep them to one or two stems only. You want the plant to put its energy into forming fruit, not leafy growth.

· You can still plant for a late crop of tomatoes but you need to use small plants now, rather than seed. Get pumpkins and main crop potatoes in without delay.

· With summer just starting, it may seem far from your mind, but get leeks and celery in now if you want to be eating them in winter. They need all summer to reach a decent size.

· It is the last chance to start annuals from seed for late summer and autumn colour.

· There is not a lot you can be doing in the ornamental garden in this current extended dry spell, but continue with deadheading and deal to weeds. Push-hoeing is ideal in the current weather because the weeds will wither and die very quickly.

· The first flush of monarch caterpillars has eaten the swan plants of many, as far as I can tell from Google searches. You can finish off relatively large caterpillars on sliced pumpkin but it is not a total diet so no good for little ones. If you have the space, sowing a row of swan plant seed right now and making sure you keep it covered, will give you feed for later flushes of caterpillars. We target the late season, so we can get the monarchs wintering over in the garden, by sowing seed now but you do have to protect the crop to stop any eggs being laid on small plants. Very hungry caterpillars will demolish the lot extremely quickly with no regard for later generations.

· Mulch asparagus beds and let the remaining spears develop into leaf to strengthen the crowns for next season. Asparagus is a permanent crop but the crowns do have a finite lifespan – usually said to be about 15 years. Ours are considerably older than that but the crop this year was so poor, despite regular care, that we have had to resign ourselves to the thought that the bed has passed its use by date.

· Shamed by the very handsome strawberries I brought home from a local PYO place, Mark finally built an impressive netting cover for our bed, using our own bamboo, and we look forward to beating the birds to fresh fruit on Christmas Day.

Dreamers of the Day: A History of Auckland’s Regional Parks, by Graeme Murdoch.

This weighty, hardback tome is more likely to be a presentation book throughout its life than a best seller. Presumably the new Super City council will be quite happy to continue presenting it, even though it is clearly the legacy of the Auckland Regional Council. One hopes the new council will value these regional parks as much as those who were the original instigators followed by those who kept the dreams alive by protecting and developing these publicly owned areas. There are quite a few such parks ranging from the well developed Auckland Bot Gardens, through reserves at Muriwai and Long Bay to the larger tracts of regional parklands in the Waitakere and Hunua ranges, along with many others in between which are probably largely taken for granted. The author has meticulously documented everything and there are many photographs, both historic and modern, in a book that has spared no expense or detail. The book will be of limited interest outside Auckland but these records are important to have, if only to avoid corporate amnesia and to prevent a repeat of the era in the mid eighties which threatened the future of these valuable and valued open spaces. Open spaces are going to become more important in the future, not less, but possibly even harder to protect from the ravages of development.
(Random House; ISBN: 978 1 86979 332 6)

Making a bamboo support or obelisk for climbing plants, step-by-step with Abbie and Mark Jury

1) If you have access to a stand of giant bamboo, making an obelisk or stylish tepee to act as a frame for climbers such as clematis or runner beans is not difficult. With bamboo’s often wayward habits, owners of such stands may be willing to part with a stem or two. It needs to be freshly cut to split easily.

2) Cut to the required length – two to two and a half metres is about right. Tie a wire about 25cm from the top, just below a node, to prevent the length from splitting right to the end. Use pliers to secure the wire tightly and trim it off neatly.

3) Using a hammer and an old knife as a cutter-wedge, make a cut exactly in the centre of the bottom of the pole. Tapping on alternate sides, work the split up to just below the wire. The first cut is the most difficult but once started, you can pull apart the two sides. With bamboo, lift up one side and start splitting. Then turn it over and split from the other side, alternating so that it splits evenly. If you keep lifting from one side only, that side will keep getting narrower.

4) Repeat the previous step four times in total, so you have eight separate sections. Our sections are about 3cm wide. The difficult part is splitting the nodes on the length of bamboo which can take some strength.

5)Use flexible ties such as grape vine, wisteria or willow to weave between the struts at intervals. Inserting a bucket will hold the shape while you do this, along with a temporary tie of baling twine. It is the ties that will keep the splayed shaped and give the climbing plant something to cling to.

6) The tepee will need to be secured to stop it blowing over. We tie the bases to simple bamboo stakes in the ground. You could use longer lasting pegs but we usually bring our teepees under cover in winter to prolong their life expectancy so old bamboo stakes as pegs are all we need to last for eight months.

Tikorangi Notes: Friday 3 December

Latest Posts: Friday, December 3, 2010

1) Why there is only one plant clearly and unmistakeably labelled in our garden – well, signposted might be more accurate – Ficus antiarus and related matters. Abbie’s column.

2) The attractive flowers on the sarracenia are a surprise to those who think the insect catching pitcher is the flower. Plant Collector.

3) Hints and tips on garden tasks for the week.

4) A Green Granny’s Garden – more a light holiday read than a gardening book.

Rhododendron sinonuttallii in all its glory this week

Rhododendron sinonuttallii in all its glory this week

Tikorangi Notes: Friday, December 3, 2010
We hurtled from a very wet and cold September (or so I am told – I was in the south of Spain at the time) straight into a very dry and mild October and November. We usually joke that three weeks without rain constitutes a drought in this green and mild area we live in. It is now two months since we have had any significant rain and there is none in sight. The garden looks more like late February. This is not weather we are at all accustomed to getting and there is growing anxiety in the rural sector. Notwithstanding that, the late rhododendrons have been flowering on cue and the R. sinonuttalliis have been a wondrous sight over the past week or two. Fragrance, big, beautiful pure blooms and astoundingly large, bullate foliage – what more could one ask?

Ficus antiarus, rare plants and why only one plant in our garden is clearly named

The curious fruit of Ficus antiarus

The curious fruit of Ficus antiarus

I admit to a wry smile when I read friend and colleague Glyn Church writing of the pileostegia (climbing evergreen hydrangea) He made a comment that if you are keen to buy one, alas he has stopped growing them because nobody seemed to know about them – which means nobody bought them. We were struck by them growing up huge brick walls at Hidcote in Gloucestershire and had volunteers running all over the place to find a gardener to identify the plant.

We have our equivalent of the pileostegia. It is Ficus antiarus and it is the most asked about plant in our garden. We used to propagate a few but we realised that while everybody wanted to know what it was, nobody wanted to buy it. I was a bit stunned when somebody turned up last month asking for one. She was out of luck.

Ficus antiarus is a bit of a joke here. Probably close to half our garden visitors would ask what it was. We got to the point where somebody would produce a fruit, a digi camera with a photo or start to say: “What is the tree with the strange bulbous growths…” and we would chime in quickly. “Ficus antiarus,” we would say. “An obscure fig collected by Felix, Mark’s father, in New Guinea in 1957. That was back in the days when you could still bring new plants in to the country. No, the fruit do not grow any larger than that. They turn bright red-orange as they age and presumably the birds don’t like them much because they never strip it. Yes they do appear to be edible. I have tried them and they have a vaguely figgy taste but they are not very exciting to eat. Just a curiosity, really.”

Maybe I did get a bit carried away with the sign
Maybe I did get a bit carried away with the sign

This year, as I was getting some signage for carparking and toilets updated, I admitted defeat and had a sign made for Ficus antiarus. I say admitted defeat because we have resolutely held out against putting name plates on plants here, despite frequent plaintive comments about nothing being named. But as Festival neared its end, Mark commented that the one sign on Ficus antiarus had probably saved us several hours of repeating ourselves. He was very taken, however, by the dry comment from one garden visitor about the sign: “The size is a bit of a giveaway.” I didn’t think it was that large, but certainly you can’t miss it.

We have been intractable on refusing to name the plants in our garden. Public gardens are different. They have a strong educative function and are impersonal spaces. But this is our home, our personal space, even though we open the garden to visitors and we don’t want to see a whole lot of signage in our garden every time we step outdoors. The Ficus antiarus sign is only justified because it is a bit of joke. Besides, we have good memories and are very good at identifying plants by description and location, even though some visitors’ descriptions leave a lot to be desired. “What is the pink rhododendron flowering behind the house?” is a little vague when in fact the visitor is referring to one plant in the five acre park which lies beyond our home. And I admit it can be a challenge when they can’t even get the plant fanily right. “The big red rhododendron” has, upon occasion, turned out to be a telopea or waratah.

We have been to gardens where all plants are labelled. One in particular had every plant named with a section of venetian blind on which was written the name of the plant, the year of acquisition and nursery who supplied it. It was absolutely fascinating and we progressed from plant to plant, analysing the data so closely that we didn’t actually look at the garden context. It was a bit like going round a museum. It would be even worse in our garden where we don’t go in for mass plantings but pride ourselves instead on growing the widest possible range of interesting plants and where many of the garden plants are unnamed seedlings from breeding programmes. I have been to other gardens where owners have used the nasty plastic display labels sold for plant retailers – the aesthetics worry me. So we have no intention of naming all the different plants in ours.

My other observation about Glyn’s pileostegia and our ficus is to suggest to readers that when you see an interesting plant or one that you have been looking for, buy it on the spot, no matter your circumstances. There is no guarantee that you will find it offered again. The range of plants being grown in this country continues to contract, certainly in the woody trees and shrubs area. The phone calls I take on our business line during the day tend to be of two types. The first is people trying to find cheap griselinia hedging (just how many kilometres of griselinia hedging are being planted these days?) and the other group are people trying to find a particular plant.

Most times I have to reply that I don’t know of anyone producing it any more. The heady days of the late 80s and the 90s (now widely referred to as The Maggie Barry Era) when gardening was the rage and nurseries flourished, have long gone. There are few, very few, specialist nurseries still operating. In fact a fair swag of general nurseries have gone to the wall in the last decade and it is so rare for a new nursery to start that you should be able to hear a collective cry of encouragement ring around the industry when it happens. The result is that you will see a continued contraction in the range of plants being offered on the New Zealand market.

Do not be like the woman who talked to Mark about Davidia involucrata during our recent festival. That is the spectacular dove or handkerchief tree and we had a few plants for sale. She really wanted one but she wasn’t quite ready for it yet. Mark shrugged his shoulders and thought, “She’ll be lucky”. The chances of her finding a davidia when she is ready are not great at all.