Gardening connects us all (Perth edition)

If you remember, our friend and Downbeat on Shortwave collaborator Jesse Yuen (of RTMFM’s North of The River Swan) moved into a new house in Perth last year and is doing some major work on his front garden. His last post was here and we’ve got an update and it’s a great one!

“Okay, so this is the next chapter in what I’m calling “re-wilding” our front yard…”, over to you Jesse:

The house was built in 1963 and right up to that point, our property was just undeveloped bushland. In the ’50s and ’60s the urban sprawl in Perth started to spread through our suburb and giant bush blocks owned by rich people were divided up into smaller lots and sold off as private properties. At the same time the government built road infrastructure through the area and our house was one of the first built on the street. We bought the house from the family who built it, who had raised a couple of generations of kids in it so when we moved in, it still felt very much like theirs.

We purposely let the front yard die, didn’t water the lawn for a year, ripped up the non-local vegetation and essentially completely neglected it. People walking past must have thought we were crackheads, because it was looking very rough by the end. The goal was to remove the effort of clearing it by hand, let it die naturally and create a sustainable garden that probably was similar to what would’ve been growing there 100 years ago.

We adopted a technique we’ve heard about called “smothering”, essentially covering the entire area in cardboard, watering it in so it moulded to the present topography and then laying a heavy amount of mulch on top. The weeds and the things we didn’t want would be starved of sunlight and oxygen so not being able to photosynthesise and die without needing any pesticides or laborious weeding.

We progressively laid cardboard over the entire garden and weighed it down with bricks then watered it all in, making it mushy and soft and moulding itself into the ground. I’ve been saving up cardboard for the last year, luckily moving house means you have a lot of the stuff on hand. It was great to use all our own cardboard rather than buy it and we also had some concrete around the house from renovations and stuff too. I salvaged a bunch of slabs from the back yard and made a cute little path through the front of the garden.

I was incredibly disheartened to find that within weeks, local weeds had figured out how to grow through the cardboard through the mulch (below). The primary villain in this war of weeds Is this one: Oxalis pes-caprae, commonly known as African wood-sorrel, Bermuda buttercup, Bermuda sorrel, buttercup oxalis, Cape sorrel, English weed, goat’s-foot, sourgrass, soursob or soursop.

Kids growing up in the ’80s and ’90s in Perth called it sour grass and we would eat the stems and the flowers for snacks, even though it is incredibly sour as the name suggests. Without a doubt if you were seen picking it, a kid would tell you that a dog probably had peed on that patch of sour grass but you’d probably ate it anyway. This weed comes from a bulb buried deep underground and I must’ve left tons of it buried in the soil because it’s everywhere now.

You can see how long its stem is (above), it’s probably extended itself maybe 20 cm to burst through the cardboard and the mulch to find the sunlight. Really impressive, life will find a way right? They have come up everywhere in the garden and I’m experimenting with pouring boiling water over it all because I refuse to use any chemical chemicals to kill the weeds.

By the way, these last couple of days was heavily soundtrack by this tender, contemporary jungle album by Coco Bryce.

 

Cheers Jesse for sharing your story and pictures, we really appreciate it and look forward to the next part which he says is a cracker. “There are some nice plants coming along in the yard and some of them are getting a lot of commentary from the neighbours as they walked past which is great too.”

Late night saturday vibes (9pm)

Here’s a couple of electronica bits for the last Saturday of warmish weather before the cold comes in (so it said on the weather forecast on the telly this evening). The first tune was played by Steve Barker on the great On The Wire last week (here) and is called Forma III by Donato Dozzy & Sabla. Wonderful stuff!

 

And above another great one on the Serafin Audio Imprint out of Germany “supporting slow and beautiful music all around the world” from Mark Mywords & JOOR called Belzehuble (Ed Noodle Remix). A nice chilled one that builds as it goes along and ends with a bit of an acid house squelch. A tune for standing on chairs and flailing the arms about to for that long lost rave feeling from a time when going to bed at 10pm was frowned upon!

Towards the end of the growing season

Cheers to Mike & Julia from near Coventry for sharing a towards the end of season photographic report (fantastic pictures as ever Julia!) This is going to be a two parter as there’s so much good stuff been sent. Their comsos are looking fine (above and below).

Their garden doesn’t half look fine even at this time of year. We thought our garden was looking beyond repair but last weekend with a bit of a lawn cut and a trim and pulling out of the tomato plants and some dead heading it didn’t look too bad in the end but nowhere as great as these pictures.

We also love what we think is an echeveria (below) as those angular flowers look great and also those aster flowers (lower below).

Next part will include some dahlias amongst some other things. Keep them coming Mike & Julia and thanks again!

A message from Kyiv

As always, it’s good to hear from Wlad (US7IGN) in Ukraine. If you remember, Wlad was featured in a Radio 4 documentary called Lights Out in an episode called Call Signs (here) which was about life as a radio amateur living and working in Kyiv during the Russian invasion. He also has two books out about his experiences and they’re well worth reading if you want an insight on what is life is like out there. More about the books here.

Wlad was telling us that his good friend Sergiy (UT3UFD) is not only growing a banana tree (more on that here) and bonsai but he’s also growing seeds from fruit he eats. The photos above and below are his avocado plants, brilliant stuff. Thanks for keeping us updated, Wlad, and as always, our best wishes to you and Sergiy over there.

We’ve found something on the RHS website about growing avocados plants from seed here. It’s interesting stuff.

And now the end is near

The back garden is in a bit of a mess at the moment as we haven’t been able to go out there as much as we would have liked to of late. There’s a still a couple of things that make us smile though. This morning we saw this cosmos (above), peeking through the broken paving slabs at the back of the pond after our “throw them everywhere” sowing experiments earlier this year.

The echinacea we got from B&Q (above) is still making a stand and hopefully if it don’t rot off over the winter due to the heavy soil here we’ve get more next year and the calendula (below) which was sown by the same method is great too. Do send us your end of season pictures (to one deck pete at gee mail dot com) and we’ll post them up.

 

A view from north London

Cheers to Debby H for getting out in the garden and taking some pictures for us now things are coming to a close but you wouldn’t think it with these photographs though.

Above are the cosmos that are still flowering and looking great and below are some cosmos deadheads which’ll be used for seeds. Debby told us you don’t even need to break the seed heads up that much, just put them as they come in a seed tray in the spring. We have to deadhead ours actually, before it starts getting wet and the chance of things going mouldy on us.

Below “The sedum is now looking very pretty” she said and she’s right. It’s a nice plant and seems to do well in UK gardens. It loves full sun and can even tolerate a bit of shade and the bees and pollinators seem to love it.
Below, “Interestingly, one of the dwarf sunflowers that we thought was dead has grown three flowers where there was previously only one.” Brilliant stuff Debby! We look forward to more photos and thanks as ever for sending them on.

Gerry Hectic in another mix up style

Big shout to our good friend down south Gerry Hectic, for including a couple of Weeds up to me knees related tunes in a mix he’s done for the excellent Dubmission show called “I blame the coal board”. The show includes all sorts of great stuff on it and so much we’ve never heard before, so tune in. Wonderful mix Gerry, ta for including the tunes and hope all is well in the garden!

The pic above (of Gerry’s fence during a well windy period the other year) is quite apt what with the windy conditions we’re supposed to be experiencing later today.

Gerry Hectic’s “I Blame The Coal Board” Mix
Azimuth – The Tunnel [Late Night Tales]
Leo Chadburn – Move Like a Freight Train [Library of Nothing]
Wojtek Mazolewski Quintet – Beautiful People (Slow Version) [NoPaper]
Radio Halesowen Town – Commenetary Grimbsy Borough vs. Halesowen Town [FA Cup UTY, 13.09.25]
Madtone – Interval Signal Jazz (Blossoms Kitchen)
Farda P – Catfood Supachunka (‘Wolverhampton’ Edit)
Rockers Hi-Fi – Going Under [!K7]
One Deck & Popular – Enrico (Hay-eer-yah’s Harmonica Cut) [Black Country Route]
Session Victim – Behind The Glass [Delusions of Grandeur]
Kuniko Yamada – Tetsugaku Shiyo (Viens Philosopher) [Rush Hour]
Public Enemy – Fight The Power (Robot84 Jazztastic Edit) [Robot Edits]
Pittsburgh Track Authority – Slide (7am Mix) feat. Brandon Markell Holmes [In The Machine Age]
Jean Jaques Smoothie – 2People feat. Tara Busch & Rochenko (Dubwise Mix) [Colour & Pitch]
Biggabush – This River feat. Jackie Walters (Gerry Hectic’s River Stour Towpath Extension) [Tru Thoughts]
Lynyn – 4m Hiero [Sooper]
Darren Morris – Deep Morning [Ramrock Noir]
Gerry B. Hectic – 10 Seconds Over Bournemouth (aka The Beginning Of The End)

But, do you know where you lad’s going tonight?

This morning we found the long version of the 1970’s public information film “Do you know where you lad’s going tonight?”, the shorter version of it used on One Deck Pete‘s “Lesson 1” mix here at 9.09 in.

The full version has a cockney sing-along by who we first thought was Lonnie Donegan  but turns out it’s Joe Brown and the Brothers.

It’s a real shame though that the tune didn’t have lyrics around the subject of the advert (being 1970’s vandalism) like “I’m bored with the crap in the biscuit tin, may go down the town and put a few wind-aws in. A neighbour’s greenhouse has all its panes intact, I’m going to smash them all now, with a brick in fact” but you can’t have everything!