Sunday 28 September 2014

Week 39 - all go in the garden!


This tiny toad was spotted in one of my pots and I had to take a photo of it.  It is so camouflaged that it is not easy
to see it.  Behind it an old owl tea light holder that lost one of its legs, now reclines against the wall watching over the plant pot.  Lots of lavendar cuttings surround the toad.

My compost bin is getting filled with spent veggie plants, especially the tomatoes, which are almost finished now.  I chop up the stems as finely as possible as it makes it easier to degrade.  

There must be thousands if not millions (not sure if I am now exaggerating here) of creepie crawlies in the compost bin underneath the new additions and I hate to see the mass moving and swaying together with a gentle whirring noise as they all get down to doing what they do... 

I use this plastic container to put my chopped bits when I am preparing food, and then it goes straight to the compost bin on a daily basis.   Used tea bags, celery leaves, end bits of peppers, onion peelings, lemon rinds, everything that can be composted goes in!

Leaves are beginning to fall so I am carefully picking them up and adding to old compost sacks with holes in them to make nice, firiable leaf mulch for the spring.

Below a sleeping cat lying in my rockery area!!! 


This fig tree was growing way out of hand and so I have pruned it back and it now looks much neater!

An elephant bench in the shade of the fig tree


I sometimes come here to sit and view the lovely countryside below...

Rosemary bush growing rampantly.  There is more than enough here to use in all my cooking!

This bay leaf tree got cut in half during a windy storm and we thought we had lost it, but is is now growing back very nicely.  I think I need to reshape it by cutting off all the offshoots at the bottom of the tree.


Roll on Week 40!!!

Sunday 21 September 2014

Week 38 - jobs in the garden

I woke up unusually early on Monday and just caught this beautiful sunrise from the balcony. It turned out to be a very nice day and I got lots of gardening done, inbetween popping into the wikis, blogs and forum posts on the online course I am currently moderating.

I caught this kitten red-handed lying in one of the nesting boxes in the chicken pen!  Luckily Freddy wasn't around, otherwise there may have been a problem......

Lots more potting and repotting and planting of bulbs and generally tidying up in the orchard.  I try to give the fruit trees a boost by clearing away weeds, and then adding fresh compost around the trunk of the tree such as this olive tree: 


Pear tree below:
 
We have quite a few trees, comprising of plums, peaches, apples, pears, pomegranates, almonds, cherries, so it is a big job, and of course the 90 olive trees.  I can only tackle the smaller trees as it would take forever to spring clean all of them!

My cucumbers are still growing and this morning I made a cucumber and celery soup for supper tonight..

The peppers are also coming along nicely and I am picking them daily.
I have 5 tomato plants of a different variety growing very closely together at the back of the veggie plot. I made a mistake planting them so close together as they have now evolved into a huge mass with all 5 plants intertwined and linked and so they are too squashed and not enough light is getting to the fruits.  Mea culpa!!

The 'rockery' area is coming along well and I have interspersed false flowers amongst the sedum cuttings to give it more colour whilst the cuttings are growing.  A lot of weeds abound and it is a constant job removing them!

 A sedum cutting doing incredibly well below.

Below an 'Aloa Vera' plant growing really well from a cutting.  I used a part of its liquid sap to heal a cut on my hand and the effect was almost instant, with the balm soothing the pain very quickly.  I am happy to use what is in the garden as natural remedies....  One things though, this plant has very spiky edges and I have to be very careful when I am near it !!
 

Finally, for a bit of fun I created a certificate from a free online certificate maker that I had come across via Twitter a week or so ago.  Hard to believe I arrived in Madrid 35 years ago, ready to start teaching EFL at the Briam Instituto.  Where have the years gone?  How have I evolved as a teacher in all these years?  Do I still have what it takes to be an effective teacher?  Has my way of teaching evolved over these years?  I think I can answer yes to these soul-searching questions!!  I sometimes wonder how would my life have been different if British Airways had accepted my application to be a flight attendant....

Roll on Week 39!!

Sunday 14 September 2014

Week 37 - Time for planting bulbs..

I thought I was over the worst on Sunday and had had a good day, but Sunday night was sleepless and full of coughing, and I woke up on Monday feeling quite rough, so I had to finally admit defeat, and off I went to the doctor's in Civitaquana.  The very nice and sympathetic temporary female doctor listened to my breathing and looked down my throuat and told me I had a chest infection, and laryngitis.  She prescribed a course of strong antibiotics and I duly starting taking them.  This week has been full of restful periods, but also I have been trying to get to grips with a new online course and system.  Because I was still feeling under the weather, it was a bit of a struggle at times, but I think I managed to keep up with everything, thank goodness.

Inbetween working, my focus has been on planting bulbs!  I bought over 100 bulbs in the local supermarket and decided I would get them planted as soon as possible.

The bulbs included special trays, and I thought it would be good to see how they work out and so I treated myself to not just one but three trays of mixed colours and varieties.
 

 Below two of the planted up pots with green meshing and an ornamental cockerel on top of them to keep the cats away!


 Two curious kittens looking on...


This Fluffy look-alike kitten below in an old paint pot looks quite cute!  He seemed quite happy to be in there.  Maybe we should name him Max after the Max Meyer paint pot!


I also started repotting plants, and taking cuttings of sedum, which always 'takes' beautifully.


I gathered lots of fruit, including plums, grapes, apples, pears and figs and then made lots of bowls of fresh fruit salads for puddings, with icecream.



Finally, to finish off this post, an image of a souvenir of a San Gabriele souvenir jug I bought for my beloved grandmother many years ago, and which I was able to keep after she passed away.  I now keep it in the kitchen and put my basil in it....


The past couple of weeks have been very quiet, but I am now finally looking forward to being back to my normal self, ready for Week 38!
 

Sunday 7 September 2014

Week 36 - Under the Weather

 On inspecting all my collection of Bombonnieri on Monday, I found that most of the sugared almonds had gone off and were of a very sticky and inedible nature, so I disbanded all of them and will use the bits and pieces for craftwork and hence recycle things.  The little flower stems have been added to my tub above which now contains lots of parsley seeds.  I am not sure if the seeds will grow as it is unseasonally wet and a bit cool at the moment, so we shall see.

Below a motley crew of furkids, at one point 5 of them all squashed together during a bad thunderstorm.  Raymondo is the prominent white kitten and he is very cute!!


As of Tuesday things didn't go too well.  I wasn't feeling too good, just generally under the weather.  I had Samantha and Victoria lying side by side on top of me when I was resting on the couch.   All of a sudden a mega cat fight broke out between them and I ended up being bitten on my index finger on a very soft part of the skin.  It hurt a lot!!  I noticed that my finger had become all red and swollen and very painful I decided I didn't want to reach out to Dr Google to see what it would say about being bitten by cats and the consequences.  I vaguely remembered reading an article about someone who had died after her pet cat had bitten her, but I really didn't want to think about this, so I ignored it.....

Wednesday and Thursday I had to do a lot of preparation for an online course starting next week and I simply overdid it on the computer and my eyes got very tired. In addition I had come down with a very bad cold and an annoying cough, so I took to a bed in the spare roomI whiled away the hours listening to the Italian radio and a parade of cats peering in from outside the window checking to see if I was ok, kept me occupied.




I also managed to read a few chapters of a book called Stay Positive!

It helped me to put things in perspective about my temporary 'down period'.  In life, we all suffer minor setbacks and we just have to deal with them!

On Sunday (today) I feel much better and I have decided to venture out again into the veggie plot that has been totally neglected for the past few days.  

I received a beautiful Jacqie Lawson ecard from one of my dear colleagues and this really cheered me up and spurred me on to get back to normal.  Thanks, Carol!!


http://www.jacquielawson.com/

Cat bite update
I have just succumbed to my curiosity and looked up 'consequences of cat bite' on Google and as I feared a cat bite could lead to a severe infection, hospitalization, many courses of antibiotics and ultimately and occasionally, possible death!!!!  I still can't bend my finger properly, but I think it is definitely getting better and is not so red and painful now, thank goodness, so I will monitor the situation and go to a doctor only if it gets worse.....

I am keeping positive, so I am sure my bite (or puncture wound) will go away of its own accord......