How many of you live in a suburb? Or in town?
I find it hard to stay living amongst houses abutting houses. I don’t mind the people but I miss the horizon. Suburbs give me no horizon. I love the busy energy of town but I miss the gentle lope of my animals.
Yet I am continually surprised at the beauty a person in the suburbs achieves. The gardens here are lovely. The walkways and parks serene.
And every thing I need is so close. I don’t need a car at all.

I can walk to the cafe, the supermarket, the little grocery store, a little Italian restaurant, a park. The fish and chip shop ( tonight) and my daughter tells me there is a great fried chicken place close by too.
This give me my 10,000 steps a day easily.
I have stayed in three different suburbs in Melbourne as my daughter moved around and she always finds good coffee and a nice local restaurant we can walk to.
Something new everywhere but always coffee.
Plus these darling little gardens.

You know how I love the challenge of a rescue garden. I almost have my daughters garden up to date but there is couch grass (pronounced cooch where I am from) in the garden. Also known as kikuyu.

It is great in the lawn but in the garden it is a horror.

And cats in the pots in the garden are a horror too! I wondered why everything was dead in that cat sized pot. But KitKat is so sweet in an aloof kind of way.
I have pulled the couch grass off of the front garden – only one big patch to go, and dug the roots out, which is a monster job, but you never fully get rid of this nasty little grass. Plus it is so hungry and invasive (it’s roots can travel under concrete for almost 6 foot) – it sucks up all the nutrients from other plants and even makes the soil acidic so nothing competes with it.
I am not into using chemicals.
So, I mowed the lawn and have heaped hot grass clippings on top of the cleared gardens for the nutrients and smothering possibilities but I hold little hope of my daughter being able to eradicate it.
Any tips would be greatly appreciated. We have lots of gardeners on these pages.
I did notice that the patch of violets seems couch free so I am digging out and transplanting the violet trailers. Something has to grow there or we give the grass a free reign. Maybe they will help.
Nature hates a vacuum.
It is windy and a bit rainy looking today. I am going to grab my cup and walk down to the coffee shop before it starts to rain.

Take care and talk soon
Celi



12 responses to “KitKat and Kikuya in the Garden”
We have foxes that attack and burst car tyres because another fox has peed on them!
The poor heron nearly drowned trying to eat the gold fish. He got stuck and then waterlogged – the RSPCA had to come out and save him.
Not many cats around here though.
Melbourne is the coffee capital of Australia! The couch makes us sneeze and we have plenty in Alice Springs. Your daughter is lucky to have a mum to help with her garden! Any time you want to come on up to Alice…. xx
How wonderful to be able to sort out your daughter’s garden. That little cat seems to have taken over the flower pot. So cute.
It is a cute cat but so naughty!!
My garden & I would love you to come for a visit. I am in town but I must drive to the coffee shops, pubs, & restaurants. You could walk down the Green Way, over the creek, across the road, through the Botannical Gardens & the campus, down the hill & meet me there. Plenty of steps for your daily count but too many for me on my stick.
Are you in Melbourne?
oh, no. I am very far away in North Carolina. I just meant I live in a town as opposed to a suburb…..
That’s what I thought!!
Have a great day out there! What’s the weather like?
Ahh…..cooch grass…..called Buffalo Grass in my neck of the woods. It is impossible to eradicate, pulling it out by the roots is the only hope.
Looks like you are keeping yourself busy….You, sweet lady, are a dedicated worker bee! haha
Johisette@cix.net
Yes! It is beastly in a garden. But we will keep trying!
It is nice to see ‘summer’ with green and growth.
No green here, just burned browns.
Summer can be hard on a person – of course it is winter here in Melbourne.