rabbits, roses and lemon roasted potatoes

Have a lovely day.

For dinner on Christmas Day we are having a steak and cheese pie! And someone has requested a pavlova! Of course! Follow the link to my MaMa’s pav recipe – if you want to make one too.

I am off to begin my watering and a bit more unpacking. We are almost done.

Take care and Talk soon.

Celi

PS the blog is going out three times a week while I am away. Just during this busy time. Alice is twice a week on Substack and the newsletter will continue on Sunday.

Though yesterday’s newsletter is a Christmas story. (Consistency is something I struggle with👗!!).

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16 responses to “rabbits, roses and lemon roasted potatoes”

  1. Well my goodness- I believe this is the very first 3 page blog post I have ever seen anywhere on WP.
    You had me laughing when you mentioned that the “livestock” had arrived! Quiet, almost self-sufficient but not really the type you want to pet or teach tricks like sitting for their food I suppose 🙂

    The rabbit is as big, or maybe bigger than the cat. Who chases who I wonder? What is that tree by the road? I like the symmetry of it and also the way the sun is making it glow.

    I will go to my sons home for Christmas dinner. I am making the salad and while you know my tiny garden was wildflowers, not veg, I was overcome to find some lovely greens in the grocery store early this morning and most on sale. An added bonus was finding organic asparagus- the tiny newly harvested thin stalks that you can just eat one by one, raw if you like. Half for tomorrow as I prep salad ingredients and the other half of the bunch for my day after Christmas feast of leftovers.

  2. “rabbits, roses and lemon roasted potatoes” sounds like a recipe from the Levant! Beware the rabbits – Audrey showed me a video of her large male, standing up to steal Oatcakes off a kitchen chair. This wasn’t something encouraged for an internet video, he could smell them and got clever. He did it repeatedly too!

    Buy lots of chicken wire and put it above and below your raised beds. Rabbits are smart!

  3. Hi Celi…..Just checking in on you down there. Looks like you are “as busy as a one-armed coal miner” as my dear old aunt used to say. I know how much energy you seem to have and you always gett’er done. Just a thought about your short hedge in front of your house….we have them same thing here in AZ and it does seem to soften the house a little, but I have also taken out a section of it and replaced it with beautiful ruffly ferns. They seem to do well in both the heat and the shade. Just sharing what worked for us.

    Christmas dinner is at my sister-in-laws….I’m bringing the napkins! Ha….. Something my beautiful mother told me TO ALWAYS volunteer to bring…bless her heart.

    Jo

  4. You could plant clivias behind that box hedge. They like dry shade, they do well in Melbourne, and the flowers are gorgeous when they bloom. I had a worm farm when I lived in Melbourne but it perished in the stinking hot 45°C Christmas we had one year; the plastic container didn’t keep out the heat very well, despite being draped in damp sacking. I hope you have a lovely Christmas Day with your daughter, Miss C, lots of love from the hot, sweaty tropics up here. 33°C and thunderstorms forecast for north Queensland.

    • 45 is outrageous. And yes the wet sack in the shade would have been good – in the heat you can always pop a couple of frozen bottles of water in with the worms too. Mine is such a small container we can just carry it all into the wash house. We had a worm farm that lasted years in the last house so I prefer to stay positive.

  5. Tidings of comfort and joy ….my worms are my pride and joy . My brother got me going on worms decades ago. They provide a lot of liquid for all my house plants and garden. Love hearing the plans and plantings you are doing with your daughter. Be well.

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