Sourdough.

Sourdough is a great way to make bread at home. Its special qualities are a flavour profile unique to the culture used, slowness of rising, which allows you to prepare it during the course of a day or even overnight, and its longer keeping time compared with yeast bread. I have been making sourdough for a few years now, from one culture. My reference is a great book by Emily Buehler called Bread Science, which you can get online here. The distinguishing feature of sourdough is that it is leavened…

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Drosera capensis sundew

This sundew looked so pretty in the sun this morning. It’s Drosera capensis, from South Africa. My plants are about 3rd generation, from a plant that stowed in growing with a pitcher plant. They have stems of little pink flowers, which open one per day, then hundreds of dust-like seeds that germinate freely in the right spot. Keeping these is all about the potting medium. They will not tolerate fertilizer, so specialty mixes are necessary. Sphagnum, peat, sand and perlite are all good, singly or in combination. These ones are growing…

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Easy orchids

Lots of orchids grow easily in Sydney, given the right spot. The native orchids are a good starting point. The big Dendrobium speciosum rock orchid is spectacular, and although ideal in a tree, will grow well on a board in a lightly shaded or East-facing spot. Little Dendrobium kingianum is sweet and super tough, will grow almost anywhere and even in soil. Dendrobium nobile grows easily in bark, and the Cooktown orchid, Dendrobium phalaenopsis grows and flowers with protection from winter cold. Cymbidiums grow easily and flower reliably when given…

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Zygopetalum

This Zygopetalum is tough and reliable. It makes a dramatic indoor plant while it flowers in May and June, and also has a strong sweet scent, something like hyacinths. It’s a big plant so it gets a pot on the floor while it’s inside. This is a very hardy orchid, and it grows happily on the South balcony with morning sun in summer, no cold protection in winter (and full shadow) and rainwater or a weekly watering when it’s dry.

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Purple Dancing Ladies

This orchid flowers twice a year if we are lucky; a small flowering in Autumn and the main show in Spring. It’s tough and stays out on the South facing balcony unless it’s flowering, then it lasts for a long time indoors and has a beautiful vanilla scent. It is one of the Oncidium type, apparently a complex and uncertain genus. It likes bright light, with direct sun only early mornings if at all, and is happy with watering by rain, or a weekly watering if it’s dry. It is…

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Rooftop gardening herbs

Herbs are good plants for roof top gardening, as they are so tough and stay ready for picking when needed. On my rooftop terrace in inner city Sydney I grew them in big pots and troughs across the open North side, I had oregano, salad burnet, and parsley, lemon grass, thyme and chives, rosemary, and sage. In smaller pots against the East facing wall I grew mint, basil and coriander. The first eight are set and forget plants; the oregano seeds and spreads from year to year, and the salad burnet needs a…

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Intro

What I’d like to offer with these posts is some of our experience of living on the land, on a small holding. Our house is off-grid, so all our own power and water, which I hope may be an example of how a lot more people will live in the future. We are having fun building a garden, trying unusual vegetables, and building a stock of productive animals.

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Planning a balcony

The style you choose for your garden will influence not just the plants and pots you use, but also the function of the space. A Japanese style might be too densely planted to allow a large dining table and barbecue, but would be perfect if you need a quiet space to relax. For an urban garden you may want something that will work like an outdoor room, and it’s useful to think of the plants as items of furniture. That means not getting confused by the endless variety of plants…

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