More ponderings …

DSCN3335 (800x600)It’s been an eventful fortnight down by the pond, and not all of the news is good.

First there was the bandicoot problem.  You’ve heard of bandicoots?  Well they are not sweet little nocturnal creatures that snuffle and squeak and play in the garden at night, they are rotten little bastards that sneak in under cover of darkness, dig holes in your landscaping, pull out plants and throw mulch everywhere.  I’ve had to erect a “bandicoot barrier” which is not exactly the look I was after.

Then there was the algal growth caused by sunlight … I’ve had to install a shade sail to cover the pond until the tree-ferns grow big enough to take over.  Again, not exactly the look I was after.

Then there was the death (my fault) of twelve goldfish!  I was enthusiastically watering the surrounds of the pond with tapwater, and it seems that goldfish are more fragile than you would think and die at the mere whiff of chlorine.  Strangely, three goldfish have survived, although they may still die of cardiac arrest as the result of my tame kookaburra taking regular “dive-bomb” baths, causing panic and minor tidal waves.

On the upside – two more frogs have arrived.  The Eastern Dwarf Tree frog is smaller than the first joint of your little finger but sounds like a large ratchet.  And the evasive little Smooth Toadlet, called smooth because it is less warty than other toadlets, it makes a squelching sound.  There have also been several blue tailed damsel flies swooping and landing on the pond edges.
All good news …

And then there were two …

DSCN3262 (800x600)Another frog has answered the call and made it across the parched paddock to my pond. Somehow I doubt that there will be many more until we have some rain … the town that floods regularly is having a “drought”.  We’ve had no proper rain since the beginning of July.
Dare I wish for rain ???

The first frog arrives …

DSCN3244 (800x600)Well, as the saying goes … “If you build it, they will come”

And last night the first frog arrived to check out the new pond – barely five weeks after I finished landscaping the edges.  It’s my second favourite frog – the red-eyed green tree frog.  I was aware that there was a colony nearby as their calls could be heard in the distance after rain … but I’m amazed they made it uphill and across an open paddock in such a short time.
How did they know ?????

Sadly, my favourite frog sounds website has been taken down, but I here is a link to a You Tube posting which will tell you why it’s also known as the raucous tree-frog“. It looks like I might be in for a noisy summer !!
DSCN3239 (800x600)

I’m sick of Mulberries …

DSCN3182 (800x600)Apparently mulberries are somewhat of a wonder fruit … packed full of anti-oxidants, minerals, vitamins, and even iron – which is a good thing because I’m picking an average of a kilogram a day.  And that does not include the berries eaten by the birds and bats, or those that fall onto the ground before I can pick them, or the ones that fall into my mouth as I am picking – although that quantity has lessened since I discovered that scoffing a large quantity of mulberries has a rather undesirable consequence (if you know what I mean!!)

Since finding the mulberry tree at the bottom of my garden soon after I moved in, I have done nothing to it except severely prune it about 18 months ago – no water, no sprays, no fertilizer – nothing.  Goodness knows what would have happened if I had lavished it with care….

So my freezer is full of mulberries, and so is Des & David’s (thank you), and now I need to add to my single mulberry recipe repertoire to avoid boring everybody including myself!