THE OCEAN CRASHES ONTO THE ADVENTUROUS

Crashing waves, the Twelve Apostles, Port Campbell National Park


Windswept by the Twelve Apostles, Port Campbell National Park

The Twelve Apostles, Port Campbell National Park

Tourists on the beach near the Twelve Apostles, Port Campbell National Park

Thunder Cave, the Twelve Apostles, Port Campbell National Park

 

Tourists tend to stick together, sometimes it’s hard to appreciate something when there are so many people trying so hard to do the same on all sides. We made a plan to return to the Twelve Apostles on a day that was not sun drenched Summer.

If you just venture a little to the west and down there are wilder adventures for those who leave the guide rail behind, past the Thunder Cave and onto the rocks. As we approached our fellow wanders they were frozen on the horizon in the act of a guilty holiday pleasure. They counted down the seconds until the wave crashed onto the rocks as he stood posed on an imaginary surfboard, the ocean had other things in mind, drenching them, squeals and all, washing away their hopes for a novelty holiday photo. Tourists can be determined though and we all rushed onto the cliff edge with renewed vigor to stand in various bizarre poses, playing chicken with the surf.

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AMATEUR APIARISTS

Removing bars from top bar hive

Honey bee close up on a glove

Smoker for bees being lit

Removing bars from top bar hive

Worker bees on bar

Jess brushing bees off honeycomb

Honeycomb oozing with honey

Looking up at the comb from below

Honey dripping off comb

Jess with a bee sting, taking one for the team

Top bar hive with roof off

Jess watching from a safer distance after her sting

Honey on the raised earthbag garden beds

Brushing off bees after the collection

 

The warm, sweet smell of honey was so strong it had begun to sway towards the sickly side of delicious. We thought it might be time to harvest a few bars.

Last year when bee mania hit our sharehouse the newspaper arrived on our doorstep with a front page cautionary tale of beekeeping gone wrong in Flemington. We considered ourselves safe as long as we steered clear of “bizarre nocturnal attempt(s) to move a beehive onto a roof” and “beer fueled escapade(s)” . But when it came time to try harvesting our honey, finding ourselves short of a suit, smoker and experience, we thought who better to call than our Irish neighbour of “bee bungle” fame, we bee keepers have to stick together and afterall 60 stings later he would surely be a lot wiser for his experience.

Quick to laugh and enjoy the challenges of the bee keeping experience, Andrew was a delightful addition to our little honey gang. And challenges are never shy around us, culminating in our bees having been very busy over spring fusing the bars diagonally to each other rather than in neat little lines. So the removal experience wasn’t quite as easy as we had hoped, a call to the bee man, Martin, informed us we would probably have to remove the offending combs in winter and start afresh! There weren’t many stings, although one did involve an unfortunate incident of a bee flying up someone’s pants which elicited gales of laughter from the flats above.

The gorgeous, golden Flemington honey was worth our misadventures and hopefully with a little bit of experience we will be running our bee operation in a less chaotic fashion next year.

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AUTUMN FLOWERS AND UNRULY CLIMBERS

Happy hens demanding food scrap treats

Happy hens demanding food scrap treats

Cleaning up the garden for the open garden in April

 

Zucchini tromboncino in umbelliferae bed

Sunflowers in the driveway

Raised earthbag garden beds in autumn

Maize in the orchard

Pots on the deck

Pepperfish chilli varigated leaves

 

Watercress in the bird bath

Yellow viola bordering the legume garden bed

Eating green beans in the garden

Purple violas in the legume bed

Harvesting beetroot

Orange poppy in the legume bed

Legume bed with flower and herbs around the border

White zinnia in the brassica bed

View from legume bed into solanace bed

Painted lady runner beans

Garden beds in full autumn flush

 

For a while the garden was inconsolable, having missed the spring flush it went into a right sulk, but with autumn here, not even the shyest runner bean has been able to resist unfurling for a sun bake. We have been in a mad flurry trying to get the garden into order for our open day in April. Through January and February beach weather demanded a lot of our attention, but now with the threat of judgmental strangers raising a questioning eyebrow at wilting vines and sorry spring remnants we have to get to the business of patching up the render and getting onto that damn earth oven!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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