Sunday, September 22, 2013

Prescott's Poster Child!


Matt hadn't seen one on his place in 30 years but this Spring just look what sprung. It's a Finger Flower - the very same featured on Ann Prescott's book 'It's blue with five petals'. There you have the poster child for all blue 5 petalled SA flowers...

Finger-flower Hand-flower
Cheiranthera alternifolia
Pittosporaceae

Shrub with few straggling stems to about thigh high. Leaves narrow, held out from the stem. Large flowers in small groups at the end of stem. Petals a rich blue. Anthers bright yellow and all on one side of the centre of the flower, like fingers of a hand. Scattered in heath and forests but not common. Spring.

unid2
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Tuesday, May 7, 2013

When a weed is not a weed

[from Tim]

According to Ann Prescott’s “It’s Blue with Five Petals” the sticky plant with small yellow flowers that we didn’t pull out in the dry frog pond on Sunday is a native plant in the daisy family (Family: Asteraceae , alt. Compositae) - botanical name Sigesbeckia orientalis , common name Indian Weed or Oriental sigesbeckia

http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/family.pl?110

daisysig

There is debate about this species being native or introduced, but the SA Herbarium treats this species as native. Also native to Asia and Africa.

http://www.flora.sa.gov.au/cgi-bin/speciesfacts_display.cgi?form=speciesfacts&name=Sigesbeckia_orientalis

It’s an interesting plant up close, covered with thousands of small glands, hence its stickiness.

Thanks again for coming along to yesterday’s working bee.

Cheers,
Tim

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Working Bee Words: A big thanks and a rare event


Thanks to all those who were able to come along on a glorious day on our hill in the latest instalment of the Weed War. The weeders were: Jemima & Craig (and Lulu) Ben, Alison (and Ellie), Paul, and Tim. Brief skirmishes were the order of the day with a very useful mix of weeds, good/bad grasses and the odd dog rose flushed out. While we've had better starts to a day (we arrived to discover our 5 newly minted water tanks trashed by a freak storm on Thursday) we ended the session with a discovery (thanks Ben and nice to meet you!) of a rare Clover Glycine patch.

clover2

(Glycine Latrobeana) Classified as 'Vulnerable' under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972

National Recovery Plan

SA Fact Sheet

Atlas of Living Australia

clover1

We really can't wait to live on the place, build on what we've learned these last few years and develop a considered approach to bush management. Very exciting.

Next month - Alison, Steve and Ellie's place...