It has taken me a while to sort this out and so here is the latest of our Wildlife in our garden.
Mr Hare (or was it Mrs?) was lazily loping around our back garden a week or so ago. They are extremely shy (as would you be, hunted by vignerons who object to you chewing through their drip lines) so it was fortunate I was able to sneak round the corner without opening the laundry door and get two photos. The moment he heard the click of the camera he was off and running.....
The photo of the spring vines was taken some weeks ago now. They are shiraz grapevines and belong to the next door neighbour. They look so delicate at that stage and you wonder where they get the energy from after the rough harvesting they have endured in Autumn when they look so battered and bruised.
Because the weather has been damp some days, the fumigating machines have been very busy in the vines keeping the downy mildew and other nasties at bay. It seems a constant battle for them but if they don't spray the sulphur, they would have no grapes to harvest.
The photo with the tall,straight gum tree is the view from my studio window.
It can be very inspirational looking out on this at times when I am stuck for ideas to go on with for my stitched art works. It was a seedling we decided to keep as the Holm oak had refused to grow there. Holm oaks can be very slow to get going but grow into magnificent shade trees.
The Holm oaks in front of our kitchen windows are flowering prolifically and the bees are there in droves....this is so exciting to have such numbers of bees as they have been sparse for several seasons and perhaps, just perhaps our zuchinis will be fertilized and so will our Queensland blue pumpkins and I may yet realize my dream of pumpkin vines covering the front yard and pumpkins in such numbers as to be embarrassing and so lots to give away and share......