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Corner of the shade house garden


Corner of the shade house garden



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Everything looks so lush in your garden Bushbernie.

6 Dec, 2024

 

All the greens are gorgeous BB! with the contrasting leaves of the pink plant, it's a smashing photo..

6 Dec, 2024

 

Thanks Klahanie and Janey. The bushland that surrounds our place is bleak, brown, dry and dreary for around nine months of the year so my pergola, courtyard and shade house garden areas are an antidote for that.

6 Dec, 2024

 

It looks really healthy and good for the wildlife too.

8 Dec, 2024

 

Yes Linda, I see lots of butterflies, bees, wasps, and little birds like the Sunbirds in there. I've also been seeing lots of grasshoppers as well but thankfully they're the small ones.

I won't mention the snakes!

8 Dec, 2024

 

Sounds good to me, and you are helping the wildlife survive too. I like snakes Bushbernie. What ones do you get in your garden?

9 Dec, 2024

 

Linda we see a lot of tree snakes - both the Green Tree Snake and the Brown Tree Snake - which are non-venomous.

We also see Pythons - the smaller Carpet Pythons and Spotted Pythons, and also the massive Amethystine Python which is Australia's largest snake. All Pythons are non-venomous constrictors.

On two occasions (in the 20 years we've been here) we've also seen the highly venomous Coastal Taipan. They are nasty, very aggressive snakes and the two we saw were not very polite or interested in leaving the house or workshop where we found them. They both had a swift end!!!

9 Dec, 2024

 

What a selection of snakes. When we lived on the Isle of Wight we used to see slow worms, and had a grass snake in the garden living in the compost heap. We saw an adder once near to the golf course next to our allotment.

9 Dec, 2024

 

Yes I'm afraid we do have a number of different snakes here in Oz. I've never had a bad encounter with one where I've been bitten.

As a kid, you get used to stomping around the garden and in the bush when you're out and about. It's a way of letting snakes know you're coming and they usually move on.

I had to look up "slow worms" and found out they are legless lizards. We also get a type of legless lizard here.

I also looked up the adders on the Isle of Wight and they look a little more serious given they are poisonous.

9 Dec, 2024



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