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Pest Notes

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Animal repellent for possums, rabbits and hares from the TreeCropper Magazine in NZ: Recommended by Eric Appleton from Appletons Tree Nursery.

Mix 5 eggs, 600ml water and 150ml acrylic paint. Spray it on your plants – very good for seedlings

Anti-Possum Fence    www.treecrops.org.nz/resrch/apple/cotago05.html
In a recent edition of the excellent West Australian publication Quandong Magazine Vol 32 No. 1, it has information from New Zealand on how the Coastal Otago Branch of the New Zealand Tree Crop Association control their possum problem in their conservation apple orchard at Volco Park north of Dunedin. The entire area was fenced first before plantings went in and since then “hot wires” were added to exclude grazing stock.  The photo shows fence posts about 3 mtrs apart and the key to this type of fence is that the lower part attached to the fence is rigid and the top part which extends above the fence posts about 2 mtrs is quite floppy with an overhang away from the orchard. Nearby vegetation is cleared well back.  Tall posts are attached at every 6th fence post to attach the upper part of the wire.

Ants   Wrap the trunk with duct tape – sticky side to the outside. (Make sure to go around just once and don’t overlap so the trunk can continue to grow.) On top of the tape you use a sticky resin. There is a product called Tanglefoot. It is a natural very stick resin. The ants will not cross that. You have to reapply every 3-6 months, depending on conditions. You would not want pesticide or diesel to contact the trunk as it could damage the tree. Even the Tanglefoot can damage the trunk if you put it straight on. You can also spray the ants with diluted dishwashing soap. That kills them. Some ants don’t like cinnamon and won’t cross a line of cinnamon. Ref:  Oscar, Hawaii

Ants    Todd in Guatemala has been using several different techniques due to the resources that they have on hand: 1.  Use an old 2 litre plastic soda bottle as a collar. Cutting the top and bottom off, make a vertical cut to put around the tree. Bury the collar a few inches in the ground. The ants can’t climb the plastic. 2.  The manure from another nest spread around your nest will make them leave. (Similar to all the male dogs peeing on the same post!) 3.  If there is a lot of water, domestic or rain water, flood their home. I dug a 6 inch ditch to canal to rain run off to flood their home/nest. After 3 days they abandoned their nest. 4.  The old timers say to put a banana plant on their nest. They don’t like the humidity of the banana roots.    

Bryan Brunner says that they have lots of biting ants in Puerto Rico and every country person knows that if you wear rubber (plastic?) boots, the ants won’t climb up them to bite you!!!  

Luc in Mexico uses a black plastic bag and ties one end around the base of the tree to protect and folds the whole thing down – has been working successfully for the past 6 months to stop ants climbing up.

Ants: Collect citrus bugs, put them into a jug of hot water then pour the brew down ant mounds or where you don’t want ants! 

Ants: Put small piles of corn meal around. They take it back to the nest and eat it but can’t digest it so it kills them.

Ant Deterent mixture:

500 gms polanta – cook like porridge; 1 cup golden syrup, mix with Fipronil or other ant deterrent like Crawly Cruncher and put around trunk of tree when fruit is on the tree. Put out once a month. Fipronil is very effective against insect pests, and may be used in doses of less than 0.5 grams of active ingredient per hectare. At these low concentrations it is not harmful to reptiles, birds or mammals (including humans). Fipronil does not dissolve in water so there is no danger of it threatening  water supply.

Diatomaceous earth is also said to act like a barrier if sprinkled around ant mounds. To ants it’s like crossing small pieces of glass and will encourage them to relocate mounds to a safer location.

In terms of a broadcast bait for ants, you can make you own by mixing 1 cup of sugar, 4 teaspoons of boric acid and 24 ounces of water in a glass jar. Close the jar tightly and shake the mixture thoroughly until all the crystals dissolve. Pour 1 cup of this mixture into a smaller jar filled partially with cotton balls. Screw the lid back on, seal around the lid with weatherproof tape and punch a few small holes in the centre of the lid.

General all-rounder for controlling pests: 1 dsp molasses, 1 tsp detergent, 500ml water

If you double the concentration of the molasses, you can use it as a possum repellent on your roses says Annette McFarlane …wonder if it works on fruit trees. The double concentration also works with nematodes.

Grubs on Cabbages  –  Try growing Wong Bok instead and sprinkle with a light dusting of fine salt when the heart first forms. Repeat every 2-4 weeks. Too much salt will burn the plant.

Insects love yellow so protect your citrus with netting, bag your fruit and hang fly traps in your trees.
Get a large 20 litre yellow bucket (white works too) fill it with 9 litres of water and they will fly into it. The versatile duct tape can also be used to get rid of white flys. Just staple the NON sticky side to a piece of Gyprock or similar material by opening up a stapler to a 180 degree angle and stapling it into the board. You can also use yellow sticky paper, whitefly/aphid traps. I use duct tape.  Tape the duct tape sticky side up.  You can accomplish this with a stapler into the wall. Masking tape also works with white flys, or try garlic/oliveoil/red pepper (red hot sauce works too)  Spiders are also natures sticky tape so get them to do your dirty work for you.   Tom Waters – www.

Possums  One of the ladies I met at the ABC Gardening Expo said that her mother had great success using garlic which she had segmented then threaded onto fishing wire and this had deterred possums from jumping onto the roof of their caravan.

Another new member brought along to the last meeting plastic spikes she had bought from Bunnings and apparently they had worked fairly well when she had wrapped a couple of them around her pawpaw tree.

Powdery Mildew Prior to spraying, the plant should have been watered for 2 days!

Mix 1 full teaspoon of baking soda, 1 tablespoon of mineral oil, half a teaspoon of dishwashing soap or insecticidal soap, 4 litres of water.

Milk Spray Recipe for Mildew: 12 cups full cream milk to 1 cup water. You could add 1tsp bi-carb also to it.

Steel wool can be loosely placed around the circumference of tree trunks to help prevent ants from walking up into the tree’s canopy.

Sterilize your tools:   Dip them in 1 part household bleach : 5 parts tap water. Then dip immediately into 1 part vinegar, 5 parts water and ¼ part salad oil.

Stink Bugs in Citrus:  Soap sprays or Pest Oil will treat nymph-stage stink bugs in winter. Dissolve 10gm of soap flakes in one litre of warm water but do not spray on hot days or foliage may burn. However, by the time stink bugs turn orange or bronze, they are hard to kill. Knock them into a bucket of hot water or use an old vacuum cleaner to such them up. Wear eye protection as they squirt caustic fluid.

White Ants:  One cup of Phenyl in a bucket of water and pour over infected tree.

White Louse Scale  Only use Lime Sulphur on deciduous trees when they are dormant and when there are no leaves on the tree. 

Perilla

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The perilla genus has at least 6 species that have been used by man. Their area of origin in Asia extends from India to Japan. Perilla is an aromatic, fast growing annual 50cm to 150cm tall, resembling Coleus in appearance, and large leafed basils, to which it is related. Two lipped flowers can be white, pink or lavender-purple, forming in leaf axils and terminal spikes. The plant has a very bushy canopy of opposite leaves forming on square stems. Leaves are ovate to 15cm long, and the margins are soft toothed and may be indented and frilly. The herb is a traditional oriental flavouring, particularly in Japanese cuisine, where it is used as readily as we use parsley. The leaves are highly aromatic and really cannot be compared to the smell of any other herb. The flavour is slightly sweet and spicy with a note of mint. Perilla’s aroma and flavour take a while to be appreciated. Leaves are eaten raw, cooked, salted and pickled, or used as a garnish. Young green leaves, particularly of green perilla are essential for sushi. Purple perilla leaves give a vivid colour and flavour to the traditional Japanese sweets and umebashi pickled plums. Perilla is also used in pickled ginger, Chinese/Japanese artichokes (which are an attractive gourmet root vegetable, see pages 84, 269) and raw fish dishes like sashimi. Leaves are cooked in tempura batter and used to flavour bean curds. Perilla seeds may be sprouted, like alfalfa, added to any dish or used as a garnish. Flowers make a dainty, edible, decoration on a dish. One of the components of the volatile oil extracted from perilla, perilla-aldehyde, can be made into a sweetener, said to be 2000 times sweeter than sugar, with very low kilojoules. This sweetener has been used as a substitute for maple sugar or licorice in processed foods, and is utilized in processed foods and tobacco. However, an antioxime of perillaaldehyde, is considered too toxic for food use, although, it is used in minute amounts in flavouring sauces, toothpaste and confectionery. Analysis of perilla’s anti-microbial properties has been documented to have over one thousand times the strength of synthetic food preservatives. Perilla is grown as an oil seed crop from Japan to northern India. The oil comprises up to 51% of the seed’s weight. The oil is used for culinary purposes, similar to linseed oil, and also has industrial application in paint, printing, and paper manufacture. The natural red pigment called shisonin is used in food processing as a colourant.

Sheryl: I recently visited Melbourne and observed this plant growing in my friend’s garden and brought back some seed so hopefully I can share it with you if I am successful in propagating it. It was growing exceptionally well (weed said my husband!) My friend and I both love Japanese cuisine particularly Sushi so do go looking for it.  Nice photos at:  http://www.plantnames.unimelb.edu.au/Sorting/Perilla_Gallery.html

Wikipedia says:  Perilla is a genus of an annual herb that is a member of the mint family, Lamiaceae. In mild climates the plant reseeds itself. The most common species is Perilla frutescens var. japonica or shiso which is mainly grown in India and East Asia. There are both green-leafed and purple-leafed varieties which are generally recognized as separate species by botanists. The leaves resemble stinging nettle leaves, being slightly rounder in shape. It is also widely known as the Beefsteak plant. In North America, it is increasingly commonly called by its Japanese name, shiso, in addition to being generally referred to as perilla. Its essential oils provide for a strong taste whose intensity might be compared to that of mint or fennel. It is considered rich in minerals and vitamins, has anti-inflammatory properties and is thought to help preserve and sterilize other foods. In Nepal and parts of India, it is called silam. Its seeds are ground with chilli and tomatoes to make a savoury dip/side dish. In North America one of the purple varieties is sometimes known as Purple Mint, Chinese Basil or Wild Coleus (although it is not a mint, basil or coleus).

Chemistry

The essential oil extracted from the leaves of perilla by steam distillation consists of a variety of chemical compounds, which may vary depending on species. The most abundant, comprising about 50–60% of the oil, is perillaldehyde which is most responsible for the aroma and taste of perilla. Other terpenes such as limonene, caryophyllene, and farnesene are common as well. Of the known chemotypes of perilla, PA (main component: perillaldehyd) is the only one used for culinary purposes. Other chemotypes are PK (perilla ketone), EK (elsholzia ketone), PL (perillene), PP (phenylpropanoids: myristicin, dillapiole, elemicin), C (citral) and a type rich in rosefuran.

 Perilla oil is obtained by pressing the seeds of perilla, which contain 35 to 45 percent oil. In parts of Asia, perilla oil is used as an edible oil that is valued more for its medicinal benefit than its flavor. Perilla oil is a very rich source of the omega-3 fatty acid alpha-linolenic acid. As a drying oil similar to tung oil or linseed oil, perilla oil has been used for paints, varnishes, linoleum, printing ink, lacquers, and for protective waterproof coatings on cloth. Perilla oil can also be used for fuel.

The oxime of perillaldehyde (perillartin) is used as an artificial sweetener in Japan as it is about 2000 times sweeter than sucrose.  References:  Refer wikipedia on the web

NB:  Perilla ketone is toxic to some animals. When cattle and horses consume purple mint (of the PK chemotype) while grazing in fields in which it grows, the perilla ketone causes pulmonary edema leading to a condition sometimes called perilla mint toxicosis.

Pepino

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In July, John issued the challenge “I want a really BIG pepino patch this summer”, and so I got to work. We’d had few straggly pepino plants around, but they weren’t given any special treatment, were semi-shaded, and had only produced a few small fruits, which were promptly eaten up by magpies.

I decided to do some research about growing conditions, and found that the pepino (Solanum muricatum) is native to temperate climates, originating in the Andean regions of Colombia, Peru and Chile. Surprisingly, the plant is not known in the wild, only in cultivation, so no-one really knows its origins. It is grown commercially in New Zealand, Chile and Western Australia. Fortunately the pepino is a hardy plant and can grow at altitudes ranging from near sea level to 3500m, although it does best in a warm, relatively frost-free climate. This seemed to suit our conditions – our vegetable patch is at the highest point of our 5 acres, and hardly gets touched by frost. In any case, it seems that they will survive a short period of low temperature of 27 to 28° F, but may lose leaves.

I forked over a patch in full sun about 3 x 2 metres and worked in some well rotted compost and just a few handfuls of Organic Extra. Our garden is all organic, and this is the standard treatment for my vegetables. I didn’t overdo the fertiliser, as I wanted to avoid too much vegetative growth. The patch was then left fallow while I propagated the plants.

With its woody stems and fibrous roots, the Pepino is very simple to propagate vegetatively from cuttings. I just ripped up some pieces – some of which had roots and some not – treated them with rooting hormones, potted them in some good free-draining mix, and placed them in our shade house. In a few weeks they were flourishing – each piece had grown to a strong plant with vigorous root growth.

I planted out 10 plants into the patch in late August, so they would have plenty of time to grow and ripen during the warm summer months. I gave them a spacing of about 40cm, and mulched well to suppress weed growth. The whole vegetable garden gets watered frequently by overhead sprinkling, and over the next few weeks the pepinos responded with rapid growth. Apparently they are sensitive to moisture stress, as their root systems are quite shallow.

The plants started flowering well but seemed slow to set any fruit. Back to the Internet! – where I found that they will not set fruit until the night temperatures are above 65° F. Before long the fruits were forming, alas, just as the first few ripened, John was headed off to the USA for 2 weeks on a business trip. He managed to try the first one, but over the next fortnight they just kept rolling in, and all the neighbours benefited! Most of the fruits were very large, as big as a good sized orange, and sweet and juicy. Luckily there were still plenty when John returned, and he went straight off to “his” Pepino patch and filled a large bucket or two. 

We have had virtually no problem with pests and diseases. Occasionally a creature (probably a rat) has a go at a fruit – usually the ripest. Apparently pepinos can be affected by many of the diseases and pests that affect tomatoes, such as bacterial spot, anthracnose and phytophthora, spider mite, cut worm, fruit fly and leaf miner, but we have not had any trouble with these. 

Despite the possibility of pest attack, we avoid the temptation to pick the pepinos greener, because the best flavour is when they are fully sun-ripened, when they compare favourably with a cantaloupe or honey dew melon. John grabs the fruits straight from the plant as a thirst quencher, and can be spotted in the garden with juice dribbling down his chin, but I think they are nice chilled and eaten like a melon.

Our pepino patch has been a great success, and I recommend that everyone grows at least a few plants. To top it all off, yesterday I noticed pepinos in the supermarkets selling for $2 each – and not as big as ours! I guess that means we’ve produced a couple of hundred dollars’ worth already!

Peach Trees – Girdling using cable ties for sweeter, larger fruit

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“Girdling is normally done by using a knife to cut away a strip of the tree’s bark,” Taylor said. “The sugars that are produced by the tree can’t flow below the strip. But this damages the tree and increases the likelihood of insect and disease damage, too.” Taylor says some growers believe the traditional girdling method shortens the life of the tree. For the past three years, Taylor has used cable ties to girdle peach trees on test plots in middle Georgia, where 95 percent of the state’s peach crop grows. She straps the cable tie to the tree in the winter. In the spring, when the tree grows its peaches, the cable ties restrict the flow of sugars but don’t permanently damage the tree. “You remove the girdle after harvest, and the tree recovers,” she said. “And you can do it again the next winter.” Peach trees create sugars by photosynthesis and move them down into the roots for storage. Girdling holds the sugars in the upper part of the tree, Taylor said, moving them up the tree and into the fruit instead.

Larger, sweeter peaches

The increase in sugar draws more water into the fruit. The result is a sweeter, larger peach.
“At the end of the fruiting season, we remove the girdle and allow the sugars to flow back to the roots,” she said. Girdling peach trees with cable ties results in earlier peaches, too, she said. “Earlier peaches translate into increased profits for the growers,” Taylor said. “They’ll be able to harvest three to five days earlier than they normally would. And the earlier you can get a crop to market, the greater the return.” Taylor said one large grower adopted the new girdling method last season and had a 5 percent increase in his highest-quality fruit category. “We’ve made a lot of progress for middle and late-season peach varieties, but we don’t have the technique really optimized for our earlier-season varieties,” she said. Growers as far away as New Jersey and California have shown interest in the cable tie girdling method. “We had a grower in South Carolina try it on about 200 acres with very good results,” she said. Taylor believes the method can be applied easily to fruit crops like apples and plums with similar results. It’s available now, but growers haven’t widely adopted it yet. Georgians may have to wait a year to pick fresh Georgia strawberries and blueberries, but if figs suit your fancy, it’s prime picking time.

Kathy is a Researcher from the University of Georgia

Pawpaw/Papaya Grafting

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If you have papaw/papaya seedlings with 1-2 cms stem diameter, use the V top grafting. However, with large tops up to 20 cms in diameter, you use a W graft,cut 99% of the leaves, you must fasten at 2-3 places with a plastic zipper strip, spray with various fungi-bactericides, double cover with opaque plastic bags to maintain humidity. Try and match the diameter of the crown to the rootstock. For the huge crowns you need a strong sharp long knife or a very thin blade hand saw. You should draw the cutting lines with similar complementary angles so that the 2 parts will fit into each other.  The photo is from Ariel’s tree in Israel.

Paul Williams from California tried this W graft of a Sunrise Solo bisexual papaw weighing five kg of apex on a male rootstock. The apex was taken from an 8 years old, 5 metres tall papaw and was grafted on a 13 cm in diameter male rootstock. The graft was conducted on July 2005 and since then the apex grew by one metre.

Authored by: 

Sourced from: 

Sub-Tropical Fruit Club of Qld. Inc Newsletter December 2006 – January 2007

Papaya Seed Australia

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This article is by Garry Grant  18 Vaughan Rd, Darts Creek, Qld 4695 (07) 4975 1317 Fax: (07) 4975 1397 Email:  ggrant10(at)bigpond.com  Darts Creek is between Gladstone and Rockhampton, Qld. Garry sold his pawpaw seed business and details of where you can purchase seed is at the end of the article. Garry now sells organic certified Pawpaw Leaf: http://organicpawpawleaf.com.au/

Papaya Seed Australia sell organic seed to produce both red and yellow fleshed papaya. The farm is certified organic, Australian Certified Organic No 4508A. Both bisexual (hermaphrodite) and dioecious seed is offered. Bisexual seed produces both bisexual (67%) and female (33%) trees. Dioecious seed produces female (50%) and male (50%) trees. Hybrid numbers are prefixed by B (bisexual) and D (dioecious) as well as Y (yellow fleshed) and R (red fleshed). For example hybrid YD1B indicates yellow fleshed dioecious hybrid 1B. New crosses are being trialled continuously and will be added to this site when found to be commercially viable.

The Reds

RB1 is a bisexual pink fleshed hybrid. The fruit is elongate shaped and sweet flavoured. RD1 is a dioecious red fleshed hybrid. The fruit is roundish, slightly ribbed with deep red flesh colour. It is very pleasant eating. RD2 is a dioecious red fleshed hybrid. This is a very fast growing plant and will start picking 9 months after planting out as seedlings. The fruit is roundish and slightly ribbed, with deep red flesh colour.  It is extremely good eating. RD3 is a dioecious red fleshed hybrid. The fruit is roundish and slightly ribbed, with deep red flesh colour. The fruit is similar to RD2 although a little larger.  It is extremely good eating. RD4 is a dioecious red fleshed hybrid. This is also a very fast growing hybrid and will start picking 8 months after planting out as seedlings. The fruit is oblong with a small teat, and firm pink- red flesh with a mild musk flavour.  RD5 is a dioecious red fleshed hybrid. The fruit is oblong, slightly ribbed with pink/red flesh colour and a small teat. It is similar in size and shape to hybrid RD1. It is very sweet and superb eating.

Sunrise Solo is a pink fleshed bisexual inbreed. It is the most commonly grown papaya worldwide. The fruit is small, pear shaped with a very sweet musk flavour.

The Yellows

Hybrid YD1B The most widely grown of all the hybrids in Australia, fruit is oblong, is very clean, flesh is firm, and is a medium yielding tree. Hybrid YD6  This hybrid produces oblong fruit, is clean skinned, and very high yielding. Hybrid YD11B produces oblong shaped fruit. It is very clean skinned, especially over the colder winter months, and consistently sweet tasting, although it is the lowest yielding of the yellow fleshed hybrids. Best planting time is autumn to produce low fruiting trees. Hybrid YD13  This hybrid produces globular fruit.  It is clean skinned and the largest yielding of all the yellow fleshed hybrids. Hybrid YD14 produces oblong fruit. It is very clean skinned and a medium yielding tree with a mild frangipani flavour. Hybrid YD29 This hybrid produces round fruit. It suffers to varying degrees from winter spot in the colder months, is consistently sweet tasting, and is a high yielding tree. It is a low bearing tree irrespective of planting time.

Hybrid YD59  This hybrid produces round fruit. It suffers to varying degrees from winter spot in the colder months, is the sweetest tasting of all the yellow fleshed hybrids, and is a high yielding tree. Initial fruit are large. This hybrid bears fruit from a very low level.

About Hybrids

Hybrids are the result of crossing 2 “fixed” (stable) parent lines. Hybrids are more vigorous than their parents, produce more fruit and are less susceptible to disease. All papaya are affected by climatic changes but when grown under stable conditions hybrids are very consistent in fruit shape and size. Hybrid seed for sale here is only the first cross of the parent lines, producing F1 hybrids. Hybrids cannot be successfully grown from seed collected from F1 fruit and will be inconsistent in shape, size and yield. Bisexual papaya are affected by a condition known as carpellody or “cat-facing” and is caused by the fusing of the ovary and stamens during adverse weather conditions. This fruit is deformed and unmarketable. Carpellody is one of the reasons bisexual varieties are not normally grown in sub-tropical areas.

How much seed will I need?

With dioecious varieties growers generally plant 4 seedlings to the site, thinning sites to 1 male site to 10 female sites. Planting density varies between growers but on average is 750 sites to the acre, or 1850 to the hectare. The amount of seed required is 50 grams per acre or 125 grams per hectare. With bisexual varieties growers generally plant 2 or 3 seedlings to the site, thinning to 1 bisexual tree per site. Some growers market the female fruit of the bisexual, although the flesh is not as thick. Seed required is 40 grams per acre or 100 grams per hectare.

Guarantee

Germination is tested before dispatch and we guarantee a minimum germination rate of 50%. If lower rates occur seed will be replaced to meet the minimum germination rate, or we will refund all or part of the purchase price. The seed is guaranteed for 50 days after purchase date, after which no refund will be made or additional seed sent.

Ordering Seed can be delivered anywhere in the world. 

Phil Slocombe, PO Box 791, Malanda Qld 4885

Ph: 0456 368 245   Email:  pwgs@ozemail.com.au

http://www.papaya-seeds.com.au

Organic Garden Recipes found on the internet

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Give these a try and let us know the results

To start controlling the fly you will need to adopt good housekeeping of fallen damaged fruit (including from neighbours yards), this must be destroyed – don’t compost it or bury it in the garden as this will only aid the development of the fly. I have been freezing damaged fruits, but generally a good method is to put the fruit into a black plastic garbage bag or the like and leave it in the full sun for a day or 2 to cook the fruit thus killing the fly larva. Here is a recipe to use in your fruit fly traps: 1 litre of water, 2 cups of urine, 3 teaspoons vanilla essence, 1 teaspoon vegemite, 1 cup sugar

Mix ingredients together – pour about 1 or 2 cups of ingredient into each trap, place traps in and around fruit trees etc. Renew the solution each 10 days.

MORE FRUIT FLY TRAP RECIPES

Use mixes of either of the following or all of the following – the more the merrier:

  • vegemite and water – 1 teaspoon per cup of water – 1.5 to 2 cups per bottle depending on bottle size … or
  • honey and water – 1 tablespoon per cup of water (then do as above), … or you can combine these 2 …  or
  • mix 1 tsp vanilla essence,1 tblsp ammonia (bleach) & 1 cup water… or
  • 1 cup of water, 2 cups of cider vinegar, 2 tablespoons of molasses

place in trap bottles and replace every 2 weeks….. or

you could buy from your local produce agency a fruit fly wick or 2 or 3 traps can be made from 2 and 1.25 ltr clear plastic drink bottles.

WEED KILLER

Mix in a container 1 gallon white vinegar (3.78 ltr), 1 cup table salt, and 1 tablespoon dishwashing liquid together and spray on weeds. To mix, remove approximately 2 cups of vinegar from the container, pour in the salt and dishwashing liquid, then return the 2 cups of vinegar to the container. Close the lid and shake to mix. Transfer to a spray bottle (after shaking to mix the ingredients) as needed. It works as well, if not better, than chemicals, but is much cheaper. Be careful, it will kill whatever you spray it on! If you purchase vinegar, 10% acidity is ok, 20% acid would be better, and spraying it on the weeds in the heat of the full sun, you will have an effective weed killer.

Native Limes – Family Rutaceae

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Australian Native Foods –  Plant Profiles Citrus   –  Family Rutaceae

Common Names & Species:

• Desert Lime (Citrus glauca), Finger Lime (Citrus australasica) and Round Lime (Citrus australis)

• ‘Rainforest Pearl’ PBR Finger lime – a selection of Citrus australasica var. sanguinea

• ‘Australian Blood Lime’ PBR – (hybrid of Australian finger lime and Rangpur lime, Citrus australasica var. sanguinea X Citrus x limonia)

• ‘Australian Sunrise Lime’ PBR lime (hybrid) (Citrus australasica X [Fortunella sp. x Citrus reticulata ‘Calamondin’])

• ‘Australian Outback Lime’ PBR, selection of Citrus glauca.

                     

Desert Lime 

Finger Lime

Native To:

• Desert Lime – Queensland and New South Wales, west of a line running from Rockhampton to Dubbo, with some isolated occurrences in central South Australia

• Finger Lime – rainforests in southern Qld and northern NSW

• Round Lime – rainforest margins of southeast Qld, from Brisbane northwards

• ‘Australian Blood’ PBR lime is a hybrid produced by open pollination, from a cross between an Ellendale Mandarin (a mandarin and orange hybrid) and a seedling form of the Australian Finger lime (Citrus australasica var. sanguinea)

• ‘Australian Sunrise’ PBR lime is a hybrid from an open pollinated seedling selected from a Faustrimedin, which is a hybrid of the finger lime with the calamondin; itself a hybrid between the cumquat and a variety of the mandarin group (Citrus reticulata). Habit:

• Desert Lime: tree to 2 – 4 m, bearing small green to yellow coloured fruit

• Finger Lime: tree to 10 m, bearing oblong green to yellow fruit

• Round Lime: tree 3 – 10 m, with rough skinned, green to yellow fruit

• ‘Rainforest Pearl’ finger lime: open, upright small tree to 3 m, bearing yellow-green fruit with red pulp at maturity

• Blood Lime: tree to 2 – 2.5 m, with small, red-fleshed fruit

• Sunrise Lime: tree to 2 – 4 m, bearing small yellow pear shaped fruit

Tom Ling is looking for Australian native citrus, namely, Kakadu Lime, Maiden’s Australian Wild Lime, New Guinea Wild Lime, and other Sydney Hybrids.  Contact the club.

Desert Lime will not survive in Brisbane due to too humid weather.

Native Hibiscus

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Native Hibiscus   Hibiscus heterphyllus    Malvaceae      Native Australian Bushtucker

Other names: Native Sorrel

An evergreen upright open pyramidal shrub to 6m, with pink, yellow or white maroon-centred flowers with crispy berry-rhubarb flavour. Leaves are dark green and often tri-lobed. Plant in sun to semi-shade, in a slightly acid, well-drained soil. Tolerates wet and dry conditions but is moderately frost sensitive. Water well and fertilise only during flowering. Tip pruning aids bushiness and seems to encourage flowering. The main flowering period is summer to autumn. The calyx is sour, acidic, fibrous and crisp in texture and can be eaten raw or cooked in sauces and preserves. Petals are used in jams, jellies, fruit stews, sauces and as a garnish. The young shoots, leaves and roots are also edible. Small prickles on the stem, leaf stalks and the underside of leaf-blades make the plant harsh to touch and can cause skin irritation. The fibres of the wood can be used for weaving. Native Rosella attracts birds.

Champagne Cocktail:   Place a whole Wild Rosella Flower in the bottom of a champagne flute. Fill slowly with your favourite Champagne for a unique, spectacular and delicious special occasion experience! Bubbles stream off and open up the flower, while the drink changes from bright pink at the bottom to light pink at the top. Enjoy your champagne and eat your flower – it has a sweet raspberry flavour!  You could add a little drop of rosella syrup if you’d like to sweeten it.

Authored by: 

Sourced from: 

STFC Newsletter April – May 2006

Native Food Plants for your garden

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When it comes to the issue of what Australian native food plants to place in your tropical garden, there seem to be a number of opposing considerations to mull over.  Unless you’re fortunate enough to have acreage at your disposal, or are planning for amenity planting in parks or educational public gardens, you are going to have to juggle limitations of space, both vertical and horizontal, and probably the availability or otherwise of water, as well as soil type and aspect.  Herein lies your first dilemma. 

Many of the tropical bush foods most eagerly sought after by both Aborigines and Europeans were (and are) fruits borne on trees that can grow quite large in both directions.  Burdekin Plums (Pleiogynum timorense) are eaten up to the present day, both as fruit in the hand and as jam and jelly.  They are easily gathered, but have to be stored to ripen and soften for eating.  The old method was to bury them (tied in a sugar bag and buried in sand on the creek bank according to my Dad).  I always hung them on the back verandah in mesh onion bags, as my boys were very partial to them, but now I just leave them in a paper bag in the fruit bowl on the kitchen bench.  BUT, I don’t have a Plum tree in my garden, handsome and shady as it is, because it is just too large.  I rely on the trees in local parks.

Unfortunately, quite a number of delicious and/or interesting fruit and nut trees are impractical for the average home gardener, particularly as suburban lots get smaller.  They are either too big or have very invasive roots, or both.  They can, however, do very well if you have space at your disposal and if you can buy or propagate good stock.  Examples include the figs such as Cluster Fig (Ficus racemosa), Rock Fig (Ficus rubiginosa) and Sandpaper Fig (Ficus opposita), often acquired as a bird spread weed.  However, these random plants are rarely particularly good eating, and it is worth seeking out a superior selection like this if you’re going to plant one.  

They used to be commonly planted or allowed to grow in chook yards, as an economical way of stretching the feed supply.  Candle Nut (Aleurites moluccana), Blue Quandong (Elaeocarpus grandis), Illawarra Plum (Podocarpus elatus), Leichhardt Tree (Nauclea orientalis) and Bottle Trees (Brachychiton australis, B.rupestris) all fall into the ‘too large for a suburban block’ category.  There are other  trees which have the potential to grow large or/and  tall, but which either grow fairly slowly, or can be somewhat contained by site selection eg in the open or under other trees. 

Among these are  Cheesefruit or Noni (Morinda citriodora), Davidson’s Plum (Davidsonia pruriens), Native Mulberry (Pipturis argenteus)  and Bird’s Eye or Red Jacket (Alectryon connatus or A.tomentosus).  Of these, I’d pick Davidson’s Plum.  It bears while still very small, and the large tart fruit makes beautiful preserves and cooked desserts, not to mention very acceptable wine and liqueur.  This is one of the native fruits in commercial demand.  It needs to begin life in the shade, and does require extra watering, at least in the early stages.  So what does that leave us?  Most gardens have room for at least one specimen tree and probably you’ll want to make use of screening small trees, shrubs or hedges and maybe even topiary features or a large potted plant as a focus. 

The plants that immediately spring to mind are the Backhousias and the Lillipillies.  Of the Backhousias, Lemon Myrtle (Backhousia citriodora) is the best known and most popular, as well as the most commercially sought after, but Aniseed Myrtle (Anethola anisata) with its glossy green wavy edged leaves smelling of aniseed when crushed is very attractive as a screen or hedge, and also has commercial applications.  Lemon Myrtle or Lemon Ironwood is a beautiful tree.  We were so sad to lose our 35 year old specimen early last year after the deluge.  We thought the constant soaking rain would do it good, but after flourishing through 20 years or so of drought, it apparently succumbed to a root fungus which we were unable to arrest.  It used to be a magnificent tree.  It did grow considerably taller than the 15-20 feet we were quoted by the nursery when we bought it, but it did take light pruning.  It had the most commercially desirable ratio of essential oils, and the dried leaves were saleable, but picking and drying them was so tedious and time consuming that after a couple of goes selling consignments to Vic Cherikoff in Sydney, even the kids wouldn’t come at it any more. 

I used the dried leaves in potpourri and in the linen cupboard, put fresh crushed leaves in the cold water jug or bottle, in the teapot, and sometimes in cooking rice or finely sliced in a curry.  But the constant joy of the beautifully shaped tree was to see it burst into bloom in November, like a giant creamy candle, attracting birds and insects, especially myriads of Blue Triangle butterflies, while the heady scent of its honey hung heavy in the air. 

Seedlings came up frequently in the garden, but attempts to transplant them were unsuccessful.  I had some success leaving pots of soil under the tree so that seeds would germinate in them, but it was hit and miss affair, and I gave them all away.  Currently we’re trying to transplant larger seedlings and root suckers from them, but with little success.  It is such a beautiful tree, and we will certainly replace it.  The ones in the Kershaw Gardens Rockhampton are still going strong and it is certainly a highly desirable species with many garden applications. 

There is so much choice available under the general umbrella of “Lillipillies” that the novice gardener can be excused for feeling confused.  It is therefore pretty important to know both the function and the position in the garden you envisage for your plant before deciding which to choose.  From one of the new cultivars such as “Tiny Trev”, which makes a low edging hedge for a formal garden or a potted topiary, to the large spreading tree that Syzygium australe or S.oleosum can become, there is a lillipilly for almost every situation. 
Of course, in many cases, the fruit will not be the primary reason for your choice, being more in the nature of an edible decorative bonus, but if fruit is your prime motivation, then the old standard, Syzygium luehmannii, takes a lot of beating. Small leaved lillipilly or Riberry is a nicely shaped small compact tree, with glossy green leaves and attractive pink new foliage, fluffy cream flowers and bunches of bright pink teardrop shaped fruit which taste of cinnamon and cloves.  This is another fruit in commercial demand, and there are a number planted as suburban street trees in Rockhampton which seem to be doing well. 

We have a Scrub Cherry, Syzygium australe, collected as a seed from Bouldercombe Gorge, growing in our front garden.  Unfortunately, there is now a power line routed diagonally across our yard from the power pole out the front of our place to the house next door, and, naturally, it was slung right above our tree.  Fortunately, it takes very heavy pruning, but as a result we no longer enjoy the former heavy fruit crop, and I’m not sure whether we will retain that particular tree.  However, I have another from Byfield with superior fruit, growing out the back, so cutting out the one in the front and replacing it with something else, won’t be a tragedy.  I’ve made many a batch of wine and jelly from the fruit, as a seedling grown tree tends to bear a fairly high proportion of fruit containing seeds,  these are the more practical uses, though I have  experimented with things like muffins. 
Syzygium australe is quite a variable species: it can be upright or weeping, have pointed or rounded, large or small leaves, and a single or multi trunked habit, which makes it very useful in many different situations round the yard.  We also have Syzygium wilsonii growing out the back, though more for its appearance than its fruit, as it’s a small weeping shrub.  Its pink new foliage, deep purple-red pompom flowers and unusual white fruit are very striking particularly as it is a shade loving plant growing under larger trees, or at least among other trees for protection. 

However, my favourite Lillipilly for taste is the blue Syzygium oleosum.  The fruit’s appearance  is really pretty and unusual, and some varieties have quite large fruit.  Unfortunately, it does have the potential to grow very large, so…..I don’t have one in my garden, nor do I grow any of the large fruited tropical varieties such as S.forte or S.suborbiculare for the same reason, though Ralph Atcheson has quite a few in his large rainforest garden on the outskirts of town, including this Syzygium boonje

So, let’s get down to something we can manage in the average garden in the tropics: small trees, shrubs large and small, vines and creepers, and herbs, and if you’re so inclined, palms and grasstrees. Some of the native citrus are worth growing.  There are the new cultivars of Finger Lime, Citrus australasica, beloved by trendy restaurants, and the Mt White Lime, Citrus garrowayae, which is doing very well at the Kershaw Gardens, or if you have a dry climate garden, the desert Lime, Citrus glauca.  This is very slow growing, (though grafted varieties do fruit sooner), carries thorns, and does have a tendency to sucker, so you need to consider placement carefully.  However, your reward is small tart fruit that make the most delicious marmalade jam. 

Decorative small trees suitable for the home garden include the Native Ebonies, Diospyros humilis and D. geminata, whose regular shape and pinky copper new foliage would be enough to secure them a place, but whose fruit is edible when fully ripe as well.  Cocky Apple, Planchonia careya, is an interesting choice for a water-wise garden.  The small, rather gnarled looking rough barked tree nearly always sports a few bright orange-red leaves among its large bluish-green ones, and the flowers, though short-lived, are most unusual pink and white bunches of stamens which carpet the ground under the tree.  The green football shaped fruit is edible both raw and cooked.  The bark was used by the Aborigines as a fish poison. 

The Peanut Tree, Sterculia quadrifida, has particularly striking orange fruit, which split to reveal 2 rows of satiny black seeds with tasty edible kernels.  These 3 trees, though very different in appearance from each other, are very much at home in a Japanese style garden.  And while we’re on the subject of nuts, you could do worse than the old Queensland Nut or Macadamia, as long as you’re prepared for the labour of cracking the nuts when you harvest your crop. 

Many Capparis species are suitable garden inclusions.  A good one for the tropics is Capparis lucida.  This is a large, glossy-leaved shrub, with typical white Capparis flowers and dark purple skinned fruit hanging on long stalks.  The orange flesh clings to the seeds, so there’s not a lot you can do with it apart from eating fresh.  Many of the workers at Kershaw use it like chewing gum, holding it in the mouth as a thirst quencher, before discarding the well sucked seeds.  The short-lived long-stamened white flowers are very beautiful, and the occasional defoliation by caterpillars of the Caper White butterfly is a small price to pay. 

While Bottle Trees and Kurrajongs might be too large for the average house block, there is a Brachychiton that can be a real winner, especially when supplementary water is scarce.  A multi-stemmed shrub, which can be very straggly if not regularly pruned, Brachychiton bidwillii  has spectacular reddish flowers, followed by the typical boat-shaped seed pods.  The seeds are surrounded by irritant hairs, so perhaps this isn’t a good choice if there are small children in the yard.  The Aborigines used to stir the seeds with hot coals in a coolamon to remove the hairs before processing into paste or flour, depending on whether the seed was fresh or dry.  Early settlers used it as a coffee substitute or flour extender. 

If you want a really tough small tree, that can stand salt winds and doesn’t need extra water, and looks good as well, then Tuckeroo is what you’re looking for.  Cupaniopsis anacardioides has festoons of small golden yellow fruit which are very decorative.  There is only a thin skin of highly aromatic flesh around the seed, which some people really like, but which I can quite happily live without.  The tree seems quite attractive to green ants too, so you can have an extra source of bush tucker as well.  Did anyone see the episode of “Food Lovers’ Guide” in which the chef in Cairns used crushed green ants in the marinade for smoked fish?  However, if you have a real infestation, I also have the recipe for a good bait which genuinely works. 

One of the proven performers in both public and private gardens in Rocky is the Beach Cherry, Eugenia reinwardtiana.  This rounded shrub with sweetly scented tiny white flowers followed by shiny round red fruit is a winner.  It can be pruned and shaped, makes a great hedge, path edge, or single specimen, grows and fruits in the shade, and is quite delicious.  Some of the local selections have quite large fruit in which the large, usually single seed, is replaced by up to half a dozen smaller seeds that fit snugly together like a three dimensional jigsaw puzzle.  It is surprisingly hardy, and easily propagated from seed.  It can edge a path, screen a fence, provide an understory, or stand alone with equal success Melastoma affine, sometimes called Bluetongue for reasons that will quickly become obvious if you eat it, is an understory shrub with an attractive pinkish-mauve flower and interesting edible, if rather gritty, fruit.  It can be eaten raw when fully ripe and the skin begins to split, and I found that it can be made into syrup which is quite acceptable as an icecream topping or drink base.  It’s another of those handy things that will flower in semi-shade, but it does need extra water.

Millaa Millaa or Elaegnus triflora is a rather informal scrambly shrub with tiny, sweetly scented flowers and small delicious fruit, but perhaps its most striking feature is the silvery metallic underside of the leaves.  These are really eye-catching when used in floral arrangements.  The plant is another which needs regular pruning to keep it manageable, but is quite an asset in the garden. 

The easiest of all Australian fruits to grow in a tropical garden is Rubus probus, one of the Native Raspberries.  But – be careful!  It spreads by root suckers, so needs to be contained in some way, either in a large container, against a wall, or surrounded by a root barrier of some sort, and it has prickles.  If you have an appropriate place to plant it, you can harvest a good crop of delicious fruit from a small number of plants.  Treat it just like any cultivated raspberry – ample water, fertilizer, regular pruning, a southern or eastern aspect, and you will be well rewarded.  It is probably the most successful bush food grown in our garden.

And for a shrub that was not only extremely useful to the Aborigines, providing food, medicine and twine, but which will provide splashes of brilliant colour in your garden, there’s Native Hibiscus.  Hibiscus heterophyllus occurs in 2 colour forms with short-lived but prolific flowers of bright yellow, or shades of white, pink and maroon.  Use the petals in a salad, or make jam, jelly or syrup from them, as you do with the introduced Rosella, which is also an Hibiscus.  Hibiscus needs regular pruning, including tip pruning, to encourage a pleasing growth habit, as it has a tendency to grow ‘leggy’ and sparse if left to its own devices, but it’s really worth the effort.  And to fill in space lower down, what about the Trailing Hibiscus, Abelmoschus moschatus, which possesses a bright pink-red flower and an edible tuber? 

Many of the food vines are too vigorous and rampart in their growth to be suitable for a smaller garden.  If you plant Cheeky yam, Dioscorea bulbifera, you’ll probably be sorry, though Joyce Hill has kept a vine growing on a wire cylinder in her front garden under control for more than 20 years, by snipping off every stray shoot as soon as it begins to wave around.  On the other hand, it is now a major headache down at Kershaw Gardens, where the lack of staff coupled with no on-going maintenance programme allowed it to “get away” and spread indiscriminately, so that each Spring more and more vines spring up in strange places.  
The native grapes have, unfortunately, done the same thing.  Tetrastigma nitens, for example, is smothering trees faster than it can be removed, and some of the Cissus are not much better.  Not to mention the feral Stinking Passionfruit, Passiflora foetida, whose tasty little fruits have seen it spread all over Kershaw as people spit out the remains of their little snacks. 
Long Yam, Dioscorea transversa, is a much better bet for a home garden, being a slender twining climber with arrow shaped leaves, and large bunches of decorative winged seed capsules.  Like all the yams, it dies back in the Dry, but will shoot again from its underground tuber. 

Of the 2 ‘look-alikes’, Eustrephus latifolius and Geitonoplesium cymosum, I’d go for the Eustrephus.  Wombat Berry is less aggressive, and will withstand dryer conditions, and it looks good scrambling over a rock or cascading down a garden wall.  Of course, you’re unlikely to want to dig it up to eat the tuberous roots, but you can snack on the little white ‘desiccated coconut’ arils among the shiny black seeds inside the orange fruits.

Getting down closer to the ground, a very hardy informal groundcover or low screen is Myoporum sp. or Boobialla.  Small white flowers are followed by shiny round pink-purple fruits with a salty sweet aromatic taste.  The birds like them anyway, and the plant is really very useful. 
The hardy and adaptable Midyim, Austromyrtus dulcis, is a similar sort of height, but with a different habit.  Slender opposite leaves with coppery new growth, small white flowers and shiny white fruit speckled with purple make it a very pretty tall ground cover.  As well, the soft berries are sweet and delicious.  A good plant for sandy soils.  Another good one for sandy or salty soil is Ruby Saltbush, Enchylaena tomentosa.  Fleshy blue green leaves and tiny red or yellow fruits are edible, and it’s a rather surprisingly attractive informal low rounded shrub, which has been used to great effect in the Kershaw Gardens, as has the lower growing Beach Banana or Pigface.
Carpobrotus glaucescens has bright pinkish daisy flowers followed by red fruits like a miniature salty banana.  The large fleshy leaves have also been cooked and eaten. It’s a tough groundcover for full sun and sandy or salty soil. 

A groundcover which is probably the nearest thing Australia had to a green vegetable in the European sense is Warrigal or Botany Bay Greens or New Zealand Spinach, Tetragonia tetragonioides.  I find this plant a real enigma.  It grows prolifically along the Capricorn Coast and covers hectares further inland, where it can be a significant weed in broad acre farming.  Everyone tells me it’s tough as old boots, but I cannot keep it alive!  At my place it seems to boil somehow.  Perhaps it’s just too humid in Rocky itself. 
At the height of the severe water restrictions in the south-east corner towards the end of 2007, the only green left in the gardens of 2 of my friends in Ipswich was their Tetragonia, which they harvested leaf by leaf.  It looked pretty ratty by then, but it was hanging in there.  I was given a precious rooted cutting to bring home, and you guessed it!  Dead within a couple of weeks.  It makes me feel very inadequate, especially when I hear of people, admittedly not in Rocky, who have trouble keeping it under control and consign quantities to the compost. 
Others are fortunate enough to be able to sell their excess crop to a restaurant or at a market.  It’s a pleasant and acceptable green veg. but you need to take care to blanche the leaves before eating. 

Then, for an easy care low groundcover that flowers in the shade, you can always use Native Violets, as long as you have the water, as they need a lot.  Both Viola hederacea and V.betonicifolia have edible flowers, and look good in the garden as well.  The flowers can be added to salads, desserts and fruit cups, frozen in ice cubes to create a talking point at a party, or crystalised with egg whiter and caster sugar to decorate cakes.  I’ve still got a little bit left in a jar of Violet jam from France that I was given as a gift.  It’s delicately flavoured and scented, and quite delicious, so I’m going to experiment with making some myself when I can find the time.

If you’re lucky enough to have a garden pond, large or small, edible natives can be incorporated in your plantings in and around the water.  Even the tiniest pond can support some Nardoo, the aquatic fern Marsilea, on which Burke and Wills infamously starved to death because they didn’t prepare the sporocarps properly. Larger ponds may contain water lilies, with their edible seeds, stems and tubers,
Spike Rush (Eleocharis dulcis) or Water Ribbons (Triglochin procera), also with tasty edible tubers.  Around the edges or in a sheltered damp spot you could grow Costus potierae with its lemony edible white flowers, or if you have plenty of room, you could try any of the other native gingers, though Alpinia can take over with very little encouragement. 

Curcuma australasica is an unusual and decorative choice with its pink and green flower spike and large fluted leaf, which dies back in the Dry.  Bungwall Fern (Blechnum indicum) is another possibility for a damp spot, but again, is probably better contained in some way, as its underground rhizomes are very vigorous.  Then as a landscaping statement, you may wish to incorporate some plants with strappy or spiky leaves as contrasts to the rest of your plantings. 
Lomandra and Dianella immediately come to mind: the shiny blue Dianella fruit is best either eaten fresh or made into jelly, because of its single hard seed.  Finally, there are the interesting bits and pieces which, while edible, you probably wouldn’t actually consider utilising for food. 

Grass trees, Cabbage Palms, Cycads, Orchids and some Lilies make interesting garden subjects, and of course there are all the colourful nectar bearing varieties such as Banksia and Grevillea, and the seed producing Wattles.  This one is an unknown quantity.  I don’t know of it being grown in anyone’s garden, but we’ve raised some plants from seed down at Kershaw.  It’s Gardenia edulis or Breadfruit, one of the ones Leichhardt ate on his trek north (but not the Breadfruit of the Lynd, though it has been mis-identified as such.  That is Gardenia wilhelmii, and I have 2 precious little plants alive at Kershaw).  In the wild Breadfruit is a small, rather gnarled looking tree.  I haven’t seen the flowers.  It will be interesting to see how it performs.

Advice on incorporating bush food plants into your garden is no different from the advice given to anyone planting a garden.  Plan your garden first.  Know where each plant will be positioned and what you expect of it.  Water, mulch, fertilise and prune as you would for any garden plant, remembering to use a low phosphate formula for Proteaceae.

Lenore is Co-ordinator of the Australian Food Plant Study Group
email:  lenorelindsay@hotmail.com