This programme has been running for over thirty years down
under, and I think it's quite good. There's
typically more than 40 shows each year, all of them an hour long.
I've streamed several episodes that were broadcast over the
past few years, and as well as seeing some wonderful new native and exotic
plants (and pests) you can also pick up some really interesting hints and tips,
and see how the approach to cultivation and pruning etc, often of the exact
same plants, differs significantly from what's common practice at home.
Water conservation and re-use for irrigation is also a very big
theme throughout the shows. And there are some other very interesting
differences. The presenters bang on all
the time about how great it is to have a north-facing garden, which of course
is not ideal here in Europe .
In the northern hemisphere, the sun appears to travel in a clockwise arc from east to west throughout the day.
But of course, south of the equator it appears to travel
counter-clockwise, and in the northern sky. And although I knew this already, having travelled in southern Africa
and South America, it's not something I've ever really given much thought to in
gardening terms - south equals sun is an
ingrained concept here !
The programme features regular presenters from most of the
Aussie states, from the tropics in the far north, the subtropics of coastal Queensland , Perth
in the west, the arid heartlands of the country and the temperate regions
around most of the southern coastline.
But it's the stuff from the cooler regions of Victoria and Tasmania
that I find most fascinating. They grow
a lot of the same flowers and edibles that are garden favourites here in the UK , too.
She said she typically has several nights running of -5C temperatures
in the winter months. Hard frosts in
mainland Australia - who knew ?
Well, the typical minimum winter temperature at our UK location is
around the same - it's ten years since we saw the mercury dip below -6C.
And if it's -5C in Victoria
then it's likely to be even colder further south on the island of Tasmania . Where we live in the UK is in the mid-50s North in terms of latitude,
but Hobart in Tasmania
is only 43 degrees South, i.e. the same relative distance from the equator as
the south of France
for example, a region I make regular visits to throughout the year and which
has a climate a world away from ours.
So I've always expected even the extreme southernmost parts
of Australia would always be much warmer than northern Europe - maybe it's the
gulf stream and other air currents we have here in the northern hemisphere that
keep the place warmer than it would be otherwise.
In addition to the typical northern European flowers, fruit
& vegetables grown in southern Australia ,
there are some very interesting others that I would never have thought could be grown successfully in the UK .
But now I might give some of them a try ...
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