The Bush Friendly Garden is at Floriade again this year, tucked
away in a corner, where you may easily miss it.
This informative display is not brightly tulipped and
hyacinthed. Instead it shows visitors a range of environmental weeds commonly
grown in gardens, and a collection of beautiful non-invasive flowering shrubs
and groundcovers that can be grown instead. Many visitors are interested and
sometimes amazed to find out that their ivy, periwinkle, olives, Cootamundra
wattle, broom, gazanias, privet, special grasses and other plants are unwelcome
when they escape the garden and invade native bushland.
Plants that are environmental weeds can (and do) grow prolifically
and swamp other vegetation. They are spread by birds eating their fruit (think
olives, cotoneasters, currawong poo full of orange firethorn berries or purple
privet berries), or their seed may blow around easily or be readily carried by
dogs and feet (think fur and seedy socks) and mowers and other means.
Most people are fascinated to see and photograph the non-invasive
alternative plants in this bush-friendly garden (BFG) at Floriade. Among these
‘good’ plants on show this year there is an unusual ‘standard’ (grafted)
casuarina, and a ‘standard’ (grafted) grevillea. There are cushion-like plants,
and soft ferns. There is a young Wollemi Pine, and a native indigo (Indigofera sp.), as well as an eye-catching
smokebush with violet flowers — a very attractive combination — and other
garden beauties.
The ACT Parks and Conservation staff members assemble this
garden each year, using potted plants arranged as if in flower beds and adding
decorative ‘critters’ — for example snakes and beetles (only models!) — to
interest children. There are takeaway brochures, and staff who chat with the visitors
who come from all over Australia, overseas, and (we hope) the local region. The
more the people from this region who recognise local environmental weeds, the higher
the likelihood that, gradually, local gardens will be cleared of these species
and filled instead with attractive non-invasives (preferably some that will
attract birdlife). Reducing the environmental weeds in gardens in turn will
help prevent these repeat offenders — that is, the weeds — from requiring
continual control work in local bushland and national parks.
Each year the ‘BFG’ garden is slightly different, with
different alternative (good) plants and often a different arrangement. In past
years the ‘good alternatives’ have been adjacent to similar ‘bad’ plants — the
invasives — reflecting the pattern used in the booklet Grow Me Instead published by the Nursery and Garden Industry
Association (it is also on the web: Google ‘Grow Me Instead’). This year, like
last year, the bad plants are in one half of the display area and the good
plants in the other.
This year, there is a lectern at the entry to each half of the area, with a rain-proofed book showing a photo and notes about, and the location of, each plant that is on display in that half. This is very helpful because many visitors are keen to know more about the plants and the volunteer staff (at least) cannot always help.
Staffing the garden remains an important means of telling
visitors about environmental weeds, even though the arrangements of plants and
signage give many visitors the clues they need to interpret what they see. You do
really need to be a bit aware of pest plants and gardening to ‘get it’ without
explanation.
Staff members from ACT Parks and Conservation are there, with
volunteers, during weekdays. At weekends, only volunteers staff the garden. We
come from a range of interests: some of us grow native plants, some are Friends
of the national botanic gardens, some are ornithologists, others help with Weed
Swap — the twice-yearly day when you can take a load of environmental-weed
shrubs to one of two ACT green-waste dumps and get a small native plant in a
tube in exchange. Others do Landcare work, clearing these weeds from the bush.
All of us are contacts of Ms Rosemary Blemings, who is tireless in her
conservation and environmental work in the ACT.
We enjoy listening to the stories our visitors tell us. This
garden is a wonderful way to hear about gardening and pest control across Australia;
this may be the only part of Floriade where a visitor can hold forth to an
interested audience, rather than ‘tiptoe[ing] through the tulips’ (and the
amazingly fragrant hyacinths and daisies and irises and…)!!
We hope this year to find out if visitors appreciate our 'BFG' and are understanding our
message clearly, via a survey. One lucky respondent will win a gardening book
after Floriade is over in October.
If you are at Floriade, do look for the kangaroo pond and
then track down the ‘BFG’. It is near a big white marquee where cooking
is demonstrated, and beyond the garden about permaculture with chooks, wicking
beds and very healthy vegetable seedlings. Mr Costa Georgiadis visited that
garden last weekend, and maybe he will call in on us one day. We hope so.
Footnote:
Mr Shane Rattenbury, MLA, has visited the garden and he sent out this Tweet: Shane
Rattenbury @ShaneRattenburyJust checked out the Bush Friendly Garden at #Floriade #canberra - great ideas for non-invasive garden plants pic.twitter.com/UngmXQJZUg
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