Welcome back to our resident gecko, Glenys

Gecko, probably Hoplodactylus pacificus.
We are very pleased to see our resident gecko back sunning herself in the same spot as last year on the gnarly old pine tree trunk. As this is apparently the behaviour of a pregnant female, it means we have more than one gecko in residence. If she was successful in bearing her babies from last year and they survived all the predators which includes adult geckos, it may mean we have several. Given that spotting one gecko is a rare occurrence (last year’s event caused considerable excitement amongst local herpetologists), we are never going to know, but we are hopeful that Glenys’s behaviour may become an annual event. The sunbathing is apparently part of the incubation process of the young.
It takes an eagle eye to spot a sunbathing gecko. We may well have others in less prominent spots and we may have had them here all the time and just never spotted one before. It is likely that Glenys is a fine specimen of Hoplodactylus pacificus.
Earlier stories from last year:
1) Gecko update
2) The first story (and best photo) about our gecko, as well as the flocking kereru and monarch butterflies which were delighting us at the time – Wildlife in the Garden, New Zealand style.
Tikorangi – the new Texas?

Next door - not quite the Tikorangi locals signed up for when they settled here
I can’t honestly say we are thrilled to learn of the deal between Todd Energy and Methanex which will see up to 25 wells drilled to frack the sub strata of the area where we live. Tikorangi isn’t very big and the first three wells are next door to us, with more scheduled to follow on the same site.
But we are pretty much alone in that. Industry thinks it is wonderful. Most Taranaki locals think it is wonderful because it brings jobs and money. The mayor thinks it’s wonderful. Somewhat disturbingly, the CEO of the regional council thinks it is wonderful (I say disturbingly because that is the body tasked with regulating and monitoring the industry’s activities and it is clear that they are very kindly disposed to the key players). The editor of the local paper thinks it is wonderful – which indicates that the paper will maintain its position of being the PR mouthpiece for the energy industry.
The bottom line is that the oil and gas industry may well be good for the national economy. It is certainly very good for the regional economy and means we have a superior class of cafe and restaurant in New Plymouth.

An increasingly common sight in our landscape
But there ain’t nuthin’ good for the locals who live by the sites. Nothing. At. All. They are ugly, industrial sites in the middle of rolling, green countryside. Drilling is noisy. The increase in traffic, especially heavy transport, has been major over the years. Flaring is abominable – flaring being the exercise of cleaning up the wells and testing the flows by igniting the gas. Considering there is nothing good for the environment in drilling either, I am somewhat surprised that the industry continues to get away with flaring. Don’t even try and tell me that anything I can do to reduce carbon emissions will help the planet – not when I live in an area where flaring takes place.
Over the years we have seen changes and some for the better. The first well drilled next door to us, maybe three years ago, was flared for many weeks on end. It was so bright, we could see the glow as we drove out of New Plymouth, 25km away. It lit our house all night. But worse was the noise – the constant, unabated, low grade roar which meant that living here was like living on the flight path to Heathrow, but this was 24/7. When you have lived for years in the relative silence and total darkness of the country, flaring has a huge impact on quality of life.
Flaring was greatly reduced for the second well on the same site and I am hopeful that the third currently being drilled (we can hear the rig grinding away in the quiet of the night and the morn), may see flaring reduced further.
Less high handed bullying from the companies is another change. We are lucky. We are dealing with Todd Energy who appear to be one of the better companies to deal with. I had thought the divisive bully-boy tactics of the petrochemical cowboys were in the past now (though only the relatively recent past) until I saw the media statements coming from another company on another site.
But we have also seen changes in the way the councils handle consents and the winding back on the definitions of affected parties. It is very difficult to convince councils that you are an affected party now and if you acquiesce and sign the agreement for one well, essentially you have signed away all rights to object in the future.
I have met with successive mayors and councils over about fifteen years, pleading with them to be more proactive in planning to mitigate the negative effects. They are terribly concerned and sympathetic and nothing happens. Planning, such as it is, remains completely reactive.
I have tried to get District Council to require, as part of the consents process, that sites be screened from public view by planting. I think they should only be visible from the air. High security industrial sites have no place in a rural landscape. Nothing has happened.
Today’s newspaper, where both District and Regional Council hail all the positive benefits of the economic boom gives me no confidence at all that any negative aspects will be even be acknowledged, let alone addressed.

I try not to look but in this case, it is both sides of the road. They should be screened from view.
So the gentle area where we live, a soft rural landscape with reasonably high density population and a solid core of very longstanding families, both Maori and Pakeha, will just roll with the changes as we have for the past decades. We will be the guinea pigs for fracking here. We will let you know if it does cause earthquakes or contaminate our water supplies. The ground below us is about to be fracked in every direction. We will adapt to the increase in traffic though we probably all hope that the ridiculous practice of laying gas pipelines down our roads and verges won’t happen again (how to cause maximum disruption to the largest number possible and completely without apology!) We will grit our teeth and only complain when the noise incidents get beyond the pale. And some of us will wait.
I think it likely that in a decade or two, all the viable reserves of oil and gas beneath us will be gone. The companies will pull out. The multitudes of small industrial sites I try not to look at will be reclaimed by long grass and then by other vegetation. Processing plants will be mothballed. The traffic will reduce and peace will return. I have to take the long view because the juggernaut that is the petrochemical industry rolls on unchecked in Taranaki in the short term.

The adjacent house is, I understand, still occupied by a very long term Tikorangi resident
Fairy Magnolia Blush picked for success in Australia

Fairy Magnolia Blush - Mark Jury's pink michelia
Australia’s leading garden magazine and TV programme, Gardening Australia, has named Mark’s new Fairy Magnolia Blush as one of its top ten selections for plants for the future in Australia. This is in addition to naming the Jury-bred Cordyline Red Fountain as one of the top twenty plants in the past twenty years. Gardening Australia is currently celebrating its own twentieth birthday.
Fairy Magnolia Blush is the first of a new series of michelias released by Mark, the result of a plant breeding programme over many years. It brings a distinct pink colour into a plant which is usually resolutely white or cream. It is an evergreen plant which clips easily and can be kept compact.
Blush is readily available from plant retailers in New Zealand.
Cordyline Red Fountain receives high praise in Australia.

Cordyline Red Fountain and Mark Jury
Gardening Australia, the top rating magazine and TV show, has named Cordyline Red Fountain as one of the top twenty new introductions in the last twenty years. It was the first of a new generation of clumping cordylines which does not develop a trunk allied to deep burgundy colouring. The hybridising was done by the late Felix Jury at Tikorangi in Taranaki and the plant was raised by his son, Mark Jury. It is widely available in garden centres both in New Zealand and overseas.
An end to plant sales for fifty weeks of the year – (subtitled: be in before mid November if you want any)
In one of those shared moments of blinding clarity, we have realised that we really do not wish to continue maintaining a retail area for half the year and it is time to accelerate the wind down of the nursery. This means three things:
1) We have plants to clear between now and mid November and there will be specials available. After mid November, our Plant Sales section of the website will be taken down.
2) From next year, we plan to retail for two weeks of the year only – from Labour Weekend to the end of our annual garden festival. We will however, increase the range of treasures and rarities we assemble for this time.
3) If you have been intending to get some of the plants we currently have, be in quickly because odds on, we won’t have them later (and you will have to wait until the end of October next year). This is particularly true of woody trees and shrubs.
Much and all as we appreciate our loyal customers, we would rather be gardening or discussing gardening than producing plants to sell to you.
Best regards,
Abbie and Mark.
Magnolia Weekend
Our garden is now open for the season and full of flowers, colour and birds. After the disappointing start to magnolia season with snow(!) and one killer frost the day after, which the early bloomers did not appreciate at all, fresh buds have opened and the mid season varieties are just starting to come into their own. This Friday, Saturday and Sunday, we are offering one free adult garden entry with every magnolia purchase. If you want to see what we have available, check out Plant Sales.

Magnolia Felix Jury in all its glory at 8am this morning, September 8, 2011
Tikorangi Diary: Thursday August 18

The lovely blue Lachenalia glaucina
The coldest spell of winter weather we can remember still continues. While Mark was entranced by the unbelievable event of snow falling here on Monday, there is no doubt that the unusual experience of a major hailstorm followed by an exceptionally heavy frost, culminating in snow and a second frost this week has knocked the early magnolia display. Magnolia Lanarth has been particularly badly hit and we may just have to look back to previous years to remind ourselves of how fantastic it usually is. (Check out the Magnolia Diary I kept two years ago). Usually we are peaking with the first flush of magnolias in bloom around now and we have an unsurpassed display of red flowered types at this time. Not yet. Many of the new cultivars set flower buds down the stem so will open fresh blooms but it appears that we will be particularly grateful for the second peak we get in early September with the mid season varieties, including the magnificent Iolanthe.
With the threat of frost, I have upon a couple of occasions rushed out with sheets of newspaper to cover the planting of Lachenalia glaucina that we have in the open. Sheets of newspaper work because if they blow off in the night, it means we have sufficient wind to disperse the frost. We grow a wide range of lachenalia in the garden to give us flowers over many months and only a few are vulnerable to cold temperatures in our conditions – glaucina is one. It is a lovely thing and for the first time in years, we have pots of it for sale ($10). They are only just starting to put up their flower spikes so I had to resort to a photo from previous years. Lachenalias come in blues, lilac, pink, red, yellow, orange, green, white and various colour mixes – we have available for purchase the red bulbifera, white contaminata, blue glaucina, yellow reflexa hybrid and an odd, predominantly green form of aloides.
We are open for plant sales every Friday and Saturday (other days by appointment) and we have Eftpos here but we only sell to personal customers. Sorry, no mailorder. If you want to check what else we have available, check our Plant Sales
Tikorangi Diary: Thursday August 12, 2011

A one-off opportunity
Where has the week gone? Much of it has been spent in the garden but in between times, I have been getting back to writing and the resumption of regular posts on this site is not far away. I have submitted the first week’s work to the Waikato Times although it is not scheduled for publication until they move to mornings early in September and relaunch a new look paper. I will be contributing three pieces a week – not exactly the same as previously but in a similar vein. So really, only the newspaper changes. Goodbye Taranaki readers and hello to Waikato readers. There are considerably more of you in Waikato.
Feature plants this week are a michelia and a narcissus. The michelia is a byproduct of Mark’s breeding programme. Yes, the buds are indubitably green and it opens to a green flower, though fading over time to cream. We think it is absolutely lovely and were very sad to turn our backs on it. But it is not enough to be a good plant when it comes to the marketplace. It also has to be easy to propagate and this one was just too difficult so it was never going to be commercially viable. Because we spent some years trialling it, we have a few plants available here for those quick enough to get in. This is very much a one-off opportunity to get something special and different. When they are gone, that will be it because it will not be named or propagated any further.

Adorable Narcissus x odora
The narcissus is N. X odora and it is a natural hybrid between a jonquil and a narcissus. I think it is adorable – a powerful and delicious fragrance and pure yellow, frilly blooms on long stems. We have pots full of it at $10.
We are open for plant sales every Friday and Saturday (other days by appointment) and we have Eftpos here but we only sell to personal customers. Sorry, no mailorder. If you want to check what else we have available, check our Plant Sales
Late winter equals magnolias here

Magnolia Black Tulip is opening its flowers here now
We were greatly amused to discover that Mark’s Magnolia Black Tulip was presented to the Queen last year. Yes, as in Queen Elizabeth of England. Apparently she likes magnolias. Sadly, we were not invited to the ceremony. It is coming into flower here now and you too can buy a magnolia fit for a queen. What is more, you get to meet Mark or me in person at the same time. Our trees on a sunny slope are coming into flower now, though it is still early in the magnolia season for us and peak display won’t be for another fortnight or so. Many of magnolia plants have flower buds so you can get the benefit of flowers immediately – the days when you had to wait a decade are long gone. Black Tulip is a splendid option for a feature tree to be viewed close up, so is ideal for smaller gardens. Because the flowers are so dark, it can meld in the bigger landscape where some of the larger, bolder flowered types will have more impact, but its perfect form certainly seems to appeal to people when they view it close up.

Camellia Apple Blossom Sun - one of the field grown hedging options we have available here at the moment
If you are after hedging, we have various options in camellias from small plants for small, low hedges to small plants for people with small budgets and patience, to instant hedges for those with larger budgets (they will still be cheaper than building a fence!). We have crops in the field (in other words we will dig to order) which are around five to six years old and ready for instant impact. Options include Mimosa Jury, Dreamboat, Apple Blossom Sun, Moon Moth, Roma Red and transnokoensis. These field grown plants are not listed under plant sales on the website – you will need to talk to us about them.
We are open for plant sales every Friday and Saturday (other days by appointment) and we have Eftpos here but we only sell to personal customers. Sorry, no mailorder. If you want to check what else we have available, check our Plant Sales
The exotica of Hippeastrum aulicum and the dainty understatement of Camellia minutiflora

Gorgeous Hippeastrum aulicum coming into flower in our garden

Camellia minutiflora - a suitable sub for standard roses
In a bitter cold week which has seen most of the country battening down the hatches, I feel the need to lead with colour this week. Hippeastrum aulicum, to be precise. Growing from large bulbs, these handsome plants are fully evergreen for us, with a long flowering season from now until springtime. We find the secret to growing them easily is planting them in open woodland conditions where the narcissi fly never seem to find them. Their big, scarlet blooms resemble Jacobean lilies and look particularly exotic on a bleak winter’s day. We haven’t had good sized bulbs of these available for many years but some of the plants in the nursery have put up strong flower spikes already – priced from $12 to $17.50.
And one of my most favourite camellias is just opening. C. minutflora has the daintiest little flowers – just the thing for people who shun the big blobby japonicas most associated with this plant family. More than just its delicate flowers, C. minutifora has an interesting, arching habit of growth and attractive small, dark leaves. The original plant here is only waist height and maybe a metre and half across though our resident tumbling pigeons may have kept it low with their habit of perching on it and posing decoratively. We have staked the nursery plants up to give them a good start so they are already higher than the original plant. We have quite a few in stock because I was toying with the idea of using them as a replacement for buxus hedging but we decided on a different variety instead. This is a plant which lends itself to keeping as a formal specimen – think a substitute for standard roses. With its graceful, arching form and its inclination to stay smaller growing, it is not as hard to keep under control as some of the more determined, stronger growing camellias (like tsaii, transnokoensis and Cinnamon Cindy). Plants are priced from $20 to $35, though prices may be negotiable if hedging quantities are required.

The dainty flowers of Camellia minutiflora
We are open for plant sales every Friday and Saturday (other days by appointment) and we have Eftpos here but we only sell to personal customers. Sorry, no mailorder. If you want to check what else we have available, check our Plant Sales
















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