Weather Forum

Welcome Guest! To enable all features please Login or Register.

Notification

Icon
Error

Report Post
Posted by: scott123 Offline Posted: Monday, 23 March 2026 1:10:47 PM(UTC)
A measly 33mm here today and some blue sky for us too SM..Though the sun has some bite to it..Hopefully the ground will dry out a bit this week..plenty of mowing and spraying to be done..but not while its so sloppy...
The vege thing is always a gamble this early Bunyip but its worth a try I reckon..

I grow the Kangkong in flat water troughs and an old spa bath on a 3 foot high stand so the pots are always in water and fed with chicken poop its grows very lush with fat juicy stems...if its not well grown away from the soil and just straggling along in the ground I find its not as palatable..we use it or curries, stir fries and noodle dishs and find it quite acceptable as agreen this time of year same with the wing beans which in the sideways pics have just overtaken all the fences......

I prefer Pak choi and silverbeet but they are no-go through the wet and the perennial stuff is just so easy.....

I have a couple of types of Breadfruit coming off this season which have been interesting..also used in curries and when older great for wedges in the air fryer (lovely with sour cream and sweet chilli sauce)and when soft-ripe they make great desserts like pancakes...though mainly for the missus as i dont really have a sweet tooth...

Cockies stripped my Rambutan tree this week...I dont want to but I think I'm going to have to introduce them to Mr Smith and Wesson...

20260323_094939.jpg20260323_095002.jpg
Please enter the reason you're reporting this post:
Bold Italic Underline   Highlight Quote Choose Language for Syntax Highlighting Insert Image Create Link   Unordered List Ordered List   Left Justify Center Justify Right Justify   Outdent Indent   More BBCode Tags
Font Color Font Size
Report Cancel

Weather Forum

Weatherzone Forum Alternative

The Weather Forum for Australia

Australian Weather Forum

Weather Forum for Australia, climate change, storm chasing, cyclones, weather photography