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Tag Archives: Blue Mountains

Autumn In The Gardens

16 Friday May 2014

Posted by gardensandpolkadots in Gardens, Polka Dots

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Autumn Foliage, Blue Mountain Botanic Gardens, Blue Mountains, Botanic Gardens, Mt Tomah, Serendipity Garden Designs

Last weekend Dave and I went for our annual visit to The Blue Mountains Botanic Garden at Mt Tomah. We packed everything we needed and by everything I mean scarves, hats and coats because usually it is pretty cold up there. I remember one year we barely made it out of the car and beyond the gift shop – I love a botanically inspired shop so that is a must under any circumstance! However, this year it was quite different, sure we still wore jackets while we wondered around the garden but we weren’t covering every potentially exposed bit of skin on our bodies. It was wonderful weather!

Together

I know, not the most sensible shoes for a walk around a garden, but what can I say, I love those shoes!

The Blue Mountains Botanic Garden is a cool climate garden focusing on southern hemisphere plants, some of which were in flower and looking rather spectacular. The other reason for a visit to the Blue Mountains, not just the garden is the autumn foliage. On the drive up Dave and I were mesmerised by the vibrancy of the autumn colour in the deciduous trees this year, claret, amber and every colour in between. Perhaps it was the abundant sunshine that was making it all look that little bit more showy.

Autumn At Mt Tomah

Autumn Trees

Water Fall

Mt Tomah Botanic Gardens

One of the views across to the ‘blue’ mountains

Feature

I love the little puff of Dianthus erinaceus in the rocks. I think the Botanic Gardens call this one Green Hedgehog and rightly so, it is super spiky

Autumn At Mt Tomah 2

Look at that crimson Protea flower 

Planting

Native Grass

This area is my favourite section of the garden

Grass Land

Still my favourite…

Protea 2

Protea

Pink Paper Daisy

It is well worth a visit and a lovely day out especially when lunch at Apple Bar is included in the schedule.

Our day out reminded us that it has been some time since we visited the Royal Botanic Garden Sydney so that has been put on the list. Maybe a picnic in the winter sun, because winter is just around the corner!

Until next time.

Carmel

 

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Apple Picking in Bilpin

07 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by gardensandpolkadots in Polka Dots

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Apple Cider Making, Apple Picking, Apple Picking in Bilpin, Blue Mountains, Cider Making, Fruit Press, Garden Blog, garden design, polka dots, Serendipity Garden Designs

Recently, my husband Dave and I spent a wonderful polka dot filled weekend in the Blue Mountains (NSW). We browsed through the lovely shops, wandered around the cool climate neighbourhoods in full autumn colour, drank delicious hot chocolate and foraged for mushrooms.

Spectacular autumn colour in the Blue mountains

Spectacular autumn colour in the Blue mountains

You’ll know from reading ‘Foraging for Fungi’ on Gardens and Polka Dots last time that Dave is a ‘doer’ he’s not a ‘gunna’. He gets an idea and the next thing you know, the wheels are in motion and he’s making whatever it is happen. Like I said, ‘it’s exciting to be me… (sometimes, depends on the idea)’.

Last winter Dave made apple cider. He bought a fruit press and all of the ‘other’ paraphernalia and by Christmas we had delicious apple cider (bubbly and alcoholic of course!). And it was pretty tasty for a first go. So considering that we would be in an apple growing region in apple picking season we, yes WE, would go apple picking for Dave’s apple-cider apples.

The fruit press. The fruit goes in the juice comes out, but not quite that simply.

The fruit press. The fruit goes in the juice comes out, but not quite that simply.

We spent the night in a little wooden cabin in Blackheath and woke to the most magical of days , perfect for, you guessed it, apple picking, but also lunch at the Apple Bar in Bilpin and a visit to Mt Tomah Botanic Gardens. It was a sun-filled autumn day and we had lots to do. Breakfast was a super delicious blackberry muffin. Blackberries are a weed in these parts, so to say the berries were fresh is an understatement. We had an unexpected visit to a delightful market and walked away with vegetable seedlings, annuals, honey, bees wax candles, nuts and that warm fuzzy feeling you get after you visit a really good country market.

Feeling all warm and fuzzy will I look at the fresh produce at the country market.

Feeling warm and fuzzy while I look at fresh produce at the country market.

Next was a short drive to the northern side of the Blue Mountains, to the Bells Line of Road. It is a beautiful drive and you can get wide open views of the Gross Valley and picture perfect views of the Australian bush.

For our apple picking we decided to go to Shield’s Orchard http://www.shieldsorchard.com/

We had heard about Shields, so that was the reason for choosing them over all of the other ‘pick your own’ orchards and we weren’t the only ones. It was a busy weekend in the Blue Mountains.

Apples ready for picking

Apples ready for picking

When we arrived we chatted to the owner about our quest for ‘lots’ of cider apples. Unfortunately (to our knowledge) all of the cider apple trees have been removed from the Blue Mountain orchards. They weren’t popular a decade ago and were ripped out, but now, with the increase in popularity of apple cider they are more in demand. However, Granny Smith, Pink Lady and Sundowner apples will do the job.

A Granny Smith apple waiting to be picked

A Granny Smith apple waiting to be picked

We were given our baskets and pointed in the direction of the orchard where we pillaged the ground for any suitable, unbruised, freshly fallen apples. Often when you pick one apple another apple will fall off the tree. Often they are left on the ground by the picker – I guess it isn’t as much fun to pick apples off the ground as it is to pick them off the tree. But they are perfectly fine and they are the ones we got for Dave’s apple cider.

Granny Smith apples for our basket.

Granny Smith apples for our basket.

Of course I picked some apples off the apple tree for fun and eating, yum!

There's one in every group!

There’s one in every group!

All up we collected about 30 kgs of apples to make apple cider. As I write this the apples are fermenting and I can hear the water valve releasing carbon dioxide out of the fermenting bottle, a sign that all is going well with the apple cider making.

It is truly exciting to be me, I have a ‘doer’ in my life and I couldn’t be happier. “Thanks Dave!”

Until next time.

Carmel

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Foraging For Fungi

24 Friday May 2013

Posted by gardensandpolkadots in Polka Dots

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Blue Mountains, Garden Blog, Gardening Blog, Mushroom Foraging, Mushroom Picking, Mushroom Soup, polka dots, Serendipity Garden Designs, Wild Mushroom Picking

When I think of mushroom picking it creates romantic images of skipping through the forest, with basket over arm, collecting wild mushrooms and returning to a hill side cabin to cook them up in the most delicious of ways. My imagination obviously leans toward European foraging…

The Blue Mountains from Mt Tomah Botanic Gardens

The Blue Mountains from Mt Tomah Botanic Gardens

Recently I spent a polka dot filled weekend in the Blue Mountains (NSW) with my husband, Dave. Dave is an ideas man, but not only does he have the ideas he follows through and makes those ideas come to life. It’s very exciting to be me (sometimes – depends on the idea!)… and this time the idea was mushroom picking in a pine forest which we did near Oberon, west of the Blue Mountains.

Dave did all the research required including what mushrooms would be growing, what mushrooms to avoid, where they were growing and how to find them. So we set out from Leura after a spot of shopping (Yay! that was my idea) to find a pine forest that would yield us our mushrooms.

Foraging and finding -  perfect!

Foraging and finding – perfect!

The mushrooms that we were looking for were wild mushrooms, in our case Saffron Milk Caps. They can be found in pine forests from late February to early May. We drove looking for Hampton State Forest – persistence is the key here. After driving for what felt like ‘too long’ we came across the odd cluster of pine trees, then some more clusters of pine trees. These were either too difficult to get to or didn’t have any mushrooms. So we kept driving and there it was, football field after football field sized areas of stumps. The loggers had been and there were no trees in sight. But, we didn’t give up, we kept driving until on the not too distant horizon we could see the tips of more, lots more trees, enough pine trees to be called a forest. And that is exactly what we were looking for.

Careful does it. Once you have cut the stem you cover the part that is left in the ground with pine needle, that way you encourage the mushroom to shoot again next year.

Careful does it. Once you have cut the stem you cover the part that is left in the ground with pine needles, that way you encourage the mushroom to shoot again next year.

I should mention here that there was no skipping, only precarious foot steps to avoid treading on pine needle obscured mushrooms or running into a spider’s web (I didn’t want to disturb any of the wild life either). There was no basket (because I forgot to bring it – shame on me and my mushroom foraging), but we did have, you guessed it, recycled paper mushroom bags, the ones we all know and love. There was however a hillside cabin to return to, but no cooking, we waited until we were in our own kitchen (to keel over and pass out…) to cook them.

Two for one!!!

Two for one!!!

Even though Dave had done the research I was still a little concerned that we were picking wild mushrooms. When the first one went into the bag I remember saying to him, ‘don’t lick your hands or smell you hands or put them near your face and don’t eat any!’ The look of response on his face was mixed. It said ‘don’t you trust me’ and ‘how bloody stupid do you think I am?’

All up we collected about two bags worth of mushrooms to take home, that was plenty for the two of us.

Mushroom foraing success.

Mushroom foraging success.

The mushrooms travelled back to Sydney with us where Dave cooked up a pot of soup. I have to be honest the images crossing my mind of newspaper headlines containing my name very close to the words fatal and mushroom did not help my wild mushroom soup go down. I tried but there was a very definite divide within my brain, ‘it’s totally fine – we’ve done the research’ and ‘it’s oh so not fine – we’ve never done this before’. Even after each mouthful Dave had, I asked if he was ok.

Wild mushroom soup. It's orange due to the bright orange sap that seeps out of the cut end of the mushroom.

Wild mushroom soup. It’s orange due to the bright orange sap that seeps out of the cut end of the mushroom.

Even while eating the soup I kept searching the internet for things that would ease my mind. But it wasn’t very ‘eased’ when Deathcap Mushroom came up in a Google search.

Sadly I didn’t finish my soup, as I write this it sits waiting in my fridge at home. And that brings up a whole other concern, ‘should you keep wild mushroom soup?’, ‘will mushrooms that have been cooked and stored produce a highly toxic substance that renders them DANGEROUS???’. Reasonable or unreasonable, I’m not too sure!

Now here comes the warning…

I cannot stress to you enough that you should never, ever eat wild mushrooms unless you are 100% certain that you know what the mushroom is and that it is non toxic and suitable for eating. Some mushrooms are highly poisonous and eating them could be fatal. If you are not sure of the identification of the mushroom, don’t touch them, leave them where they are. A leaflet and directions are available from the Oberon Visitor Information Centre.

Dave and I survived… of course we survived, we had done the research and knew exactly what we were picking and eating. When there was any doubt as to the identification of a mushroom we left it alone. As they say, it is better to be safe than sorry.

Until next time

Carmel

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