An overgrown Outram section with heaps of rubbish has been
transformed into a delightful garden, as Gillian Vine
discovers.
Trish Brenssell says she was very ignorant when she began
gardening in Outram more than 25 years ago and recalls the
horrified look she got when she showed her mother the lovely
plant growing at her new home.
"It was oxalis, that noxious weed one, and getting rid of it
was a nightmare," Mrs Brenssell said.
When she and her husband, Ken, bought the property, the small
section was crowded with conifers, silver birches and a
massive walnut.
A rubbish pit had been dug beside the walnut and more refuse
was piled alongside it.
At the back of the garden was a gorse hedge.
The couple removed the hedge and the trees, including the
walnut, which was badly damaged and potentially dangerous,
and began planting.
"The garden's sort of evolved," she said.
"We had the cottage garden and did try the red hot pokers
alternating with toetoe but, fortunately, they died.
"I had a lot of roses to start with but as I was working
full-time, I took them out except for those I kept for
sentimental reasons, or ones that have been given to me.
I'm now putting in more permanent things."
There is still something of a cottage-garden effect but Mrs
Brenssell's criticism of her original cottage garden was that
it had masses of colour at its peak and nothing in winter.
She now looks for plants with interesting colour and texture
- for example, olives that screen a shed; Chatham Island
forget-me-nots (Myosotidium hortensia) for their big,
shiny leaves; and camellias that do double duty as a
windbreak - to maintain a good look year-round.
Outram has a reputation for good soil but the Brenssells
found theirs to be very poor and silty - "It dries out very,
very quickly in summer so vast quantities of manure and
compost have been used to build up fertility.
"We do get a lot of wind here, too, but by trial and error
we've planted things that cope with that."
Old farm gates and fence posts, and dozens of rocks, have
been worked into the garden design.
"I collect rocks.
I just can't resist them," Mrs Brenssell said.
She also has an eye for an unusual plant, often bought during
the Outram Garden Club's annual bus tours.
One such is a variegated Norway maple (Acer
platanoides 'Drummondii'), bought from a Geraldine
nursery and very happy in Outram.
There is plenty of colour in the garden now but it may be a
different story in a week's time, when she picks flowers to
enter in the annual Outram Flower Show.
"My late mother was a fantastic gardener with amazing green
fingers.
She always won prizes at the Outram Flower Show and even won
the supreme award.
My son also used to enter, so three generations [have
supported it]," Mrs Brenssell said.
Unlike her mother, she does not grow especially to show.
"I come home from work, tear around the garden with the
secateurs and it's surprising how much I find to show.
I've even surprised myself by getting some prize cards
sometimes."
She urges people to have a go at showing.
"People are reluctant to enter because they think they have
to have the best but it's not really like that."
Be there
The Outram Flower Show is being held at the Outram Church
Hall, Holyhead St, Outram, next Friday, February 19. The show
is open to the public from 2pm until 7pm and admission is $1.
Afternoon tea costs $2 and there will be a market table.
Artwork by local schoolchildren will be on display.
Anyone can enter the show. Simply take along your flowers
and/or vegetables on Thursday, February 18, between 7pm and
9pm, or on Friday, February 19, between 8am and 10am. Entry
is $1 per exhibitor, regardless of how many classes are
entered. Schedules are available from Mitchells Family Food
Centre, in Outram, but if you do not have one, show officials
will tell you which classes to enter.
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