Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garden. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

brindabella: one year on

Twelve months and two weeks ago we moved from our cosy little cottage at Ythanbrae to the ramshackle farmhouse here at Brindabella.


We have worked our tails off every weekend, after work, every spare moment we had between busy full time jobs and wedding planning, to make this little abode a home.

I thought I would share some before, during and after photos with you all. Get ready for an onslaught of images...

Before: The back porch (excuse dodgy photo)
After: The back porch today!
Before: The backyard, looking from the shed to the house
After: The backyard, looking from the shed to the house
Before: The backyard, down the path
After: The backyard, down the path
Before: The backyard
After: The backyard
Before: The backyard
After: The backyard
Before: The backyard
After: The backyard
Before: The front driveway
After: The front driveway
Before: The front of the farmhouse
After: The front of the farmhouse
Before: The western side of the house, paddock
After: The western side of the house, now yard
Before: Western side of house, cypress trees, rubbish, rubble and paddock
After: Western side of the house, trees removed, all rocks, sticks, roots picked up, ground levelled, ripped x 3, more rocks, sticks roots, sown and mown
And finally just some 'in progress' shots...








Although we've only been here for 12 months, looking through these photos it has made me think it has been a lot more! But then on the other hand, we do not have a great sense of 'home' here, which I think is so important. So many hours of blood, sweat and tears have gone into transforming Brindabella, and yes we will be walking away from all our hard work when we leave here after our wedding. I am so, so very proud of what we have achieved here though - if nothing else it has been relationship strengthening stuff! 

One day when we do have a place of our own we will look back and laugh at our funny old ramshackle farmhouse we lived in before we were married...

A new adventure awaits.

Images by Emma Durkin for Cinderella at Brindabella


Wednesday, November 2, 2011

wordless wednesday: at the bottom of my mum's garden...



Playing along with Faith, Hope and a whole lotta Love.

Image by Emma Durkin for Cinderella at Brindabella

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

our beautiful tree

I've said it before, and I'll say it again - the big old horse chestnut tree in our backyard makes our house. Absolutely. When we first moved in 12 months ago we had no idea what it was - some sort of oak? A liquid amber? The family who used to farm Brindabella came to the rescue by informing us it was a horse chestnut tree. I'd never even heard of them, on my grandparents farm Ballina Park there are two enormous 80+ year old plain old chestnut trees, but horse chestnuts were...well a different chestnut altogether. My sister recently told me that in London the parks are full of these trees, but the Brits think that these are the real deal chestnuts and the 'regular' chestnut trees are quite the novelty? I don't know...all I know is that they are both beautiful trees. Big, beautiful, strong, shady in summer, crunchy in autumn - just the way I like my trees.



This beauty is estimated to be about 60-70 years old, the elderly gentleman who built the ramshackle farmhouse in 1938 told us he remembers planting it 'Oh sometime in the 40's, love!' It's towering limbs are bare all through the cold Thorpdale winters and spring into blossom come September. 


On Monday I got a phone call from lovely Lou - she lives an hour further away from Melbourne than me and was on her journey home from the big smoke, would I mind popping on the kettle for a quick cuppa and battery re-charge? Of course not! We had tea out by our beautiful tree, chatted about all things weddings and her own beauties - her girls Sunny and Scout - explored my garden and became professional egg collectors. 

Lou arrived bearing a sweet birthday surprise - these lovely roses. I am such a roses girl, and promptly put them in a vase jug to admire and ooh and ahh over (and have been doing ever since)...



But back to the tree...next to the tree stands our 'wishing well'. When we moved here it was covered in goodness knows what (moss, mildew, creepy vines and dead plants in it). We debated whether to push it over entirely but decided to keep it. We then discovered (from the lovely elderly couple who's home this used to be, a wealth of knowledge!) that the 'well' was in fact built to be a kiln. The former lady of the house at Brindabella was a keen ceramicist and would fire her pottery in the 'well' - there is even a vent on the side which made oh so much more sense when we found out it was a kiln! We considered making a water feature out of the well/kiln but ended up filling it with soil and planting it out with petunias earlier in the year, and now strawberries from my generous friend Amy. Alas I think the well/kiln is somewhat lacking in the drainage department and the strawberries are not thriving. We'll see...


The beautiful tree has shades us for spring and summer barbeques under it's branches and produces lovely crunchy leaves through Autumn. I gaze at it from the kitchen sink, play with Tessa beneath it and look upon it as somewhat of a guardian of the ramshackle farmhouse. I especially love the initials carved into it's big knotted trunk - I wonder the stories this tree would tell if it could talk?


Love you long time our beauty, we will miss you terribly also. So many things to miss, but so many things to look forward to.

Images by Emma Durkin for Cinderella at Brindabella

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

spring with lily

Yesterday the weather was gorgeous - sunshine, blue skies, flowers blooming, birds chirping type weather. I took a moment to smell the roses crabapple blossom, a tree which my sister and brother-in-law gave us for our engagement almost 12 months ago. After a rough winter of possum attack I'm surprised to see it going so well...




Our giant horse chestnut tree has broken out into leaf from it's bare hibernation. Have I mentioned how much I love this tree? Love it. 



And my little friend beside me whilst I admire our Spring garden? None other than my lovely, lovely Lily - such a gentle soul is my Lily-pad. She really is the pin-up girl around here. Tessa has her fair share of mischief making and barking at night, Pippa generally just creates utter chaos wherever she goes, but Lily...well dare I say it, she's just perfect.




Lily is most likely going to live with friends/family whilst we live out our travel dreams next year. She is not a trouble at all, we have quite a few people putting their hands up for her! She may even go to the city to live with Mr M's brother, the thought of Lily trotting down Lygon Street makes me chuckle. Lily who is used to galavanting about the hills of Ythanbrae, jumping in stock troughs and riding on the back of the motorbike. She might need a bath before she goes to the big smoke!


She doesn't work much anymore and it breaks my heart to see her getting so old. I watched her out the study window the other evening making her way from the back gate down the driveway to the bonfire, she stopped three times for a rest and I nearly cried. Mr M mentioned to me the other day that Lily might not be around when (if?) we come home. But we won't think about that for now.

Love you long time Lil, you're up pretty high on my list of the things I'll miss terribly xxx

Images by Emma Durkin for Cinderella at Brindabella

Monday, August 29, 2011

point + shoot: garden splendour

This weekend I could hear my garden waking up, stretching and blinking into the early Spring sunshine. 

My favourite Avon View lavender, which I grew so abundantly at the cottage, is starting to peek through the winter fog of my Gippsland garden...


Endless Summer hydrangeas (also transplanted from the cottage) which I thought I had sent to an early grave with a harsh Autumn prune are proving me wrong...


Eggs abound at Brindabella at the moment...


Daffodils are trumpeting after their winter hibernation...


And we came away from visiting generous friends (who are living the dream) laden with their yummy produce.


Life is good.

Playing along with Lou at sunny + scout.

Images by Emma Durkin for Cinderella at Brindabella


Wednesday, August 3, 2011

wordless wednesday: is that you spring?




Playing along with Faith, Hope and a whole lotta Love.

Images by Emma Durkin for Cinderella at Brindabella

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