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

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Shooing away monkeys-You can't be serious!


The small back yard garden I have faces the biggest threat from troops of monkeys on the prowl looking for goodies.  Having gotten wise to their habits, we have been taking many precautions.

1. Never, repeat never, leave any door of the house open.
2. Never leave dustbins out.

3. Always cover your compost pit.
4. Never, repeat never, offer any food to them, even if a baby monkey steals your heart with its pranks.

So far so good.   But if you have ripening tomatoes/ bananas/mangoes in your precious bit of land which you call your backyard garden, how does one protect them?  Seeing monkeys carelessly tasting and throwing away your hard worked tomatoes and brinjals (grown organically and examined daily with such anticipation that will put many farmers to shame)  breaks any kitchen gardener's heart.  

So this time when the mango blooms appeared on the sole mango tree at the centre of my kitchen garden, many minds went to work to think of ways to protect the future mangoes.


Make a green house, said one.   What about the birds in the garden, how will they fly about?  This suggestion was vetoed out by me.
Light a firecracker with a big boom, came another suggestion.  This was immediately accepted.  So now on, whenever one was alerted about monkeys in the vicinity , a firecracker went off and monkeys scampered away.  The alert came from babblers and bulbuls who have made my garden their property.   But often the monkeys visited when we were not around and in stealth.  The half eaten vegetables strewn around were the only proof of their visit.

As the small mangoes started appearing, more human brains started worrying about their future.  "Only a couple of mangoes will survive, that too  with luck",  pronounced the koodawalla who looked at the tree with interest everyday he came to collect the garbage.

Cover each mango with muslin cloth, suggested our gardener after due deliberation.  We had tried this the the year before with little success.  The mangoes looked terribly unhappy at the imprisonment, for one.  For the other, monkeys figured out the mangoes were covered and managed tearing apart the covers.

Then one day, our maid came with two toy guns, one a fairly big one and another a  small one.  Tie this up high enough so that monkeys can see them from a distance, she suggested.  If scarecrows in fields can scare away birds,  the sight of the gun will scare away monkeys, she reasoned.

I was ready to try anything to protect the mangoes.  This suggestion seemed harmless to all concerned.  So we implemented it.



It is now two full months  since we put up the gun.   The monkeys pass through our garden once in a while.  They hurry through without looking left or right.  So is the scaregun working?  May be it is all too early to declare the experiment a success.    But then it can well be.  Monkeys are clever beings.  Many people have started using toy guns to scare away monkeys and they associate big booms with guns.  So may be ?

Here are some pictures taken today.  We are taking a chance and letting the mangoes ripen on the tree.  Hope the monkeys will leave them alone.



(Click on the photographs to see a bigger picture)

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

The Season of Blues



The Jacaranda tree is in full bloom with blue -violet flowers





Spring is here in Gurgaon with cool mornings and evenings. What we call, beautiful weather. When spring comes with a tinge of cold, rather than an abrupt change from cold to hot, the colours are vivid and rare beauties bloom.




The above flower is called bachelor button and it is mostly blue in colour.




More bachelor buttons among pink flocks

The iris lily forgot to bloom last year as the summer came swift and strong. But this year one eagerly awaited the blooms hiding inside wrinkled leaves of the lily.




Young Iris bloom



Full bloom Iris Lily

But the highlight of the early spring is always the appearance of Common jay butterfly, that streak of blue in flight, but whose underside blends well with the surroundings, with hardly a hint of blue.



Common Jay resting on the kitchen garden hedge.



Common Jay in flight

The Blue pansy also appears sucking in wet mud and taking a break on the Ashoka leaves



The crowning glory of the season this year, was of course our own blue cricket team who lifted the world cup after 28 years!

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Cat and the pigeon

Mention the domestic cat and the vision is that of a 'purring' furry creature happy to sleep on your bed, slurp milk from a bowl and eat cat food for breakfast and dinner keeping the pet food manufacturers happy.

A very different picture from that of "kitty"-the cat who roams our neighborhood. Her territory consists of the back and front yards of at a least a dozen houses in the neighborhood and loathe she will, to enter a human household.

So we are not surprised when at times we find bird feathers in the yard, remains of kitty's meal. We also know that kitty keeps in check the rodents and garden lizards.

The latest hunt of kitty surprised us though. A full grown pigeon attacked and downed in a jiffy. The pigeons usually avoid the small hedges and lawns in our garden but this one did not and paid with its life.



Kitty Claiming the prize hunt



Kitty the hunter with the pigeon she felled

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Nature at our doorsteps!

Kitchen Gardens are a great vehicle to bring a little bit of nature into our everyday lives. While the plants and flowers are a source of joy in themselves, greater is the joy if these plants attract small wildlife like butterflies, insects, birds and squirrels as well.

Here is a slide show of the creative efforts of a group of ladies who are members of the Kitchen Garden Association of India.

http://backyard-wildlife.wildbytes.in/#12