Gardening Magazine

Busy in Brizzie

By Gardenamateur

As tourists, we love it when the soggy weather forecasts don't come true. They said 'cloud and showers' and all we got was cloud, with hardly a drop on our heads all day. Pammy and I were keen to re-visit the Botanic Gardens in the city, on the banks of the Brisbane RIver, as we knew the gardens had been slammed by the awful 2011 floods and we wanted to see how everything was going. The short version is 'very well, considering' but there are still many signs of damage and recovery but it's remarkable how plants can survive and bounce back from such a devastating event as those major floods. 

What follows is lots of photos. Pammy and I each took roughly half the photos shown here. We love hitting a botanic garden, each with a little digital camera in hand, and it's amazing to see how very differently we view the same things! We were busy in Brizzie, so let's go for a wander around a beautiful, big, subtropical garden.


Busy in Brizzie

Pam's photo of this mussaenda captures the beauty of its
colourful bracts and those tiny little yellow flowers very nicely.


Busy in Brizzie

These are the mussaendas in their bed very close to the river;
there's a pinky one right, and a white one, left.

Busy in Brizzie

This Eastern Water Dragon stayed as still as a statue as we
snuck around it snapping as quietly as excited kids can.

Busy in Brizzie

The water dragons are no rarity in the gardens; we saw several
here and there, all very still and quiet as we passed by.


Busy in Brizzie

Beside the Central Path which effectively splits
the gardens in two is this new flood level marker
which shows that much more than half the gardens
must have gone underwater in the 2011 floods.


Busy in Brizzie

As a grower of the deciduous frangipanis which do so well
in Sydney, it's always great to come across the evergreen
tropical frangis, which are in leaf and flower year-round.
The flowers aren't as sweetly scented as the deciduous ones,
and they're a different shape, too, but they're still lovely.


Busy in Brizzie

Wouldn't you know it, this is one of the few trees in the gardens
which didn't have a helpful little name plaque on it! It took me
a while to track it down online, but I am fairly sure this is the
'Pride of Bolivia' Tipuana tipu, a truly glorious tree with a
perfect domed crown and a broad spread that must be at
least 30 metres across. Our weed control experts say it's a
weed in Australia, but this is surely our most magnificent weed!

Busy in Brizzie

While I'm admiring big trees that I cannot grow
at home I might as well show you the African
sausage tree (Kigelia pinnata), a huge tree
dangling dozens of these big seed pods.

Busy in Brizzie

The flower stalks of the sausage tree hang
down like this on long stalks, and presumably one
of these multi-flowered candelabras produces
just one marrow-sized sausage each.

Busy in Brizzie

And the Banyan fig is even bigger than Tipuana
or the sausage tree. I paced out its canopy
from one side to the others, and it's 50 metres
wide. These mature enormous trees are one of
the reasons I love to come back to these old
gardens, the first established in Brisbane.


Busy in Brizzie

It's great fun to meet a fruit which you have only
seen in supermarket shelves actually growing
on the tree it comes from. This is the custard
apple fruit, introduced into Australia via these
Brisbane Botanic Gardens many years ago.

Busy in Brizzie

And for the record this is the custard apple
tree itself, a handsome fruit tree.

Busy in Brizzie

In the same vein as meeting a custard apple
on its tree, we also came across an enormous
jackfruit on its tree. These huge fruits are bigger
than a basketball, and you wouldn't want to
be under the tree when it decides to fall off.

Busy in Brizzie

While these crotons were inside the gardens,
you see them everywhere as roadside infill
plantings here in Brisbane. They're such a
perfect embodiment of tropical foliage color.

Busy in Brizzie

Speaking of tropical colour, the hibiscus were all in bloom,
and of course I don't have a clue which variety is which, so
for the next few photos here's a good sampling of the vivid
range of colours you can find in these classic subtropical blooms.

Busy in Brizzie

Busy in Brizzie

Busy in Brizzie

Nice variegated foliage!

Busy in Brizzie

Busy in Brizzie

If crotons are everywhere in Brisbane, so too are these blooms
of Ixora, which are often seen around office buildings, in the
forecourts of public buildings and as park hedges.

Busy in Brizzie

Still with me? I showed you a superb crepe
myrtle in our previous 'Country Comfort' post
and yes, the crepe myrtles looked great here
too. This one was loud with bees.

Busy in Brizzie

Every time I looked back as we wandered
around I could see Pammy taking shots of
details that I suspect will one day become the
subject of a painting, like these buttress roots...

Busy in Brizzie

... or this wrinkled, thick, corky bark...

Busy in Brizzie

... or this sculpture of a Banyan fig's aerial roots.


Busy in Brizzie

Pammy's not a fan of having her photo taken, and especially
of having her photo posted in my blog (although there are a
couple in our USA trip blogs back in 2011) so to finish off
this mega-long posting here's half of our photographic team
in his favorite 'Peace, love, Gumbo' T-shirt posing by the
hectic little waterfall that flows into the lotus and waterlily pond.

We really are having a lovely, busy time in Brisbane right now. An enjoyable evening eating home-cooked Mexican (thank you Karl!) out on the deck under the canopy of a big, broad-spreading poinciana tree last night, and today we're off to the Queensland Art Gallery to see the Triennial Asia Pacific Art Exhibition at the Qld Art Gallery. We love this art show, held every three years. We've been to the last two shows and so this pilgrimage up to beautiful Brisbane is hopefully something that we'll keep on doing for many years to come. As Pammy said, it's nothing like Sydney, more like a big Darwin, with a feeling and tempo all its own. We love it here.

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