I know February is a shortish month, even with that extra leap day added this year, but here we are with no posts whatsoever last month. During these most humid and uncomfortable last weeks of summer, Pammy and I found time to enjoy a little holiday break, seeing friends in Brisbane and visiting lots of art galleries as well.
The last few times we've stayed in Brisbane we've rented a serviced apartment across the road from the Brisbane City Botanic Gardens, and a day spent there is always a treat for both of us. So that's mostly what this blog posting is about.
One wonderful thing about visiting a subtropical garden such as Brisbane's is the chance to enjoy the lushness of growth here, the different colours, and the spectacular trees. However, for starters, here's a planting which is perfectly possible to grow much further south. These canna lilies in two different colourways, mass-planted, are helpfully backlit by the morning sunshine. (I think the foreground ones are 'Tropicanna' and the background ones are 'Bengal Tiger' but I could be wrong, as they weren't labelled.)
Another sight you can enjoy all along the East Coast, not just the subtropics, is the calm presence of an Eastern Water Dragon sunning itself on a palm trunk.
Colvillea racemosa, or Colville's glory, a delicious spot from which a bossy noisy miner could keep a lookout for other birds wandering onto its aggressively guarded territory.
Fortunately, that water dragon I showed you earlier had taken a liking to Pam, sitting at her feet while she painted, and so that kept the numbers of curious children well down.
Finally, if you want to drop in on these gardens while visiting Brisbane, they are down by the Brisbane River, at one end of the city's CBD. The main botanic gardens of Brisbane are now in another location, in Mt Coot-tha, and they are well worth visiting too, of course, but I do prefer the charm of these original riverside gardens and make a beeline for them every time we visit BrizVegas.