Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeGazettePeaceful place

Peaceful place

By Jade Lawton
EVERY TIME she moves house, Norma Allen leaves behind a garden far more impressive than the original.
The most recent effort at her Pakenham unit could be described as a work of art.
In it she has planted roses, camellias, some birds-nest ferns and hydrangeas, along with a weeping maple tree that sports bright red leaves.
But the stand-out feature would have to be the wall that Norma, who is quite crafty, has painted with a garden scene.
“It is a big garden for a unit; it goes right down the side of the unit and has the back garden and front as well.
“That’s why I bought it,” she said.
“It had a lawn, but by the time I bought it in February 1998, it was just some dried grass.
“I dug out bags and bags of clay; it was like digging into a stone.”
Norma’s daughter, son-in-law and friends bought some topsoil and put mulch and newspapers down before she got planting.
Hot weather over recent years has caused some problems, with the maple and hydrangeas getting sunburnt, but the maple has been revived with recycled water and Norma plans to move the hydrangeas to a shadier spot.
Norma’s favourite flower in her garden is the rose.
“I love the perfume and there are so many different colours and shapes – some are pointed buds and some are fatter,” she said.
She has stuck to a pastel colour scheme of blues, yellow and some pinks and describes her garden’s theme as ‘peaceful.’
“I don’t have bright exotic things – I think it’s a peaceful garden.
“I think I am a peaceful person and you tend to put a lot of yourself in to your garden,” she said.
She painted her feature wall two years ago.
“Because it was a blank fence and because of the pathway and I had to get the barrow round to that side, I really couldn’t have a very wide garden at all.
“I decided to do a garden mural so it looks like it continues on,” she said.
Norma, who is nearly 87, has scaled back the time she spends gardening, although she still tries to eat her lunch in the garden as often as possible.
“I could never not have a garden. If I didn’t have any ground I’d have to have planting boxes or something,” she said.
>>>Have you got a green thumb? Get your patch in to Me and My Garden by Contacting the Gazette on 5945 0666 or editor@starnewsgroup.com.au website.

Previous article
Next article
Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Old foes first up for CCCA

**The draw is out for 2026 Melbourne Country Week with CASEY CARDINIA (CCCA) drawing BAIRNSDALE, MORNINGTON PENINSULA (MPCA) and SALE/MAFFRA in the elite-level...
More News

Community farewells Warwick

Family, friends and community members gathered at Tobin Brothers Chapel in Berwick on January 12 to celebrate the life of Warwick Keith Glendenning. He is...

Hunt for Casey’s most wanted

Crime Stoppers Victoria has announced a blitz on Casey’s eight most wanted people. Collectively, they are wanted on 60 arrest warrants for offences including...

Pakenham History: Century of medical care

The new Pakenham Community Hospital, due to open later this year, is a stone’s throw and a century away from the town’s first medical...

Pakenham History: Opening a grand affair

This is how the Gazette covered the opening of the temporary Pakenham Bush Nursing Hospital on 29 May 1926 - and an update a...

Pakenham History: Mary travelled far and wide to provide medical care

As pioneering families carved out a living in the Pakenham district, times were tough and help was a considerable journey away. Early settlers had few...

OPINION: The back-to-school survival guide for working mums

So, you survived Christmas and are limping to the finishing line as school holidays come to a close. You are expected to be ‘refreshed’...

OPINION: How should Victorians celebrate Australia Day this year?

It is 2026, and Australia remains the only Commonwealth country without a national treaty with its Indigenous peoples. Other settler nations, such as Canada, New...

Bunjil Place set to hosts vibrant Open Space festival this summer

Open Space will be taking over Bunjil Place this summer, with a packed lineup and events to keep you busy during the summer holidays....

What’s On

The Lang Lang Show 'n' Shine The Lang Lang Show 'n' Shine plus Swap Meet is back this February. Run by the Rotary Club of Kooweerup/Lang...

Calder blasts Clyde into big dance

A knock for the ages has lifted Clyde into the grand final of the Casey Cardinia Cricket Association (CCCA) Kookaburra Cup Premier Division. The Cougars...