Sunday 3 February 2013

The battle for the peaches

I have had a victory of sorts!  The Wallaby has been successfully excluded from the vegetable patch. Now we are battling each other for the peaches.


When we moved here in mid-November, there was very little growing here in terms of fruit trees but there were 4 peach trees and 3 crab apples. While the Wallaby seems to enjoy pruning the leaves from  the crab apples leaving the fruit behind, the Wallaby loves peaches.

A small sample of the peach stones left behind by the Swamp Wallaby.
To date the Wallaby has eaten about 50 peaches.

I had netted the peaches soon after moving in, but I had imagined my main competitor for the fruit would come from above from Sulphur-crested cockatoos, King parrots and such. Instead I have found that the fruit raiding comes from below. I have also discovered that Wallabies have very dexterous front paws. Even when  the netting had been secured under fruit branches, the Wallaby had found the gaps and pushed its little muzzle thru to reach the fruit.


Yesterday I went on a mission, to exclude the Swampy from the best of the fruit.

I started by closing these gaps in the netting, and then on the trees that had insufficient netting to tie up under the tree, I went about re-using the netting that I keep that comes around oranges and onions when you buy them from supermarkets (I knew there was a reason to justify visiting the bug two supermarkets occasionally!).



And when I had run out of these net bags, I deployed some wire to make a cage around some particularly delicious looking peaches. (Look thru the bird netting to see the wire cage).


Last night the Wallaby did visit - it comes every night - but this morning I couldn't find any new peach stones. (Just quietly, I think I might have won!)

So given that I think I will have some peaches to myself,  perhaps you know... at what point should I pick the peaches? When they have ripened on the tree and are ready to eat or use? Or should I pick some and ripen inside?

9 comments:

  1. I know it is awful but I was sort of barracking for the wallaby!

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    Replies
    1. Hi Cat! So... you will be refusing the delivery of peaches that the Lad might make to the Metropolis? That's if we get any!

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    2. Damn a flora/fauna dilemma. Thinking ... thinking...

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  2. Those peaches look absolutely divine - I would have got out the string bags too.

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    Replies
    1. My mouth waters just looking at them. They have a lovely blush don't they?

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  3. Do they smell as good as they look? Maybe take a couple in to ripen and leave some on the tree to ripen and have a taste test

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    Replies
    1. They dont have much odour yet. However,we knocked one off the other day accidentally and popped it inside with the other fruit. Today I chanced it and cut it open... it was perfect! Fragrant, yellow skinned and free stone and the best part of all - no fruit fly!

      It was pretty delicious. I have picked some that are more vulnerable to Wallaby attack and left others less accessible on the tree.

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  4. Looks like excellent peach protection! I have just found with my individual peach protection bags that when the peaches are ripe they fall and the bag catches them. Was planning to blog it this week, when I get around to taking some pics. But I've picked them before they fall and I find when they smell peachy and delicious and easily come from the branch they are good to go.

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    Replies
    1. Love it, protection from wallabies and birds and ripeness detectors!

      Happy peach eating.

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