Ed Buziak's Photos + Artwork
200,000 plus words... 200 plus articles... and 600 plus images...
on his photography, art, scenes from Wiltshire, Wales, France...
Last updated:
11/06/07; 13:57:19


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Complete Article Index...
A picture named Mini.ArtworkHeader.1.jpg
Artwork... drawings, themes...
Five minute exercise... the nude

Leaves / negative space... pencil
Leaves / negative space... pastel
Razzle Dazzle... 1
Razzle Dazzle... 2
Still-life #1... Bottles
Verner Panton chair... mixed media
Wax crayon faces

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Self Portraits...
At 30

Competition Entry
Fisheye Silhouette...
Legs and Feet
My two Feet
Polyfoto
Sequences...
S/Portrait nude #1
S/Portrait nude #2
S/Portrait nude #3
S/Portrait nude #4
S/Portrait nude #5
Shadow of Man... 1
Shadow of Man... 2
Shadow of Man... 3
Shadow of Man... 4

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Cameras I've clicked with...
Bronica S2A

Hasselblad SWC "Super Wide"
Hasselblad to Holga
Hasselblad XPan
Leica M3... part 1
Lotus Rapid View
Mamiya C330
Mamiya 7
Nikon D200... Part 1
Pentax 67... Part 1
Pentax 67... Part 2
Pentax 67... Part 3a/Soft-Focus Lens
Pentax 67... Part 3b/Fisheye Lens
Pentax 67... Part 5/Extras

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Lenses I've looked through...
Dallmeyer 3B Soft-Focus

Leica 28-35-50mm Tri-Elmar lens
Leitz 400mm Telyt
Nikkor 8mm Fisheye
Nikkor 20mm Wide-angle
Nikkor 28-70mm Zoom
Nikkor 105mm Bellows
Nikkor 500mm Reflex
Nikkor El-Lenses

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Photo Themes...
Abstract Colour

Abstract Details
Aerial Faux
Apple tree blossom
Art Photo or Crap?
Backlit blossom
Balloons
Beauty Opinions
Buttercups
Candid Camera
Candid Photography
Car Number Plates
Colour Filters & Colour Film
Conker Championships
Contrejour
Costing Photography
Craftwork... Hot Glass
Cropping Photos
Dandelions
Darkroom User downfall!
Death of Film?
Depth-of-Field
Eyesight
Family Photos... Father
Hot Air Balloons
Hot Car
Inverted images
Kitchenalia
Kitchen Window... Ivy
Laid back perspective
Locomotive Valve Gear
Michaelmas Daisies
Mistletoe
Multiple Exposures
Multi-Prism Lenses
Night photo
Nostaligia... John Peel & T-Rex
Opportunity Missed?
Painswick Churchard
Paparazzi
Pastis 51 glasses
Photo Theme... Chimneys
Photo Theme... Numbers
Photo Theme... Pointing Signs
Photo Theme... Post Boxes
Photo Theme... Seats, Chairs
Photo Theme... Tractors
Photo Theme... Tri-colour
Photo Theme... Wheels
Portrait... Jilly Johnson
Plum tree blossom 1
Plum tree blossom 2
Quince tree blossom
Sequence... Minutes
Sequence... Hours of the Day
Sequence... Seasons
Sequence... Seconds
Sequence... Self-Portrait
Shadow Play
Signs... Don't
Snow Scenes
Soft Focus
Solar Eclipse
Solar Flair
Speed Camera... Le Mans 24
Steam Engine Fair
Still-life #1... Bottles
Still life - Kitchenalia
Stuck...
Swans
Trees
Tulips
Walnut tree blossom
Widecombe Fair
Window Gazing... 1
Window Gazing... 2
Water... Black & White
Water... Colours
Zone System... I
Zone System... II
Zone System... III
Zone System... IV
Zoom Effect
Zoom Lenses?

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From My Darkroom...
Bulk film loading

Darkroom Dodge
Film developer - Agfa Rodinal
Film developer - Ilford ID-11
Fortepan 400 film
Fuji Neopan films
Ilford Multigrade IV
Leitz Focomat enlargers
LPL 7452 enlarger
My Darkroom... in Wales
Processing Faults... E-6
Polaroid Image Transfer
Sepia toning
Split-Selenium toning
Stöcklers 2-bath
Tray processing

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Alt.Photo Ideas...
Cyanotype (1)

Cyanotype (2)
Sepia toning
Sun printing

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French Connections...
Abstract

Alphabet soup
Apple tree blossom
Bastille Eve
Cafe chairs
California Poppies
Chateau - Azay-le-Rideau
Cycling (1)
Cycling (2)
Cowslips & coucou
Dandelions... Pis-en-lit
Double take
Early Purple Orchid
Flower seller
French flowers
French toast
Gossamer webs
I-Spy
Lime tree leaves
Lime tree seed pod
Lucky black cat
Mistletoe
Pastis 51 glasses
Plum tree blossom 1
Plum tree blossom 2
Purple Gromwell
Quince tree blossom
Speed Camera... Le Mans 24
S/Portrait nude #3
S/Portrait nude #4
S/Portrait nude #5
Sunflowers
Tilleul tree
Tractor & Walnut tree
Walnut tree blossom

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More Scenes from Wiltshire...
Avebury Stone Circle

Bishop's Cannings
Bradford-on-Avon
Corn Stooks
Garden "Open Days"
Gt.Bedwyn Stone Museum
Great Ridgeway
Lyneham Banks
Malmesbury Abbey
Malmesbury, River Avon
Malmesbury River Walk
Maud Heath's Causeway
Ramsons
Ricardo's Tomb
Roundway Down
Salisbury Plain
Savernake Forest
Silbury Hill
Stonehenge
Strip Lynchest
Urchfont
Westbury White Horse
Wilton Mill


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vendredi 17 juin 2005

A picture named Ed'sBlog.WildFlowerGarden.1.jpg

Wild Flower Garden in Wales
How to propogate your own...

Whilst it's blazingly hot in mid-west France for many months of the year... it wasn't so that often in mid-west Wales when we lived there for a dozen years. But when the sky did turn blue it was of the deepest hue and any contrasting foliage or flower contrasted brilliantly against it.

On the whole, any patch of hillside in the Cambrian Mountains that wasn't sheep-nibbled sward was over-run by gorse or bracken. They were able to withstand the elements - horizontal wind and rain - and shelter the sure-footed woolly animals in their lee.

Occasionally, on our off-the-beaten-track strolls, we would come across a hidden garden in the middle of nowhere... usually south-facing and protected on it's other three sides by trees and a hill-side. Such was the one above which, surprisingly, was only seen once like this in it's full glory.

We found out that the lady who owned the farm had ploughed the rough, rocky slope then broadcast about half a hundredweight of mixed wild-flower seeds over the half acre plot... a lot of effort to experience a wonderful effect just once! The flowers never returned, and the cost of trying again was beyond her budget. Every June when we walked up to the same location we expected to see another glorious display... but all that showed itself were a few straggling clumps of foxgloves, daisies and scrubby weeds.

I was reminded of this tale of woe after looking at the above photo - and did a Google search to find out what went wrong with the lady farmer's abortive attempt at creating her wild flower garden...

I came up with some answers in the following article which I can use here as it has certain reprint conditions... I think you'll enjoy it and also learn some tips for your own gardening activities, no matter where you live. Here's what successful gardener Michael J. McGroarty has to say...

In the past few years I've read about, and have seen more interest in wildflowers, so I figure it's about time I jump in and add my two cents.

I have watched in despair as some of my friends have created a wildflower bed in their yard, and have ended with the biggest, ugliest patch of weeds I have ever seen. Why did they get weeds instead of wildflowers?

Two reasons!
One they were armed with a lack of good information, and two, they were lead to believe that planting a beautiful bed of wildflowers is so easy that a child could do it. Actually, a child could do it, and with great success. But only if that child were extremely lucky, or had a basic understanding of exactly how to plant a bed of wildflowers and achieve incredible success.

In the next few minutes I intend to arm you with enough good information so you can successfully plant a beautiful bed of wildflowers, and have your neighbors hanging over the fence asking you how you did it.

First of all, you've got to understand what kind of a neighborhood wildflowers like to live in. They tend to prefer wide open spaces with at least 8 hours of sunshine each day. It's true, they are sun worshipers. They also like the soil to be rich in nutrients, and well drained. They don't like hard packed soil, and they don't like to get their sneakers wet, only for short periods of time.

If you have an area that tends to be wet, wildflowers are not the answer.

Wildflowers can be used for weed control, and with a great deal of success. But you have to give the wildflowers a running start, or the weeds will keep the area "Wildflower Free." Weeds and wildflowers are both sun worshipers, so who ever reaches the top first wins. Neither will grow well without adequate sunlight. If you use this to your advantage you can have a beautiful bed of wildflowers that requires little maintenance.

The secret is proper bed preparation. You must create a bed that is as weed free as possible. You can do this by removing all the vegetation from the area you intend to plant in, and then prepare the soil for planting by tilling or raking to a depth of just one inch or less. Do not disturb the soil any deeper than that, or you will just disturb dormant weed seeds that are just waiting to be brought back to the surface so they can grow. You should consider spraying the existing vegetation with Roundup before you remove it. This will kill all the roots that might still be in the soil.

Keep in mind that you need to spray the weeds or grass with Roundup at least three days before you disturb them. If you feel that the area you have chosen has significant amount of weed seed near the surface, you might consider letting the soil sit for about six days after you work it, then work it again. Do this over and over, but don't work the soil more than one inch deep. The longer you continue this process the more apt you are to get the bed as weed free as possible.

Most weed seeds germinate rather quickly, so when you bring them to the surface through your cultivation efforts, you are giving them a chance to germinate. But then when you work the soil again in six days, you will actually interrupt the germination process and the seed will be spent. The longer you continue the process, the fewer viable weed seeds you will have to contend with. Of course additional seeds are blowing in all the time, so it's unrealistic to think that you can create a planting bed that is free of weed seed.

The most important aspect of this process is to have your bed as ready as possible, at the ideal time for planting wildflower seeds. The secret of success is to plant the wildflower seeds at the ideal time so they take off growing immediately, and beat the weeds at their own game.

The ideal time? Depends on where you live. If you're in zones one through six, you should plant in the spring. If you're in zones seven through 11, you should probably plant in the fall.

Wildflower seeds like warm soil. They will germinate best with a soil temperature of 68 to 70 degrees F. So if you live in a cooler region, you should wait until later in the spring to plant. There's no point planting when the soil temperature is 45 degrees and have the seeds just lay there while some of the weeds seeds germinate. You'd be much better off to continue working the soil as described above until the soil temperature is up to 68 degrees.

I'll say it again, just in case you missed it earlier. Don't work the soil any deeper than one inch.

Now for planting the wildflower seeds...
The best way to plant your wildflower seeds is to distribute them with a small hand held broadcast spreader, or to apply them in a manor that mimics that technique. In order to get the best coverage you should thoroughly mix the seeds with dry sand, vermiculite, or potting soil to increase the volume before you spread them. It's a lot easier to evenly distribute five pounds of granular material over an area than it is 8 ounces.

As you spread the seeds walk in straight lines from one end of the bed to the other. Then do the same thing from the side of the bed in a criss cross pattern to the first set of footsteps you made. This will give you thorough and even distribution. This is why you should mix the seeds with some sort of filler material before you start, so you have plenty of volume to work with, and will be able to cover the area completely and evenly.

I urge you to visit wildseedfarms and ask for a catalog, or call their toll free number 1-800-848-0078. This company publishes one of the most complete and informative catalogs I've ever seen. They have a color photo of each variety, along with a good description. They even tell you what percentage of seeds you can expect to germinate, and this varies from variety to variety, so they list this information for each variety.

They also tell you how long each variety takes to germinate, and what the ideal soil temperature is. They also tell you how many seeds are in each pack, how many seeds in a pound, and how much seed you need to cover a given area. Wildflower seeds have germination periods of 6 to 28 days, so you have to keep this in mind as you plan your garden. If you select a variety that has a 28 day germination period, you should select a second variety with a much quicker germination period and mix them together before sowing.

If you were to sow only seeds with a 28 day germination period the weeds would get a jump on the wildflowers, and you would likely end up with a weed garden. When you mix seeds with different germination periods, the faster germinating seeds will come up very quick, and act as a nurse crop for the seeds that need more time, keeping the weeds and birds at bay until all the seeds can germinate.

Good luck with your wildflower garden! Have fun, and enjoy.

Michael J. McGroarty is the author of the above gardenig article. Visit his interesting website freeplants.com for more advice and sign up for his  excellent gardening newsletter... and whilst you're there grab a FREE copy of his E-book, "Easy Plant Propagation".


1:22:12 PM    comment []




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