TJs gardening Works

TJs gardening Works Hi I’m Tammy!😄👋 Qualified Horticulturist in the Limestone Coast SA. Let’s get gardening!🪴🌸 Welcome to TJs Gardening Works!

My name is Tammy, I'm a lover of all things plants and gardening, and I'm a qualified Horticulturalist. Follow me for all the hints, tips, tutorials and advice you could ever need for in the garden :)

Some of my earliest memories, from when I was a little girl, were of visiting Nanna and Grandpop’s house in winter.Nanna...
21/05/2026

Some of my earliest memories, from when I was a little girl, were of visiting Nanna and Grandpop’s house in winter.

Nanna had one of those old wood stoves in the kitchen, and the little front fire door was almost always cracked open with that soft orange glow flickering away inside. There’d be a pile of chopped wood stacked beside it on the floor, a few weeks’ worth of old newspapers saved for relighting, and an ash bucket half full, ready to go out to the garden. The kitchen was always warm, cozy, and smelled faintly of smoke, rabbit stew, and comfort.

Nanna and Pop didn’t live a fancy life, but it was rich with love, laughter, and resourcefulness.

Nanna always sprinkled the wood ash somewhere throughout the veggie patch or around the garden, and because Nanna did it… Mum eventually did too.

For generations, gardeners have used woodfire ash in the garden as a kind of free homemade fertiliser. Grandparents swore by it. Old orchard growers scattered it beneath fruit trees. Veggie gardeners sprinkled it around the tomatoes and roses.

But does wood ash actually help the garden… or is it just another one of those old gardening myths that’s been passed down over time?

As it turns out — the answer is a bit of both.

So, Can We Use Wood Ash in the Garden?

Yes… if used correctly.

Wood ash can genuinely benefit some soils and plants because it contains valuable minerals absorbed by the tree while it was still alive and growing. Once the wood burns down, a lot of those minerals remain concentrated in the ash.

Wood ash commonly contains: calcium, potassium, magnesium, phosphorus and trace minerals
One thing wood ash doesn’t really contain, though, is nitrogen. During combustion, nitrogen is largely burnt off and released back into the atmosphere as the wood burns away.

So, while wood ash can help improve soil mineral levels, it’s not really a “complete fertiliser” the way many people assume.

Think of it more as a mineral supplement, soil amendment, and natural pH adjuster rather than a magic cure-all for the garden.

An Interesting Fact Most Gardeners Don’t Realise About Wood Ash
is that it's surprisingly alkaline and can often have a pH upwards of 9–11.

So, if you were tipping your ash bucket out in the same area of the garden week after week, you could unintentionally raise your soil pH over time.

For gardeners with naturally acidic soils, that's fine... it might actually be beneficial.

But for many of us gardening in naturally alkaline regions — like parts of the Limestone Coast, South Australia, too much wood ash can quietly create problems we don’t immediately notice.

Problems like nutrient lock up, reduced soil biology and create a hard crusty soil surface.

Despite the myths, there actually was good logic behind many of the old gardening practices involving wood ash. Wood ash is naturally rich in potassium — an important nutrient that helps support flowering, fruiting, disease resilience, and water regulation within our plants. That’s why older gardeners often sprinkled it around things like tomatoes, roses, pumpkins, garlic, onions and fruit trees.

And interestingly, not all ashes are created equal either. Hardwood ashes like red gum or old fruit tree pruning's, generally contain far more minerals and nutritional value than softwoods like pine.

So, Grandpa wasn’t completely wrong after all. 😉

Can You Put Wood Ash in Compost?

Yes... but sparingly.

A light sprinkling of wood ash through the compost can actually help add valuable minerals, reduce odours, and balance an overly acidic compost.

Thick layers are another story.

Too much ash in compost can raise pH too high, slow microbial activity and interfere with decomposition.

As with most things, balance matters.
A sprinkle is beneficial.
A bucket dumped in one spot… umm, probably not.

Does Wood Ash Stop Slugs and Snails?

This one sits somewhere between fact and myth.

Dry ash can temporarily irritate soft-bodied pests like slugs and snails.
The problem is, the moment dew, rain, or moisture hits the ash… it quickly loses effectiveness.
So, while it might help briefly, it’s not really a reliable long-term snail control method.
(And honestly, a nighttime wander through the garden with a torch and a bucket still works surprisingly well!)

Warning ⚠️
Not all ash is safe to use in the garden.
Avoid using ash from treated timber, painted wood, MDF, laminated products, or those BBQ charcoal briquettes.
These materials can contain glues, chemicals, salts, or heavy metals that you definitely don’t want ending up in your soil.
Only use ash from clean, untreated natural wood.

The Real Secret to Using Wood Ash Successfully

The best gardeners rarely rely on just one thing alone, they tend to use a balanced, layered approach instead. A little bit of this, a little bit of that, all working together. Wood ash works best when used sparingly alongside compost, mulch, healthy soil biology, organic matter and good watering practices, because ultimately, healthy soil is all about balance.

A quick fun historical fact — Did You Know...

Long before commercial fertilisers existed, wood ash was actually one of the world’s most important agricultural products.

The word “potash” literally comes from the term “pot ashes”, because people once soaked wood ash in large pots of water to extract potassium salts for farming, soap making and food production.

It became such an important source of potassium that potash eventually grew into a major international trade commodity.

Not bad for something most of us simply sweep out of the fireplace and throw away.”

Gardening has always been full of old traditions handed down through generations.
Some turn out to be myths, some turn out to contain real wisdom.
And many sit somewhere beautifully in between.
Wood ash in the garden is a perfect example of that.
Turns out many of those old gardening traditions carried more wisdom than people realised.

Happy Gardening😘💚

https://www.tjsgardeningworks.space/post/wood-ash-in-the-garden-helpful-soil-booster-or-old-gardening-myth

Tree Conservation-Why Our Old Giants Matter🌳💚I grew up in the era of fluro bobby socks, bubble gum jeans, and cassette r...
14/05/2026

Tree Conservation-Why Our Old Giants Matter🌳💚

I grew up in the era of fluro bobby socks, bubble gum jeans, and cassette recorders with the little flap-up lid and five chunky buttons across the front.

We thought we were pretty cool when it was finally our turn on the phone, twiddling the cord around our fingers for hours… and even cooler if Mum let us stay up past midnight watching our favourite songs on Rage when a friend slept over.

But some of my best memories were never inside at all. They were the ones where we built cubbies and hide outs in the beautiful big old trees that lined the creek on the back track to Clayton Farm.

I don’t even know if that dusty old summer track still exists anymore… but I truly hope the trees do.

We’d catch tadpoles in old jam jars and try for yabbies using a bit of string and leftover meat we'd sneak from the fridge. It was like our own little secret world where our imaginations could run wild. We'd spend entire afternoons down there dreaming about what we’d become one someday.

Back then, we never gave it another thought that those trees were doing far more than simply “being there.”

They were quietly holding entire little worlds together.

And perhaps that’s something many of us forget as we grow older.

Trees are not just scenery.

They are life itself.

Big old trees cool our streets in summer. They soften harsh winds. They hold our fragile soils together during storms and heavy rain. They clean the air we breathe and provide shade on those blistering forty five-degree afternoons when the garden, and we ourselves are struggling.

But beyond helping us… trees are also home.

Home for entire ecosystems.

A single mature tree can shelter birds, insects, lizards, possums, bats, fungi, mosses, and soil life all at once. Some creatures rely so heavily on old hollowing trees that without them, they simply cannot survive.

And while Australian native trees are incredibly important for our local wildlife… the truth is all trees matter.

Native or not.

Our beautiful south Australian Red-tailed Black Cockatoos rely hugely on old Drooping Sheoaks (Allocasuarina verticillata) as an important food source. They use their powerful beaks to carefully crack open the woody cones to reach the tiny seeds hidden inside. To many, a sheoak may simply look like just another tree dotted along the red dusty roadsides… but to a hungry cockatoo, it’s a pantry, shelter, and survival.

Wildlife doesn't read plant labels the way we do.

It simply searches for food, shelter, safety, and survival.

And increasingly… those safe places are disappearing.

When a beautiful big old tree comes down, people see the mess, the leaves and dropped bark, and the clean-up headache. Maybe they see the firewood potential.

But what many don’t take a moment to see is the decades, sometimes centuries, it took for that tree to become what it was.

A sapling planted by somebody long gone.

A home built slowly over generations.

Shade that protected children playing beneath it. Branches that carried swings, cubbies, bird nests, and memories.

You cannot replace a hundred-year-old tree overnight.

Even if we plant ten more tomorrow, (and we absolutely should) there is still something deeply special about protecting the mature trees we already have where we safely can.

Because once they’re gone… we quickly come realise just how much they selflessly gave us.

And perhaps this is where hope still lives.

Not in guilt. Not in anger. But in awareness.

We can all play a small role in protecting the future.

Maybe it’s planting a tree with the kids one weekend. Maybe it’s choosing to retain an old gum tree on a property where possible. Maybe it’s leaving hollows, logs, and leaf litter for wildlife instead of tidying every corner of the garden spotlessly.

Maybe it’s simply teaching the next generation to notice.

To look up when cockatoos fly overhead.

To stop and listen when kookaburras laugh at dusk.

To understand that a tree is never just a tree.

Because trees connect us.

To childhood. To wildlife. To seasons. To each other.

And perhaps most importantly… they connect us to the simple reminder that even when the world feels noisy and uncertain, nature still quietly carries on around us.

Still growing. Still sheltering. Still giving.

And maybe that’s why protecting trees matters so much.

Not only for the planet we leave behind…

…but for the kind of world we choose to live in right now... and pass on to tomorrow💚

Happy Gardening

Tammy😘🌳

https://www.tjsgardeningworks.space/post/tree-conservation-why-our-old-giants-matter

Only 3 sleeps till Mother’s Day! Are you ready? 🌸Give mum the gift of time, fresh air, and a helping hand in the garden ...
07/05/2026

Only 3 sleeps till Mother’s Day! Are you ready? 🌸

Give mum the gift of time, fresh air, and a helping hand in the garden 💚

Perfect for any of the beautiful mums, daughters or daughter in-laws in your life.

Message me to organise a voucher🩷💐

10 sleeps till Mother’s Day 🌸Stuck for ideas?Give the gift of time, fresh air, and a helping hand in the garden 💚Perfect...
30/04/2026

10 sleeps till Mother’s Day 🌸

Stuck for ideas?
Give the gift of time, fresh air, and a helping hand in the garden 💚

Perfect for any of the beautiful mums, daughters daughter in-laws in your life.

Message me to organise a voucher — there’s still plenty of time to get one in the mail or if you’re local, I can even deliver it for you 🌿

✨The Backyard Chickens That Raised Us✨The air’s cooling off, the sky that soft lavender-pink we only seem to notice when...
17/04/2026

✨The Backyard Chickens That Raised Us✨
The air’s cooling off, the sky that soft lavender-pink we only seem to notice when we slow down.

My two-year-old granddaughter grips the torch like it’s a sacred treasure.
My five-year-old grandson walks beside her, whispering about “monsters” in the dark.
They’re on an important mission.
They’re heading down to pen up the chickens!

Behind them, lolloping through the long grass, are the only real “monsters” in sight… the cat and the dog, happily tagging along like part of the security patrol.

And as I watch those two little shadows wobble their way toward the chook pen, my heart just melts, because I’ve seen this before.

Their mother did the very same thing at that age. Torch in hand. Bare feet in gum boots. Big imagination. Important job to do.

Some traditions aren’t loud.
They don’t come with certificates or trophies.
But they shape us.
And backyard chickens are one of those quiet rites of passage.

Let’s be honest… eggs aren't cheap right now.
Walking out to the pen and collecting warm, freshly laid eggs from your own backyard chickens feels almost rebellious in the best way.
They're free, organic and reliable.

Chickens give us far more than 'just' eggs.
They give us:

Responsibility
Routine
Connection to food
A reason to step outside daily
A front-row seat to nature doing its thing

For children especially, caring for animals teaches real, everyday life skills. Feeding. Refilling water. Checking fences. Observing behaviour.
(It still makes me smile that it even taught my three girls about “the birds and the bees”…
yes, we had a rooster — I’ll leave that one right there.)

It’s not theory, it’s lived learning. And that sort of learning sticks.

Chickens fit beautifully into a balanced, chemical-free garden. While they scratch and forage, they’re doing some serious garden work:

Reducing pests naturally
Interrupting pest life cycles
Decreasing our reliance on pesticides
Improving soil health

Every time we reach for chemical sprays, we’re not just targeting “the bad bugs”, we risk harming the beneficial ones too, and that ripple doesn’t stop there.
Our blue-tongue lizards, birds, frogs, and soil life can all be affected. Even low-level exposure builds up over time.

Chickens aren’t just livestock, they’re part of the ecosystem.
When we lean into natural systems instead, whether that’s welcoming a resident blue-tongue or keeping a handful of chickens, we create gardens that are healthier for everyone…
Plants, wildlife, pets, and people.

If you're a gardener, you already know this one, chicken manure is powerful stuff.
Imagine knowing you’re making your very own ‘Who Flung Dung’! Who would’ve thought.
It's high in nitrogen, brilliant for composting (once aged correctly), and an incredible soil booster.

It closes the loop beautifully:
Kitchen scraps → chickens → manure → compost → soil → food → back to the table.
That’s sustainability in action.

And our kids get to see it happening in real time.

There’s something deeply grounding about children growing up knowing where their food comes from, collecting eggs, watching hens dust bathe, learning that animals need care every single day, not just when we feel like it.
It builds empathy, it builds work ethic and it builds respect for life.

And maybe most importantly…
It creates memory.

One day, my grandchildren will likely tell their own little ones about walking to the coop at dusk with “monsters” in the grass behind them.
And the story will carry on.
That’s legacy.

For me, it’s about so much more than just the eggs. It’s about those precious moments under dusk torchlight, small boots padding through the grass, and the thrill of imaginary monsters lurking just beyond the chook pen. It’s the cat and dog faithfully joining the nightly patrol, and the comfort of walking the same well-worn path that’s been shared across three generations.

In a world that moves so quickly, backyard chickens have a way of slowing us down in the very best sense. They gently tether us back to the land, teaching us patience without ever needing to say a word. They nourish us, care for our gardens in their own clever little way and quietly help protect the little patch we call ours.

It’s funny, isn’t it… how something so simple can end up meaning so very much.
Have the most amazing weekend
Tam😘💚

https://www.tjsgardeningworks.space/post/the-backyard-chickens-that-raised-us

Have you ever thought to yourself... "I wish someone would just tell me what I should be doing, and when in the garden" ...
09/04/2026

Have you ever thought to yourself... "I wish someone would just tell me what I should be doing, and when in the garden"

Think it no more!
Come join me in 'The Backyard'.
Backyarders receive a weekly newsletter, What To Do This Weekend
Access to all my downloadable guides
And access to chat 'one on one' with Tam for any problem solving or advice for in their gardens
Everyone is welcome.

Count me in👇🏼
https://www.tjsgardeningworks.space/plans-pricing

✨What’s happening in The Backyard this week

Being in the mid-month of autumn now, our soils are still holding onto the remnants of warmth fromsummer, but the air has cooled off just enough to make being outside feel really lovely again. It truly is a beautiful time of year.

You’ll probably notice your summer veggies really slowing down now too… tomatoes, zucchinis, cucumbers and capsicums are starting to look a little tired and less enthusiastic.

Rather than pulling everything out all at once (if you don’t do so already), maybe consider a “no-dig” or no-till approach. Leaving the old summer plants in place a tad longer — even in their final stages — gives you the chance to sow your next round of winter veggies in amongst them.

Think of the old stems and remaining leaves as the security guards or “bouncers.” They provide shelter and protection from wind, sudden temperature drops, and even the odd warmer day for your tender new seedlings. It’s like a natural nursery, right there in your garden.

And another little bonus of leaving the summer crop skeletons in place is that, as the roots begin to break down, they gently feed the soil and preserve its structure. It’s a win-win.

A light top dressing of fresh compost and a sprinkle of your favourite organic goodies should be almost all you’ll need to get the season off to a good start.



😁🌳What to do in the garden this weekend

This weekend is going to feel really chilly in comparison to the milder days we’ve had lately. I hope you’ve got the woodshed stacked… we might be calling on it soon! 🔥

Here are a few things you can tinker with in the garden if you’re feeling keen:

🌱 Plant out a second round of broccolini, kale, silverbeet and peas to help stagger and prolong your harvest.

🐛 Do a pest inspection — don’t forget to check under leaves and along stems where little caterpillars love to hide.

🍂 Rake up freshly fallen leaves and add them to your compost or use them as mulch around the garden.

🌸 Pop in some new-season pansies and violas for a cheerful splash of colour on those grey, gloomy days.

🌿 Take a few cuttings (herbs or natives) — they strike beautifully this time of year.

Interested to know more? 👇🏼
https://www.tjsgardeningworks.space/plans-pricing

Big headlines. Big opinions. Big worries about what might happen next…Fuel prices climbing, talk of shortages, recession...
21/03/2026

Big headlines. Big opinions. Big worries about what might happen next…
Fuel prices climbing, talk of shortages, recessions and uncertainty about the future.
It’s no surprise that more and more of us are starting to think about how to be a little more self-sufficient in tough times, not out of fear, but from a quiet desire to feel steadier, more prepared, and a little less reliant on everything outside our control.
And while it’s easy to get caught up in all of that, there’s one truthful, comforting, dependable place I keep coming back to… my own little backyard. A humble tank-stand with passionfruit ripening by the bucketload and the figs are just beginning.

I don’t see it as burying my head in the sand or turning my back on reality.

Truth is… right now, the world does feel a little scary and unpredictable. But the simple things haven’t changed.

Seeds still grow. The sun still rises. And a garden, no matter how big or small, still offers us a sense of calm, purpose, and control.

🫶🏻Life is short and precious… and we owe it to ourselves to hold onto that.

We don’t need to overhaul our lives overnight to feel more secure.
Sometimes it’s the smallest shifts that make the biggest difference.
Walking down the street to grab a loaf of bread and a carton of milk instead of jumping in the car. Getting a little fresh air, a little sunshine, giving someone a wave and a smile as they drive by, and saving a few dollars while we’re at it.

Planting a few herbs by the back door. A handful of continuous pick lettuce. A punnet of broccoli seedlings or two.
Not because we need to become fully self-sufficient…But because it feels good to grow something of our own.

🍅Growing more than just food
There’s something quietly powerful about stepping outside and picking what you need. Whether it's something as small as a sprig of parsley, or a handful of beans.

It might not seem like much… but it all adds up.
A few dollars saved here and there. A little less reliance on the shops. A deeper connection to what we’re eating and how it’s grown.

🤝 Community still matters
One of the most beautiful things I see, time and time again, is how gardens bring people together.

I was standing in the kitchen, casually chatting with some lovely clients recently after pruning their espaliered fruit trees, when a neighbour dropped in. She was heading out of town for a few days and had brought over a big box full of freshly picked herbs, tomatoes, and cucumbers.

Smiling at me, even though she didn’t know me, she warmly said, “Please… take some, take as much as you like. There’s plenty there.”

This is what I’m speaking of, these simple, warm, generous acts. These are the things money cannot buy, and the very things gardening brings into our lives.
It’s so much more than just growing plants…although that’s a very important part.

It’s checking in on someone down the road. It’s tending to each other’s gardens or sharing the overflow of fresh produce in times of absence.In times when the world feels uncertain, these small acts matter more than ever.

🌼 A different kind of strength
We don’t need to live in fear to be prepared, and we don’t need to panic to be practical.

There’s a quiet kind of strength in learning a few simple new skills,
growing a little of our own food, being mindful of how we use our resources, supporting the people around us.

It’s not dramatic. It’s not headline-worthy. But it’s real. And it’s enough.

🌿 Come back to what’s steady
When the world feels a bit loud like it does right now…
Step outside, feel the sun on your face. Take a slow walk, put your hands in the soil. Water your plants.
Because in the backyard, things still make sense.
And sometimes, that’s exactly what we need.

We might not be able to control what’s happening out there…But we can absolutely shape what’s happening right here.

And that’s a pretty powerful place to start.
Tam 😘💚
https://www.tjsgardeningworks.space/post/how-to-be-self-sufficient-in-tough-times-starting-in-your-own-backyard

How good is this!!!!🥳👏So proud to have had my voice heard and know my small contribution helped make a difference 😇🦉🫶💚
10/03/2026

How good is this!!!!🥳👏So proud to have had my voice heard and know my small contribution helped make a difference 😇🦉🫶💚

: Woo hoo! 🦉 Together, we did it! The regulator is now recommending a BAN on the public sale of bird-killing rat poisons.

After massive public pressure and a decade of campaigning by BirdLife Australia and other conservation groups, the APVMA has strengthened its recommendation to include the removal of second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs) from retail sale. This announcement comes just one week before the original submission period was due to close.

This was not the original decision proposed by the APVMA, and if approved and implemented, SGARs would be restricted to licensed professionals and removed from shelves, marking one of the biggest conservation wins for Australian wildlife in recent years.

These toxic baits have been killing owls, eagles, and other native wildlife across Australia. This new recommendation is a huge step forward in protecting our birds and other animals.

Victory is in sight, and it is thanks to all of you. Over 10,000 submissions to the APVMA were from BirdLife Australia supporters alone. The APVMA heard your voices and we thank them for listening.

While this is a huge win for wildlife, we still need this recommendation to be finalised and signed off. So over to you, Julie Collins, Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry of Australia, to make it official.

There is still work to do so stay tuned for more and we thank you so much for your passion and support. Today, you have all made a difference for Australia's wildlife.

📸 Ray Sayers, Rebecca Harrison & Teresa Madgwick

So this was me recently...Warm sunny lunchbreak.I race outside to grab the washing off the line, throw the side gate ope...
10/03/2026

So this was me recently...
Warm sunny lunchbreak.
I race outside to grab the washing off the line, throw the side gate open and recoil in horror thinking… SNAKE!!!” 🤯

Common sense prevails.

I can’t just ignore it…I peek back over the gate from a safe distance (perched like a ninja on the tank stand).

And there he is…

A plump little blue-tongue lizard, none too impressed staring back up like “Excuse me??” 🤨

Instant relief. Instant smile.

One of Australia’s most misunderstood garden legends, the blue-tongue.

💙And That Blue Tongue?
It's all bluff.
It's just his warning system.
I’m not really scary but I’m hoping you’ll think I am!

Truth is?

He's just there to smash down a couple of grubs, pinch a strawberry, then be on his way🍓

🐌 Nature’s Pest Control (No Chemicals Needed)

These chunky legends quietly manage:

• Snails & slugs

• Beetles & insects

• Grubs

• Fallen fruit

They’re especially brilliant in veggie patches.

One blue-tongue can make a noticeable dent in pest numbers, without harming soil life.

🏡Put out the Welcome Mat

Blue-tongues can live 20+ years.
Some even closer to 30 in safe environments.
That means the one you see today could still be sunning himself in the same warm patch decades from now.

What a privilege 🥹🫶

🌿 Why They Need Our Help

Habitat loss is their biggest threat.

Over-tidy gardens, sealed fences, chemicals, they make life hard for these ground-dwellers.

They rely on:

• Leaf litter & mulch
• Logs & rocks
• Dense shrubs
• Safe access between gardens

And a gentle reminder for us pet lovers…
Even well-fed cats still follow instinct. Keeping cats safely contained (runs, enclosures, supervised time) protects wildlife and keeps our pets safer too. Small thoughtful choices make a huge difference.

🌸 Spring Babies!

Blue-tongues give birth to LIVE young, usually 5–20 tiny fully-formed little bubba lizards.

And then?

Off you go, kids, no hand-holding, no free meals.
Sink or slither!

Because babies are small and curious, spring is high-risk time:

• Check before mowing
• Look before lifting pots or timber
• Avoid snail baits
• Leave refuge areas intact

That “little stick” moving through your garden might be someone’s first solo mission.

A blue-tongue in your patch is a sign of a healthy garden.

So next time one frightens the life out of you and flashes that neon tongue…

Take it as a compliment.

Your garden has officially been approved by one of nature’s toughest little critics 💙🦎

Happy Gardening😘💚

https://www.tjsgardeningworks.space/post/how-to-make-blue-tongue-lizards-safe-and-at-home-in-your-garden

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