Garden Miracles

Garden Miracles My mission of making the world a more beautiful place and bringing joy to those who appreciate the finest of natures gifts also continues

🌟 Exciting Workshop Alert! 🌟Join us for the "Bring back the Love" Workshop in Mountain Creek on Sat 28th Oct and 2nd Dec...
01/02/2024

🌟 Exciting Workshop Alert! 🌟

Join us for the "Bring back the Love" Workshop in Mountain Creek on Sat 28th Oct and 2nd Dec 2023, and Discover the Power of Family and Systemic Constellation Work! 🌈✨

Embark on an extraordinary journey of family re-bonding, rewiring, and rewriting old narratives. This workshop offers a transformative space for personal growth and profound healing shifts through Constellations.

🌿 **Deepen Family Bonds**: Immerse yourself in a supportive environment, fostering deep connections with a naturally formed community. Explore the hidden dynamics within families and create new patterns for optimal health and growth.

🌱 **Nurture Personal Growth**: Find clarity and self-awareness in a safe space. Leave feeling strengthened and resourced for your personal journey.

🌻 **Experience Healing through Constellations**: Facilitated by Matt Dilges, Constellations illuminate ancestral patterns, unresolved traumas, and unspoken emotions. Break free from the chains of the past and embrace a future filled with harmony and love.

✨ **What to Expect**: Our experienced facilitator, Matt Dilges, creates a nurturing environment for your transformation, providing personalized attention. Leave with a renewed sense of self, stronger family bonds, and healing memories.

🌈 **Don't Miss Out**: Reserve your spot today and unlock the incredible potential within you and your family! Join us on this journey of transformation, where the benefits are immeasurable, touching every aspect of your life.

👪 **Together, let's create a future filled with love, understanding, and harmony.** See you at the workshop!

📧 Email: [email protected]
📅 Book online: [https://transformativetherapies.10to8.com](https://transformativetherapies.10to8.com)
📞 Talk to us live: 0416733410

🌟

Ready. Set. Go.
27/08/2018

Ready. Set. Go.

31/07/2018

Food for thought

29/06/2018
A true Garden Miracle at work.
19/04/2018

A true Garden Miracle at work.

In a world where the average person consumes more resources than could possibly be regenerated in their lifetime, it’s no surprise to hear that our quickening resource consumption is resulting in a slow-motion collapse of the environment and all life on the planet.

16/01/2018

Mother Nature nothing as powerful or amazing to watch

This is my Quesnelia 'Tim Plowman' in flower It is a popular cultivar of Q. marmorata. It is known for its tall, upright...
09/12/2017

This is my Quesnelia 'Tim Plowman' in flower It is a popular cultivar of Q. marmorata. It is known for its tall, upright leaves that curl at the top. Keep, it in the full hot sun and does best elevated especially if planted on hollow logs. Do not overwater this Quesnelia or its leaves will straight and lose the lovely curling affect. As you can see with mine it is not as curly as it has been due to all the rain we have had this spring.

Who is Timothy Plowman
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Timothy Plowman
Born November 17, 1944
Died January 7, 1989
Nationality American
Citizenship United States
Alma mater Cornell University, Harvard University
Known for · intensive systematic study of coca
Scientific career
Fields ethnobotany
Institutions Field Museum of Natural History
Doctoral advisor Richard Evans Schultes
Influences Richard Evans Schultes
Influenced Wade Davis
Timothy Plowman (November 17, 1944 – January 7, 1989) was an ethnobotanist best known for his intensive work over the course of 15 years on the genus Erythroxylum in general, and the cultivated coca species in particular. He collected more than 700 specimens from South America, housed in the collection of the Field Museum of Natural History.[1]

Plowman joined the Field Museum of Natural History in 1978 where he became tenured in 1983 and was appointed Curator in 1988. He published more than 80 scientific papers (46 on Erythroxylum) and served as editor for several scientific journals.

He is one of the main subjects of One River: Explorations and Discoveries in the Amazon Rain Forest by Wade Davis. [2] Both were students of Richard Evans Schultes, the father of modern ethnobotany.

Plowman died of AIDS, which he contracted from pre-trip inoculations.[2] The nightshade species Brunfelsia plowmaniana was named after him.[3]

The Australian Newspaper The Weekend Australian Magazine.November 4 2017Tropical StarFOR ALL YEAR ROUND COLOUR BROMELIAD...
04/11/2017

The Australian Newspaper
The Weekend Australian Magazine.
November 4 2017
Tropical Star
FOR ALL YEAR ROUND COLOUR BROMELIADS TOP THE BILL.
It’s line ball who is the bigger bromeliad fan – the garden’s owner or the bromeliad expert who supplied and planted them. Either way, their mutual obsession has produced a spectacular garden.
But first came the house. What started as a modest plan for New Zealanders Allen and Barbara Peters to add a swimming pool to their Noosa Heads property, somehow evolved into a full knockdown-rebuild. Local architect Tim Ditchfield designed the house, which was completed in 2010. Its crisp, white finish and clean lines just happen to be the perfect foil for the multi-coloured bromeliad collection that flows across the front garden.
The Peters were already hooked on bromeliads, having previously developed a sub-tropical garden at their Auckland home, overlooking the Rangitoto Channel. In Noosa, Allen contacted garden designer and bromeliad grower, Michael Radley. “If you want a magnificent garden in full colour all year with as little work as possible, then bromeliads are the way to go,” the owner of Mooloolaba-based Garden Miracles says. “They’re so adaptable for any position, and in the climate here they proliferate. My philosophy is that a garden should, in ten years time, have grown into a masterpiece.”
Together they went searching for the specimens to fill the garden, using Radley’s knowledge of plant placement and his connections with specialist growers and collectors. “He didn’t want what other people had,” says Radley appreciatively of his client.
The catch-all term bromeliads covers thousands of species in 56 genera, mostly from the American continents, with many more thousands of varieties bred by enthusiasts. They grow from sea level to altitudes of 4000m, in sun and shade, from rainforests to deserts. Most grow on trees, rocks, or cliff edges, catching water and nutrients in their cupped centres and using their minimal roots for clinging on. As landscaping plants they need little care – sometimes not even soil – yet they provide colour from both foliage and flowers, and strong structural form.
The front garden’s design is simple, but dramatic. A long, linear water feature along the front of the house forms a cool accent slicing through the foliage colour. The front entry path crosses it by bridge; on one side the channel is lined with white Bisazza tiles, on the other, clear acrylic sides create a sleek focal point at the entry.
A light and airy pergola-like structure of powder-coated steel provides all-weather access from the street to the front door for visitors. “We kept the posts and purlins very small in section in order to create a light trellis structure, with almost invisible, clear, acrylic roof sheeting,” Ditchfield says of its design.
Softening the house façade is a living wall of plants, which runs across the top of the garages and entry area, then drops vertically to meet the entry path. A steel structure supports the hydroponic growing system, which allows plants to thrive without soil.
“The living wall has caused a huge amount of interest, with people stopping to admire the garden from the street,” says Allen Peters. He and Radley have recently reinvigorated it, replanting the wall with – you guessed it – masses of bromeliads. “Our aim is to have a range of colours, plant sizes and leaf shapes in the garden, always with a view to presenting each plant so as to show it off at its best and complement its neighbours.” Says Radley “They’re the perfect fit for vertical gardens.”

Thomas Muster sold it to Mark Weber for $5 million.The pool was a million $ Noosa Heads.
03/11/2017

Thomas Muster sold it to Mark Weber for $5 million.
The pool was a million $ Noosa Heads.

Liberty Hall, Noosa Hinterland.
03/11/2017

Liberty Hall, Noosa Hinterland.

Strummer Creek Coolum, you can paddle to the surf Beach.Low maintenance garden..
03/11/2017

Strummer Creek Coolum, you can paddle to the surf Beach.
Low maintenance garden..

Address

21Kingfish Court
Sunshine Coast, QLD
4557

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm
Sunday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

416733410

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