Friday, 16 January 2026

Replanting African violet multiple timesmother leaf

African violets are often reasonably simple to propagate.  Most people have great success rooting an African violet leaf in water, it is meant to be very simple, yet for some reason I have zero success when using this method.  

Other people cut off a leaf, wrap the petiole in damp paper towel, and propagate new plants that way.  That sounds easy, but I haven't tried it myself.  

I take a leaf cutting, plant it in soil, and usually end up with 3 or 4 leaf babies after about 3 months.  For me this method has been largely successful, and the majority of leaves I try tend to work.

Often when planting a leaf cutting, the mother leaf will produce some baby plants, then I normally leave them until the mother leaf dies and then separate off the baby plants.  Often the mother leaf looks alive and healthy for a very long time. 

I started to wonder if I could replant the mother leaf.  If I cut it off just above where it attaches to the baby plants, could I replant it and get a second set of leaf babies?  I thought I could, so I gave it a try.  

Light Blue African Violet getting old

I have an African violet with sentimental value that I have had for a few years.  Rather than risk losing this plant to some mishap, I decided to propagate a leaf.  

I planted a leaf on 03/12/2023, in March 2024 it produced three plantlets.  Taking about 3 months to produce leaf babies is pretty common, sometimes a bit faster, sometimes much slower.  

I left the leaf babies to grow out for far too long, they had competition, no fertiliser, and were in a small pot so did not reach their potential.  I divided them 12/01/2025.  This variety is a slow grower, so the timeframe to being large enough to divide are rather long, other varieties seem to grow a lot faster.

Three plants divided and mother leaf replanted 12 January

When I divided the baby plants the mother leaf looked old and shabby, one part of the leaf blade was dead, but the leaf was clearly still alive.  I replanted the mother leaf on 12/01/2025 (about a year after first planting the leaf) to see if it would give me any more leaf babies.  

The mother leaf, and all three of the leaf babies, were planted in the same pot.  You can see a photo of them above.  

The mother leaf produced its second set of leaf babies 18/04/2025, which was about about 3 months from cutting off and re-planting the mother leaf.  It seems to have produced only one or maybe two baby plants, if you squint you may be able to see them in the photo below.   

I left the leaf babies to grow a little larger before trying to remove and replant the mother leaf another time.  

The leaf was already about a year and a half old by this time, and the weather was getting cooler, so I didn't get a third set of leaf babies out of this leaf.  Had the leaf been younger (rather than leaving it attached to the babies for so long before trying this) I think I would have probably got a third set of leaf babies from it.  

Mother leaf sprouting second set of leaf babies 

The same baby plants from above 

This has shown me it is possible to get a second set of leaf babies from an African violet mother leaf.  

I thought it may be possible to get a third set of leaf babies, or even more if the mother leaf is healthy.  I also wondered if you get less leaf babies each planting as the leaf gets older.  

No one seems to talk about this, so I need to give it a try and find out for myself.  People don't need a lot of plants of the same variety, so probably don't try this/record it/bother to tell anyone.  

I tend to grow rarer things, and like to share them around, so for me it would be good to know how many sets of babies I can get from one leaf cutting.  

All of these were divided from the same pot - far too crowded

Again I used the light blue flowered African violet.  I planted a new leaf on 27/01/2025 (along with a few leaves of another variety).  

This mother leaf produced its first set baby plantlets on 19/03/2025 - which is day 72 (about two months).  Normally it takes me about 3 months to produce leaf babies, but it varies a bit, I think the weather has a lot to do with it.   

I allowed the leaf babies to grow, but not get very large.  I then cut off and replanted the mother leaf 06/04/2025.  The leaf babies survived the mother leaf being removed so were clearly large enough.  

The leaf babies possibly grew slower after the mother leaf is removed as they were not drawing any energy from the larger leaf, or maybe it makes no noticeable difference, I don't know yet.  

The second set of baby leaves was noticed 06/07/2025.  This was about three months after the mother leaf had been cut and replanted.  It was winter here in July, so the second set of baby leaves grew very slow.

The babies grew slow at the start, and I somewhat forgot about them.  This leaf was cut off again and replanted 23/11/2025.

The mother leaf was looking great, until I went away in December.  I think I bumped it out of the pot while moving things around, when I got back home the leaf was out of the soil and had dried off badly.  I replanted it but it was too late, and the leaf died.  I think it would have produced a third set of leaf babies had it not bee knocked out of the soil. 

African Violet leaf babies sprouting - too early to remove the mother leaf
Same pot. Mother leaf (on right) cut off and replanted further back
The leaf babies survived the mother leaf being removed

The other two leaves in that pot were from another African violet variety, as you can see in the photo above they also produced leaf babies.  This variety is called New Hampshire, and for me it is simple to propagate and goes from leaf cutting to flower much faster than the light blue one.  

I figured I would like to learn more about re-using an African violet mother leaf so cut off and replanted both of those mother leaves.

The New Hampshire mother leaf was first planted 27/01/2025, produced its first leaf babies and was cut off and replanted 03/05/2025.  

All mother leaves produced leaf babies, were replanted, and produced more

These leaves sat over winter and didn't do a lot as it is too cold in my house for them.  Spring came and I had largely forgot about them.  They had produced a second set of leaf babies in this time.  They were relatively large before I even noticed them.  

Early November 2025 I cut off the New Hampshire mother leaf and replanted it.  Late December it produced its third set of leaf babies.  This variety is very vigorous, and tends to propagate faster and more easily than many other African violet varieties. 

Once the leaf babies get larger I will cut the mother leaf off again, and see if I can replant it to get another set or two out of it.  

More flowers than leaves - this variety is incredible

All of this has shown me that African violets are simple to grow from leaf cuttings, and a single leaf can produce leaf babies reasonably easily several times before it grows too old.  I am not sure how many times a mother leaf can be reused, but three times has worked for me pretty easily.

I don't use rooting hormone, or humidity domes, or bottom heat, or supplemental lighting.  I just plant the African violet leaf, keep it in bright indirect light, and water it from time to time.  If I used hormones and humidity and all the other things this would probably work a lot better, but I don't have the time or money do do that, and my simple way of doing things is working fine.

Various African violets

I tend to get 3 or 4 leaf babies from the mother leaf each time, and from what I have seen the mother leaf produces slightly fewer leaf babies after being reused.  Given the low number of times I have tried reusing a mother leaf, this could just be coincidence.  Even if it is not a coincidence and I am getting lower numbers with repeated replanting of the same leaf, getting a single extra plant would be worth it if the variety is rare or holds sentimental value.  

I sell African violet leaves through my for sale page, and sometimes I sell flowering size African violet plants.  I only have a few varieties at the moment, but am looking to expand my collection a little and expect to have a few more varieties to add to that page soon.  


Saturday, 10 January 2026

Azolla the little fern that could

I've been growing this azolla (Azolla pinnata) since at least 2016.  It has been growing with us through drought, flood, snow, frosts, dust storms, and utter neglect.  

Remember that children's story of 'the little engine that could'?  It was a little train that kept going and going and going and when the hill got too steep it just kept going.  Azolla is like the plant version of this.  Very few plants have as many uses as azolla, and very few things are as simple to grow without posing a weed threat.

Azolla is simple to grow, incredibly productive (hence its ability to survive neglect), and I use it for a surprising number of things.  Very few plants have as many uses as azolla, very few plants are as simple to grow as azolla, an added bonus is this species is native to my area. 

While a few containers of azolla tucked under things around the yard can be surprisingly productive, each year I wish I had more azolla.  I consider increasing the amount I grow, but the reality of space and water constraints hits me and I only find space for a few more small containers of azolla. 

Azolla covering the water surface and forming a mat

Even though it doesn't look like a typical fern, azolla is a fern.  This little fern tends to float on the water surface with short thin roots dangling freely in the water, and does not ever need to touch soil.  Unlike many water plants, azolla can thrive in low nutrient water.  It is surprisingly resilient.  This species of azolla is native to Australia (and parts of Africa, and parts of Asia), and is the most common species of Azolla that can be found in my area.  

Azolla has a myriad of uses including animal feed, human food, mosquito control, fertiliser, mulch and compost, clearing water, providing honey bees somewhere to safely collect water, and plenty of other things.  I have eaten azolla, it isn't my favourite but in a pinch I guess I could eat it, that being said I would prefer to feed it to my chickens and then eat their eggs.  

If you ever have time to kill, look up the 'Azolla event'.  This is a time in the Eocene era were it is hypothesized that azolla growing in the arctic grew so much that it took so much carbon from the atmosphere that it changed the climate and caused an ice age.  Given that azolla can easily drawdown over 1.5 kg/m2/yr of carbon (some sources state it draws down 6.2 to 7.8kg per square meter), and the basin it was growing in covered around 4 million square kilometers, this hypothesis is plausible.  Sadly azolla will never be able to do this again, as the conditions that lead to this were rather unique, but it is fascinating nonetheless. 

Azolla and a rice plant

Azolla has a mutually beneficial symbiotic relationship with a blue green algae (cyanobacteria) called Anabaena azollae.  This is one of the few instances of symbiosis in nature being beneficial to both species.  To simplify what happens, the Azolla grows special little pockets to house the cyanobacterium and feeds it carbon, in return the blue green algae collects nitrogen from the air and turns it into a form that is usable by the fern.  Collecting nitrogen from the atmosphere like this is what makes azolla so useful. 

Not only is it rather rare to see mutually beneficial symbiosis, but this symbiosis is passed on from generation to generation and does not require re-inoculation.  To quote the Azolla foundation "we know of no other symbiotic relationship in which a cyanobacterium and plant pass down together during reproduction from generation to generation".  

Azolla also has a few other species of symbionts.  At this stage we don't really understand the purpose of those other species, or how they each interact, or if each is passed on or needs to be re-inoculated each generation.  It doesn't really matter too much, what matters is the azolla has various symbionts, and together they do a great job.  

Azolla and Chinese water chestnuts

I tend to grow azolla with aquatic vegetables such as Chinese water chestnuts.  I add some azolla when I plant them, and ignore it while it does its own thing.  Within a short amount of time the azolla covers the surface of the water.  From there it doesn't take too long to make a dense mat, which prevents mosquito larvae from being able to emerge and turn into adults.  

The azolla on top of the water surface also helps shade and cool the water, and somehow prevents the water from becoming too acidic.  Small containers can overheat in summer due to their small size, shading the water and shading the submerged soil helps keep the roots cooler which helps things grow better in the heat of summer.  

Azolla with watercress and brahmi

The mat of azolla also effectively blocks light.  This prevents algae from being a problem, and tends to prevent weed seeds from germinating.  

After the azolla turns into a thick mat, it starts to self compost.  New azolla grows on top, while the ferns underneath get smothered, and die.  This releases nitrogen and other nutrients that can be used by the water vegetables.  This works well as a natural organic biofertiliser.  This beneficial relationship between azolla and water plants was noticed hundreds of years ago, and azolla was introduced into rice paddies to increase rice yields and feed countless people long before the invent of chemical fertilisers.

The below container was partly filled with leaf litter, planted with a duck potato, topped up with water, and azolla added.  The soil level is too high, so there was not much space for water, but the azolla didn't mind, it grew well and covered the surface.  You can see the duck potatoes grew into large plants even though they were growing in small containers.  

Azolla and duck potatoes

The roots of azolla hang down in the water, and a myriad of life swims among them.  I don't know how these tiny things find their way into my containers, but I know if I look closely (or use a microscope) the roots are absolutely teeming with life.  

Tremendous amounts of research have been conducted into azolla.  All of this research points to azolla's productivity and ability to reduce the need for both chemical fertilisers and herbicides.  

While azolla is widely used as a biofertiliser in China and various other countries, it has not gained popularity in the Western countries where it is preferred to apply chemical fertilisers.  For backyard growers, azolla creates free organic fertiliser and free chicken feed.

Chinese water chestnuts growing in buckets with azolla

I start small aquatic vegetables in small pots of soil, then I transplant them into larger pots.  The ones in the photo below are in 10cm pots of soil submerged in a 4 liter ice cream container.  The azolla shades the water, which helps with temperature regulation and prevents algae from growing. 

Sometimes I place cuttings between these submerged pots.  The pots help hold the cuttings upright, keeping the base of the cutting under water, while the leaves remain in the air.  The azolla shades the water, prevents algae growth, and keeps the water cooler.  

Azolla with aquatic vegetables and cuttings

Recently I started to grow black forbidden rice (Oryza sativa).  I have some of the rice plants growing in pots of soil and being watered like any other vegetable plant, and some plants are in pots of soil submerged in shallow water.  I am curious to see which will perform better for me. 

In many countries azolla is intentionally added to flooded rice paddies.  Adding azolla is said to increase rice yields anywhere from 6.2% to 112% depending on which paper you read and what they are comparing.  All the research indicates that azolla helps rice plants grow larger, tiller more, and produce more grain (both in terms of weight as well as number of grains) per plant.  

I added azolla to most of the submerged rice I am growing.  It doesn't take long before the entire surface is covered.  Once the surface is covered it doesn't take long until the azolla forms a dense mat and starts to break down.  This should fertilise my plants, and provide food for numerous tiny water critters.  If nothing else, azolla will prevent mosquitoes from successfully breeding in these containers of still water.  

Newly planted Black forbidden rice with azolla
Azolla and rice - a few days later

The growth rate of azolla is pretty extraordinary.  

I took the photo below not long after adding azolla to the surface of the water.  You can see, the azolla is dividing and growing well. 

Black forbidden rice growing with azolla

I took the next photo of the same plants just six days later.  At this point the azolla had almost covered the surface of the water.  

This was towards the end of spring, over summer when the temperature is a little warmer the growth rate of azolla can be even faster.  

The rice plants seem to be doing well with azolla on the surface.  I am also growing a few rice plants in shallow water with no azolla to see if there is any noticeable difference.  I am taking photos and plan to write another blog post on this towards the end of the season.  While it is too early to make a call, at this stage the rice with azolla appears to be larger and more lush.

Six days of azolla growth

Azolla grows best floating on the surface of water, where it can double its biomass every few days.  Strangely enough, azolla can also grow long term on soil.  

Once I watered a pot using water that had a small piece of azolla in it.  The azolla sat on the surface of the soil and didn't die, and I decided to leave it and see what happened.  It stayed green and looked healthy enough.  

Over time the azolla grew, and slowly covered much of the soil surface.  This has not grown anywhere near as fast as when it is in water, but it has survived spring, summer, autumn, winter, another spring and is heading into its second summer.  This is long term survival.  

The azolla on top is growing, while the lower levels are mulching down.  The photos below are of the same pot of azolla, taken several months apart.  The first photo was taken after the azolla had been growing on soil for several months, the second photo was taken a few months after that. 


Azolla growing on soil long term

The same azolla still growing on just soil
From what I have seen, if growing on soil long term the azolla is a little tricky to get started, but once it gets established it is relatively hardy.  

The azolla needs damp soil and some shade to get started.  If I start by using free floating azolla and place it on soil it struggles.  If I get azolla that has started to form a dense mat, this seems hardier and tends to adapt to soil faster.  Once the azolla has been on soil for a while it changes slightly, it gets thicker and the roots change, and it seems to survive drier conditions and more sun.  

Interestingly, if I float some soil grown azolla on water, it seems to take some time to revert back to aquatic life.  For some time it just floats, it gets thinner, and does not divide.  Once it gets used to living on water, it then grows and divides like normal. 

Azolla growing on soil underneath dryland rice

As well as being excellent fertiliser, and great animal feed, azolla has a few other uses.  Honey bees and other small things need water in summer, but they can't always access water without drowning.  The bees can safely walk on azolla, and reach the water between the plants.  

Every summer I see a lot of bees on the azolla collecting water.  I also see butterflies standing on the azolla collecting water in the heat of summer.  

Dragonflies and other beneficial insects are also commonly seen around my azolla.  I am not sure if they are breeding in the water under the azolla, or if they are attracted due to the other insects, or if they are there for some other reason.  

Dragonflies are pretty, plus they are useful to have in my yard as they eat a lot of mosquitoes.  Whatever the correlation is between dragonflies and azolla, I am glad they are here.

Honey bee collecting water from azolla
Honey bee collecting water from azolla

For me, azolla performs best in part shade.  It certainly survives in full sun, but I find it grows faster when it has some shade.  Not surprisingly, being a plant means having too much shade will stop azolla from growing well. 

Azolla turns red when it is stressed.  This stress can be from too much sun, or from extreme temperatures.  When azolla is red, it grows slower, and is meant to be less nutritious.  While a pond covered in bright red azolla is a pretty amazing thing to see, I prefer to keep mine green and growing fast so I can use more of it for various things.  This normally means giving it a little shade.

Azolla starting to turn red from stress
Azolla and duckweed

Azolla spreads and divides fast.  It can double every day or so under good conditions.  

While azolla also reproduces sexually and produces spores like other ferns, the main way it reproduces is asexually.  Any part of azolla that breaks off has the potential to produce more azolla.  

While azolla prefers not to be frozen over winter, my azolla survives heavy frost, and has survived being frozen for days on end.  If it ever died from the cold, I have little doubt that either a tiny part was still alive, or sporocarps could be present in the water, and it could recolonise pretty quickly once the weather warmed.  

Azolla makes great chicken feed

I use azolla to supplement chicken feed, this helps the chickens stay healthy, and it lowers the feed bill.  

Azolla is surprisingly nutritious, and it is readily eaten by my hens.  As mentioned earlier the roots of azolla are teeming with tiny life, when my chickens eat azolla they also eat these tiny invertebrates.  

Studies indicate that azolla can replace up to 20% of bought food for layer hens without seeing a decline in eggs, but I can't grow that much azolla here.  I give them as much as I can as it replaces some bought food, and lowers the cost of eggs a little bit.  

Azolla is appreciated by hens over summer when there isn't much grass or other greenery available.  I can either float azolla on water, or I can scoop it into a dish, either way my hens eat it pretty quickly.  

Azolla and rice plants

While I am a little disappointed that azolla will never again be responsible for creating an ice age, I still like azolla.  I tend to find a lot of uses for azolla, and could use it a whole lot more if I had more of it.  I have to be content only growing a little bit as I don't have a lot of extra space.  

If you grow any animal feed, or have a garden, or grow water plants, or want to provide somewhere safe for honey bees to collect water, then azolla is for you.  Once you get azolla, you never need to buy it again as you can keep it going forever.  You may be able to find some azolla locally, or you may need to buy it.  You only need a little to get started as it divides fast.  Very few places other than dedicated water garden nurseries seem to sell azolla.  If you can't find any locally, I sell azolla through my for sale page.  

Azolla and Chinese water chestnuts growing in a bucket


Saturday, 3 January 2026

Black raspberries in Australia

I have been growing black raspberries (Rubus occidentalis) for a few years.  I think I am one of the few people in Australia who is growing black raspberry plants.  These are not blackberries, they are a species of raspberry that produces black fruit.  They are a different species to the red raspberry.  This species of black raspberry is native to North America where are also called 'black caps'.

I grew my first black raspberry plants from seed in 2019-2020.  It took a long time, and was a little tricky, but the resultant plants are great.  

I have seen black raspberry seed for sale a few places in Australia, but I would not buy from them as the reviews are either people saying the seed arrived quickly, or that the seed never germinated.  Perhaps they didn't germinate as people don't know how to stratify them, or perhaps the seeds are dead, either way I would avoid these companies.

My back cap raspberries ripening

My black raspberry plants have strong curved thorns, similar to a rose.  They grow long arching canes, and flower on last year's growth.  They flower and fruit well, and produce a surprisingly large crop even when not cared for properly.

The berries are smaller than my red or yellow raspberries.  My black raspberries also have a lot of seeds.  Black raspberries have a distinct taste that everyone seems to enjoy, and many people comment that they are sweeter than yellow raspberries.  

I won't go into detail about the differences between black raspberry and red or yellow raspberries here as I wrote an earlier blog post as a comparison of different raspberries

Yellow raspberry, red raspberry, and black raspberry comparison
Raspberry comparison 

Black raspberry are a different species to a red raspberry.  If they cross pollinate it does not change the fruit of your plant.  By this I mean a yellow raspberry will produce a yellow fruit no matter what it is pollinated with (and no matter how much Diggers tells you otherwise and tried to blame you for receiving a red fruiting raspberry when you bought 'Diggers Gold' from them).  It's only if you plant a seed that is cross pollinated that you will see a difference, and it is the seed grown plant that will show some differences.

I am told when these black raspberries are crossed with red raspberry they produce a purple raspberry.  I haven't tasted one of these crosses to know if it is worth making and growing this cross.  

I would be curious to cross this with a yellow raspberry, or a thornless raspberry, and see what could be produced.  A thornless black raspberry would be great.  At this stage I lack the space or the time to try these crosses.

Black raspberries are productive

Black raspberry plants don't love to dry out too much, and they do well with some afternoon shade.  If they dry out too much I tend to lose some of the berries.  

While they probably are susceptible to some diseases, I have never seen any disease touch them.  I also don't have problems with pests, and birds don't tend to steal the berries (but this may change).

These plants are surprisingly productive.  Even small plants grow large bunches of berries.  The berries ripen November/December/January here, some years earlier or later than others, and are always ripe around at Christmas time.

As the canes are very thorny, I grow black raspberry plants in pots.  That way I can keep them contained and only growing where they can't grab my clothes or pose any risk to my kids.  I am sure keeping in pots is limiting their potential.  

Under these conditions they grow a meter or two long, I think if they were in soil they could grow larger and be more productive.  I don't like thorny plants, and am considering getting rid of them, but they will probably stay as they taste so good.  

Black raspberry fruiting

Propagating black raspberries is easy enough but takes time.  Seed grown can be fiddly but takes a long time, and tip rooting canes is simple but means that cane won't fruit the following year.

Raspberry seeds needs cold wet stratification to germinate.  I soak the seeds for a day or so, the water will take on a lot of their colour.  I then put the soaked seeds on damp paper in a zip lock bag in the fridge for a minimum of 3 months.  This step is not optional, without cold wet stratification black raspberry seeds will not germinate.   

The best germination rates I had were cold wet stratified for close to 12 months (because I forgot about them).  If cold wet stratifying seeds there is a risk they will germinate in the fridge, so you need to keep an eye on them and plant them if they start to germinate. 

After the wet seeds have been in the fridge for a minimum of three months, I plant them in a pot of seed raising mix.  This is fiddly as the wet seeds are hard to handle, and they tend to clump together.  I water this pot until the seeds germinate, this can be a few days but some will take a few months.

Once germinated, the seedlings are tiny and fragile.  If they are crowded they stop growing and will sit at this tiny weak stage with one or two true leaves indefinitely until divided.  Dividing tiny seedlings is tricky, I lose a lot whenever I try to do this.  Once the seedlings get past this tiny stage they are pretty hardy and grow reasonably fast.  Larger pots with more root space translates to much faster growth.

black raspberry seed for sale in Australia
Black raspberry seed

I sell black raspberry plants and seeds through my for sale page.  I don't have plants available often.  Be aware that growing any raspberry from seed is a slow process.  They must be cold wet stratified in order to germinate.  I stress that stratification is not optional.  Putting dry seed in the fridge does nothing, this is not stratification, this would just be long term storage.  

The seeds need to be cold and wet for a few months minimum, and seem to do better with longer stratification.  Even when you do everything right, sometimes the seeds take a long time to germinate, and some seeds will need to go through a second winter before they germinate.  

These black raspberries are a floricane variety, meaning once they have germinated you still have to wait quite a while before you get a crop.  After they germinate, they must grow through a warm season, then go through a winter, then the second warm season they will flower on last year's growth.  If you have them in poor soil, or with too much competition, you may need to wait an extra year.  

Plants are expensive, seeds are cheaper.  If you can be bothered to grow them from seed you end up with more plants than you will need. 


Friday, 2 January 2026

Perennial vegetables for sale January 2026

For sale in Australia perennial vegetables, heirloom vegetable seeds, edible herb plants, organic berry plants, and a few non-edible plants and things.  Everything has been grown organically by me. 

Maintaining my old for sale page wasn't working for me, so each month I will write a new blog post with an updated list of what I have for sale that month and include a link on my old for sale page.  

December got away from me with Christmas and public holidays, things are growing well and I have a few new things for sale below. 

Immali corn is the first coloured sweetcorn bred in Australia
Immali corn - the first coloured sweet corn bred in Australia

For Sale: January 2026 


Small Bare Rooted Plants $5 each (unless otherwise stated): 

Everlasting onions (currently dormant bulbs)
Tree onions (small bulbils)
Babington leek (1 yr old dormant bulbs)
Pineberry strawberry 
Virginian strawberry
Atilla alpine strawberry 
Jekkas thyme 
Peppermint 
100 yr old mint
Lavender mint 
Banana mint
Berries and Cream mint
Native water mint
Pineapple sage
Willow herb
Lime balm 
Fish mint
Vietnamese coriander
Variegated water parsley
Green water parsley (more vigorous stronger tasting version of the variegated form)
Asparagus (Variety: Purple) 
Sweet Violet 
Lemongrass 
Water cress 
Brahmi/water hyssop  
Azolla $3 per scoop 
Duckweed $3 per scoop 


Dormant bulbs or corms:

Saffron corms (small - this size may or may not flower this year) $3 each 
Daffodil - Hoop Petticoat   $3 each
Muscari grape hyacinth bulb  $2 each
Muscari grape hyacinth - Packet of seeds  $4


Ancient Cultures: 

Milk kefir grains  $5 
Kombucha SCOBY  $5 

Heirloom Vegetable Seeds:  $4 packet (unless otherwise stated) 

Immali corn
Superior coriander
Giant parsley
Purple hot mustard
Wasabi salad herb (not true wasabi) 
Purple asparagus
Tomato Zolotoe Serdtse
Tomato Tommy Toe
Tomato Reisetoimate 
Tomato Woolly Kate 
Senposai
Huacatay
Black raspberry SEED (note: needs minimum of 3 months cold wet stratification to germinate)


Non edible things:

Aloe vera (small plant) $5 
String of pearls succulent - plant $5, cuttings $2
String of beans succulent (from Coober Pedy) - plant $5, cuttings  $2
Red jelly bean succulent  $5 
African violet leaf cutting (Variety: New Hampshire) $3 each
African violet leaf cutting (Variety: unnamed double light blue) $3 each


Candle mold 'skep' $10 each 
Candle mold 'owl' $10 each 


Postage Prices: 

$12 for plants etc 
Or $3.50 if only buying seeds.  

I post the Monday after the payment has cleared. 

Asparagus seedlings

To order anything from the above list: 

Please send me an email saying what plants/seeds you would like and I will reply with prices/payment methods.  My email address will need to remove the the spaces, put @ instead of the word 'at' and . in place of the word 'dot': 

damien_beaumont at yahoo dot com dot au 



Photographs, binomial names, descriptions of plants, and notes on how I grow them, can be found on my old for sale page.  Please note my old page has a lot of things not currently in season/not currently for sale.  The only things I have for sale this month are listed in this blog post above.