The Bountiful Country Garden of The Design Files’ Alice Ziebell!

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The Bountiful Country Garden of The Design Files’ Alice Ziebell!

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The Bountiful Country Garden of The Design Files’ Alice Ziebell!

Gardens

by Bea Taylor

Tablecloth from Bonnie and Neil. ‘The rogue poppies have come up through the gravel – where we didn’t plant them!’, says Alice. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

Marlon, Otis and Alice harvesting zucchinis from the vegetable garden. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

The family love to spend evenings in the garden, picking produce for their dinner! Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

The vegetable beds are also dotted with rows of beautiful dahlias! Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

More dahlias! Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

Stopping to smell the roses, or rather, dahlias. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

‘The garden really is natures playground,’ says Alice. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

‘Dahlias are my favourite flower to grow, I love having the bursts of colour in the garden to brighten our day,’ says Alice. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

The strawberry patch (bottom left, under the netting) started out small, but was quickly expanded when Alice realised the family needed more than a handful of strawberries each picking. ‘I wanted bucketloads!’, she says. ‘Now we have as many strawberries as we could wish for each season.’ Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

Otis hauls in that evening’s harvest. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

Otis loves shovelling soil, picking veggies and going on ‘little adventures’ with his mum and dad. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

Alice shares snippets of her beautiful garden (and gorgeous knitted wares) on TikTok! Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

Alice holds a basket of zucchini white green, Ronde de Nice and green beans. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

There’s no taming pumpkin vines when they get going! Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

The old shed is slowly being taken over by hops and pumpkins, says Alice. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

Alice says, ‘There is a lovely little saying that the best time to plant a tree was yesterday, so we began by putting in dwarf fruit trees. We knew that fruit trees take a few years to develop before we’d see any yeild so we went to the nursery on the first day we got the keys and put in as many varieties of fruit trees as we could manage!’ Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

Cosmos and carrot flowers. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

Every inch of their productive garden is in use. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

The family’s chickens scratch around under the big willow tree on the property. ‘It is so majestic the way it swings in the wind and creates a roof over the garden,’ says Alice. ‘It’s like something out of a fairy tale.’ Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

The charming cubby house was a gift from family friends. ‘They had made it for their own grandkids who had grown out of it and passed it onto us to give it a new life,’ says Alice. Photo – Amelia Stanwix for The Design Files.

When Alice Ziebell (The Design Files’ partnerships manager) and her husband Marlon (landscape architect at Ziebell Landscape Architecture) moved from their Northcote rental to their new home in the country, they initially imagined themselves living on many acres in the middle of nowhere.

Instead, they ended up on a 1412 square metre block in the middle of Korumburra town. But, as visitors to their idyllic home will know, this tranquil spot feels far more removed from the bustle of the main street, not 500 metres from their front door.

‘It gives us the best of both worlds,’ says Alice. ‘We can grow as much as we could possibly need (and more!) in the garden, whilst also being walking distance to everything we need in town.’

When Alice and Marlon first started working on the garden in 2018 it was an unloved, open space with a hard piece of compacted dirt where the previous tenant’s caravan had once been parked. ‘It was the perfect blank slate for us to create our little paradise!’, says Alice.

Now, the garden is complete with fruit-laden trees, a bee hive, chicken coop, wild flowers and vegetable beds, which have slowly developed over time with extra rows added as Alice and Marlon’s planting needs grew.

Spring is the busiest time in the garden; it’s the season of sewing seeds and planting seedlings, in the hope of a plentiful harvest in the coming months.

Peak summer into early autumn sees them picking and processing said harvest! This time of year is less about being in the garden and more about being in the kitchen, turning homegrown produce into pickles, jams, chutneys, pies, cider and much more, to be enjoyed in the months ahead. Then, it’s time to start sewing and planting seedlings once again.

It’s an idyllic lifestyle, but not without its challenges, says Alice. ‘It certainly keeps us on our toes! One year there was no rain at all, and everything just turned into a crisp! The next year we had so much rain that everything went mouldy and the tomatoes didn’t get enough sun to ripen, so we ended up with kilos of green tomatoes.’ 

A big lesson they learnt was the importance of caring for the soil as well as the plants. ‘After a bumper couple of years, our soil became depleted because we weren’t giving it the love and nourishment it needed. Now, in between each growing season we are dedicated to adding lots of compost, mulch and giving beds rest time/adding green manure crops. Since learning this, we’ve been rewarded with plants that are thriving!’

Some days the pair spend a couple of minutes in the garden, other days, hours. ‘To some it might seem like work, but to us this is where we are happiest,’ says Alice. ‘It truly is a labour of love.’ 

Alice paints a pretty picture of their garden paradise as she describes the sweet smell of tomatoes and basil as they warm in the sun, the apple tree heaving with fruit, picking warm and juicy peaches and the brightly hued flowers giving pollen to the bees. 

But in truth, there’s nothing sweeter than sharing the garden with their young son Otis. ‘Gardens are such a rich and magical place for kids to grow up. Each day Otis runs to collect the eggs from the chickens, or checks if there are any ripe strawberries for him to pick. He loves watering and shovelling soil, picking veggies, and going on little ‘adventures’ with us. The garden really is natures playground and I hope it will teach him that the most important things in life are almost always the smallest things.’ 

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