Category Archives: Newspaper features

Dr Easaw Thomas’ Graden on the Business Times

Dr Easaw Thomas’ amazing garden was featured in the Business Times about two weeks ago and thanks to Cheow Kheng, I now got a copy of the article where I am now able to share with those gardeners who are keen in planting trees in their gardens.

Read on to find out what inspired Dr Thomas to plant 200 forest trees in his garden…

Article originally published on the Business Times Weekend
Saturday/Sunday, September 6 to 7, 2008
by Cheah Ui-Hoon

Why pay for a sculpted Japanese garden when you can DIY with local greenery?

Secret Garden

When you’re rebuilding or renovating your home, the question of what to do with your garden is usually answered by the landscape architect you hire. Sculpted trees. Check. Exotic plantings. Check. Weekly visits by gardener. Check. Do it yourself. What?

Easaw Thomas’ decision to DIY has turned his home in Wilby Road – dotted with good class bungalows turned into palatial homes – into a tropical jungle, and is a lush testament to his green thumb as well as one person’s effort to address global warming and conserve local, indigenous plants. Today, he wakes up to a low maintenance, equatorial rainforest garden that’s has been left to grow pretty much on its own.

“The burning of forests in Sumatra was a wake-up call which made me want to do something about the environment,” shares Dr Thomas, 63. To him, this was the only way to create an environment that would reduce the greenhouse effects – because of the great volume of carbon dioxide that rainforest trees absorb from the atmosphere.

“Singapore is also losing a lot of its native plants and trees,” he adds, so he makes it a point to pick plant varieties which are indigenous like syzygiums with its colour leaves (the red jambu tree belongs to this family, for example). “You have to take the context in which we live – we can’t be having Japanese gardens or temperate ones,” he points out. “Out context is one that favours an equatorial rainforest-like garden because the plant themselves grow better and they blend in with the surroundings.”

With these ideas in mind, Dr Thomas drew up his own design for his Wilby Road garden in the late 90’s that would be created around his existing 1930s house, open courtyard and pond. When the garden was done, some 200 forest trees towered around the 26.000 sq ft compound, layered with shorter fruit or flowering trees, followed by ground plants like ginger flower plants. “The other thing I wanted to have was some fragrance in the garden so I picked trees like the Michelia chempaca,” he rattles off, before showing you the variety of wild plants he picked from the jungle rather than commercial nurseries.

The garden is less than 10 years old, but it looks like the house was built within a decades’ old tropical forest. The house adds to the credibility – a 30’s style single-storey original wing and a newer, curved bedroom block that was virtually carved out of a hill on his land. The top of the hill slope serves as its roof – way before rooftop gardens became vogue. The rooftop garden has tea leaf bushes and flowering trees, and giant yam plants with their elephant ear-shaped leaves – which birds had seeded, says Dr Thomas, since he doesn’t recall planting them. The garden gets weekly visits from a few hornbills, in fact, a stamp of approval, if you wil;, for the natural rain forest eco-system he has created.

Back in 938LIVE and GCS Members on myPaper

This morning, I was back at 938LIVE’s studio located at the Radio Building on Caldecott Hill after one and a half years. Similar to the previous trip, I was on the airwaves in the same radio show entitled “The Living Room” talking about plants and gardening where I also answered the sometimes challenging gardening questions from the calls made by the public into the studio.

But what’s different this time was that the show is now hosted by Stanley Leong who is also Senior Producer-Presenter of the station. The segment that I am involved in today’s and the next two Thursdays is a “Mini Green Series” that spans only for a half hour due to my work commitments. My last time at 938 LIVE was almost an hour long. Today, I chatted about growing herbs and edible plants and the topics for the next and last sessions would encompass carnivorous plants and edible sprouts respectively.

I also took the opportunity to take a picture with the host of the show before I left the studio today. Compared to the previous visit, I found myself no longer nervous, probably due to the several previous ‘live’ radio shows that I have been involved in.

Shortly after the radio show, I was notified by the reporter who did an interview on several members from the Green Culture Singapore (GCS) discussion forum recently that the feature article has been published on today’s edition of My Paper.

The members who were featured today are all edible plants growers. Many thanks to Soo May, the SPH journalist, and GCS members, namely, Herb Lover, jolantru, Karen79 and skyfiery for agreeing to be interviewed although only Herb Lover and Jolantru were featured eventually.

The Unwarranted Bromeliad Scare

Last Friday, shortly after the news of the Gardens by the Bay’s bromeliad collection was revealed to the public, a member of the public wrote a letter to the local newspaper’s forum to sound his concern:

 

A quick reply from the National Parks Board (NParks) which is the organisation in-charge of this mega-project was published on the papers today in the same column.

It was a reassuring reply. I firmly believe that NParks would have considered their choice of plants because of the mosquito problem we face here. They will also take all the necessary measures to prevent mosquitoes from breeding with the consultation with experts.

So be rest assured, everyone and patiently wait for the plants to be up and the Gardens by the Bay open in two years time! Can’t wait to see how spectacle will look!

 

A nice corridor garden that was featured on the papers recently…

The Life! section of the Straits Times that was published last Saturday (29 Mar 08) featured a very nicely done corridor garden. I must say that that corridor garden would serve as a very good role model and fine example for all Singaporeans who dwell in highrise apartments to follow and learn from. Before I move on, I would like to credit the pictures I posted on this blog to the Straits Times. Many thanks to Andrew Tan writing this article!

Corridor gardens are not necessarily messy and untidy. Neither should they be boring where pots of plants simply line up along the corridor’s parapet. 

Do you know that corridor gardening in Singapore is, in fact, is not encouraged and often frowned upon for several reasons?

I have been told that some town council officials actually conduct frequent checks on the corridors in the apartment blocks in their constituencies to ensure that residents comply with the basic guidelines. However, most of time, the ‘give and take’ stance is taken, as long as residents do not overly crowd a corridor.

The most important and obvious reason for not encouraging gardening along the corridor is due to some inconsiderate instances where flower pots and so on, become obstacles to traffic and block fire escape. Hence all those various pieces of garden hardware that I saw in the pictures shown in the article can be considered as obstructions to human traffic.

Corridor gardening is not easy. Because Singapore is a small country and most of us live in apartments, we must either have very understanding neighbours or neighbours who love plants to be able to enjoy and permit such massive planting. Troublesome neighbours who dislike one’s plants may become those who go complain to the authorities for the obstruction caused or for the fear of mosquito breeding. I have encountered people who simply link gardening and plants with mosquitoes.

I have members on my Green Culture Singapore discussion forum lamenting that their plants grown in the common corridor that got stolen. That probably has rendered some of them from posting pictures of their plants on the forum. I reckon some clever people can actually recognise the location by just looking at the pictures and go steal those plants when one is not aware. Corridor gardeners also have to tolerate vandalism that may sometimes occur.

As we all know, not all Singaporeans live in apartments that has a balcony, especially those who live in 3-room flats. The only place that these people can do some gardening is the common corridor and that is often the only place that has some decent sunshine that is vital for plant growth. Also notable is that not all Singaporeans are keen to go down to the community garden to do gardening.

The ‘kampong’ spirit and good neighbourliness in modern Singapore are literally dead. We know that nowadays, neighbours seldom interact and the doors to each home are shut tight. Some people still do not know their neighbours well even having lived next to each other for years. The apartments that line the corridor make up a mini-community and can consists of two or more races. I thought - can gardening is an activity that can be used to bring neighbours of various faiths and races closer together? How about community gardening for neighbours who reside on the same level?

Neighbours can cooperate to watch each other’s plants – the gardening version of the neighbourhood watch. They can also grow herbs and spices to be shared among each other. When one family is away for holiday, neighbours can help to water their plants. They can also work together to design a themed garden just for their level. Last but not least, if window boxes are to be built one day in HDB flats, residents can then all take part to dress up their apartment block’s facade – a way to show their community spirit. Lastly, citizens can then also play an active role to beautify their living environment, a step that should be taken to help us get closer towards our goal, that is, to make Singapore truly a ‘City in a Garden’.