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Madeline Curr turns to a local expert for gardening tips and receives the gift of advice about her own life

"Somehow, driving home after my unplanned therapy session with Penny, I felt relief, because I knew she was right."

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Penny sharing some unexpected life advice with Madeline.

PHOTOGRAPHY MADELINE CURR

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Madeline ponders the pros and cons of staying home in the wide open spaces or returning to the bright busy lights of New York City.

PHOTOGRAPHY MADELINE CURR

One of the grand debates I often have with myself is whether I’ll live in the city or the country. When I arrived home from New York City for Christmas last December, I had a return flight booked, but at the time of writing I’m still standing on Australian soil. I thought that as I got older, the decision about where to live would magically become easier, but it’s proving to be as hard as it always was.

Getting older can be daunting, yet also exciting. I’ve noticed that as you grow, your tastes also change: in foods, in style and even in love. You tend to pick up new interests and hobbies, too. For instance, recently I woke up one morning and randomly decided I wanted to plant three white bougainvillea bushes along the side of the horse stables. I actually don’t think I’ve ever planted anything before, so this is a really unusual thing for me to try. As I drove in to town to purchase three new little plants to join the family, I wondered, “Would I have had this new passion if I had gone back to NYC?” I think not.

When planting the baby bougainvilleas, I didn’t know there’s a secret to keeping plants alive in the bush, beyond stopping my brother from parking his horse float on two-thirds of them. I had heard that bougainvilleas are one of the toughest plants you can get, but even so they could not withstand a 21-year-old’s ute and horse-float tyres. I have to admit that maybe without him realising it, my brother was letting me off the hook for success or failure of my new-found project, as the three plants were already not looking quite as healthy and happy as they had been when I bought them, that’s for sure. What had I done wrong? How could I stuff them up this badly so quickly? I knew that there was only one thing left to do: call Penny.

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Penny McKinlay is every garden’s saving grace. She is the Darling Downs garden guru who can tell you anything there is to know about any plant, for any soil, on any property or station from Toowoomba to Timbuktu. I was told that people from surrounding farms and properties travel long distances to get their hands on a plant from Penny. Did I mention that she’s 81? So she really does know her stuff.

As I pulled up outside Penny’s lovely home in our local town, with its sprawling gardens, I was expecting to leave with plenty of knowledge about plants and soils.

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Little did I know I would also be leaving with advice about my life and how to live it in the best way possible.

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