Unpredictable conditions and changing plant behaviour underscore the need to alter our gardening and landscaping choicesSign up for climate and environment editor Adam Mortonās free Clear Air newsletter hereThe sun shone on Melbourneās gardens in May ā and kept shining. Warm-weather plants that had begun to die back in expectation of winter got a second wind. Basil started sprouting leaves again and roses shot new buds. The stateās second-warmest May on record also confounded cold-weather plants starting to make their way out of the ground. Was it time to bloom or sink back underground?Meanwhile, in the stateās south-west, dry earth became even drier, and raised the risk of unseasonal fire. At the same time, in coastal parts of New South Wales and Queensland, it didnāt just rain but it poured.Sign up to get climate and environment editor Adam Mortonās Clear Air column as a free newsletter Continue readingā¦