Tuesday, 24 June 2008

Shade



The sun finally came and the many seedlings needed some shade while the barn area was being re-roofed so they were moved up to my ruin where they are doing well. I have a lot of aromatic herb plants - no you can´t get a great meal out of them but the bees and insects love them and they are good for the soul. Just smell some lavender, Anise Hyssop, Fennel, Rosemary, Lemon Balm etc and you´ll know what I mean. I struggled to keep up with the potting on and keeping track of them all - I´m so good at loosing labels that many end up ´anonymous´ which is a bit of pot luck at the end of the day. Mum has
been a great help keeping it all going. It´s not something you can do on your own and like any project needs the energy of many. Considering we are not many the progress this year has been amazing. Our spiral has spiralled into plants and flowers of all sorts, shapes and colours. I gave up trying to keep track of them all but it´s florishing.





Water storage has been lacking this year which is a shame as we have had so much rain. It is a priority of next year now via ponds or containers and hopefully some money will be found for guttering on the ruin to direct it all into the holding tanks. The water butt we do have fills up in a single downpour so size is important.

The plants - what´s doing well


We put the potatoes in and even though we were told it was the wrong place, wrong time, wrong method etc they seem to be doing well. There is a bit of blite on the leaves but having taken a peep at my neighbours who is the champion of all potato growers and he religiously sprays them every so often with Bordeaux mix we are quite pleased with our result.



The trees have all taken and I am especially pleased with the walnuts and Ginko. The tree seedlings of Ginko and Monkey Puzzle have also taken so should have some more to plant in the future.



Strawberry plants have been brilliant - I never knew they were so easy and we have strawberries everyday now. I planted some in between onions and garlic as well having read that they were good companions and they seem to be getting along fine.


The Clary Sage loves this climate and managed to survive below zero temperatures during winter so that was a nice suprise.
I returned to the UK for a much need break. After being here for over a year it was time to see friends and family. It was lovely and some questions about Permaculture and how it fits in practically to everyday living have surfaced which I´ve been debating with some PC friends.
The bees have had a hard time this year to catch up on their food. It has been a very wet Spring so their time out has
been limited. A neighbour caught a swarm while I was in the UK and left it in a spare hive for me. They seem to have picked up now the sun has arrived but I still don´t think they
are at their strongest. I read recently about Biodynamic beekeeping and how important it is
not to disturb the hive at all because it is like a whole body. As soon as you open it up, smoke it, place treatments of any kind in it you are disturbing the natural equilibrium of the hive body. They recommend leaving the bees well alone for them to build up their own natural defense system and that natural selection will leave the truly resistant varieties to serve future generations. This bee in the picture seems to be doing very well!

Polytunnel

The polytunnel is finally up - a little late in the season but will come in handy to get things started next year. We took advantage of Andres the builder and his sons who were here doing the barn roof which was close to collapsing. They kindly offered to help get the wire mesh in place which wasn´t that easy but with three hefty lads was no problem. The doors are yet to be done - maybe in another couple of years!
The plastic is agricultural plastic from the local hardware shop - not cheap and considering you only get a couple of years out of it before it starts
to show signs of breaking you have to make sure
you get good use out of it.
The temperature soon builds up in there as does the humidity so good ventilation is essential hence the ladders holding up the rear plastic. All my DIY skills are up to at the moment.

Wednesday, 18 June 2008

Blooming!


The rains have been very gracious in reviving the Earth and heart.

If there is something to desire,
There will be something to regret.
If there is something to regret,
there will be something to recall.
If there is something to recall,
there was nothing to regret.
If there was nothing to regret,
there was nothing to desire.

Ana Pavlova

The Journey Begins

In actual fact the journey began some time ago. The Design course has reinforced decisions that had already been made and given me the tools to put together some sort of plan to make that first step a little less daunting. I returned from the two week course today and although extremely tired I have been so motivated not just by the course, but by the people I had the good fortune to meet, that I have created this blog. I owe a great deal of thanks to those people, for their inspiration, support and a great deal of laughter. I'm not sure what the outcomes will be, but I am sure it will be an interesting journey and welcome you to join me.