Sunday, May 10, 2009

Polytunnel

We bought a polytunnel a couple of weeks ago, and I thought "Hey, dead easy to put up.... nothing to it..."
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Ha!
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The first part of the job is to hammer scaffolding tubes into the ground. These are essentially the "foundations" of the polytunnel. Each length of scaffolding acts a sleeve for the main hoops of tubing which make up the "skeleton" of the tunnel.
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Now I'm while fairly robustly built, I'm a bit puny when it comes to wielding a sledgehammer. It took me a full afternoon to get the tubes into the ground at just the right angle to take the hoops. Each hoop is made of of two parts, fitting together with a male/female joint. If the tubes are in the ground at the wrong angle, even slightly, the two halves of the hoops either don't come together at all, or they spring apart with a joyous sproinggggg!!!! noise and you have to start again.
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Next job; get the ground sheet down. Easy enough, but I discover at this point that the supplier has been very economical with the ground pegs. The sheet is down as I place it there, but the first high wind and it'll be "I don't think we're in Kansas any more Toto....". Memo to self: purchase more grounds pegs.
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And today's job: the doors.One either end (i.e. so that when there's a high wind, we can open both ends and avoid the Kansas scenario).
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Of course, when fitting doors, it is a usual assumption that one is fitting the frame and door to a, more or less, "square" structure. i.e. One consisting of right angles, uprights beside which a plumb bob is parallel and horizontal lines which will not embarrass a spirit level.A word to the unwary: bashing scaffolding tubes into the ground is not an exact science. A degree or so out of true is enough to bugger things up completely. A job that I thought would take about an hour for me and another guy - he's six foot two, got a reach like an orang utan and is good with a drill and screwdriver - in fact took all afternoon to sort out just one door, not two. I'd thought we would have the plastic canopy in place by the end of the afternoon.
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Sigh....
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Still a task that was difficult the first time should be easy for the second. It's one of those jobs where there's a way of doing it, and number two should take about an hour. Then my multitudinous seedlings can get some shelter.
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Watch this space......

Friday, May 8, 2009

Cider Apples

We bought a polytunnel last week. Putting it together is hard work. The job starts with hammering in three foot sections of scaffolding into the ground to take the "uprights". I'm a bit undermuscled to handle a sledgehammer, but with my mother's help got it done eventually. So I've got the supports down and the ground sheet, but Sod's Law says that as soon as I'm ready to put up the plastic sheet cover, we get a week of the windiest days for months......
Then, I met a very nice chap in the pub a few days ago. In fact it was my mum who got chatting to him, but it turned out that he is a botanist and specialises, right now anyway, in cider orchards. He's been really helpful. He's provided me with four small cider apples (variety Harry Masters) and gave me a tour of some commercial cider orchards and the associated factory.

He's also donated several strawberry plants, some shade netting for the polytunnel and a bakers bread tray (I've been trying to get hold of some). He also knows a strawberry grower, who after his strawberries have exhausted their compost, has to dispose of it. The compost is no good for strawberries, but is fine for anything else. He's also offered to try to get someone he knows to help us get the caterpillar and the earthmover working.
He's a great chap and full of useful advice. I really hope that we can keep his friendship.
On a change of subject, we have jackdaws nesting in one of the chimneys, so we won't be using the range for a few months. And yesterday i spotted a pair of goldfinches in the garden. I think they were eating dandelion seeds.

Field Mushooms - St George's Mushroom

Hey!! We've got mushrooms in the meadows... one of the best there is: St Georges Mushroom. I spotted them this morning walking the dogs. I saw some areas of darker grass against the background and went to investigate. I found four beautiful "fairy rings" about a meter across.

I'll pick a few to eat, but also I'll move a few to likely areas for them to spore successfully, such as the giant heap of straw and horse manure at one end of the field.
The meadows are looking really beautiful now. I had thought when I first moved here that I'd inherited a "grass desert" from the previous owner, but in fact this just isn't so. As I watch what is growing as Spring moves on, I am finding more diversity all the time.
The meadow contains, apart from the actual grass, buttercups, cuckoo flower (or milkmaids as we called them when I was a kid) and a lot of red clover. Also, the blackthorn hedges have self seeded like mad. As I walk through the grass by the hedgerow, I'm wading through a sea of sicx inch high blackthorn. If humans vacted this site for more than a couple of years, or it didn't get grazed, the hedgerow would take over the field..... just another example of the fact that we live in a country design by nature for the forest.









































































Monday, April 20, 2009

Buzzard Wars

I was walking through the fields a couple of mornings ago when I saw two of the buzzards overhead. Nothing unusual in that. I see as many as six sometimes all soaring and circling together.
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However, this time there were only two and they were flying oddly. At first I thought they were struggling to find thermals and gain height. It was cool and misty with no visible sun, so thermals would have been hard to find.
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Then I realised that in fact, one of the buzzards was attacking the other and trying to drive it off.
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It was utterly fascinating to watch. It's amazing just how much it resembles a dogfight between to old World War I bi-planes; each trying to gain the advantage over the other. Each was trying to get to the rear of it's opponent and attack from the back, but off course each was trying to stop the other doing the same. A fantasy ballet in the air......

Monday, April 13, 2009

Seeds

I've been working my way through seed and plant catalogues - always a fun task - and it's the first time I've ever had the space to be able to seriously consider being able to grow everything that takes my fancy.
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Earlier this week my order to the Organic catalog went off. And now I'm working my way through the Agroforestry catalogue. It's like Christmas.
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Slightly more daunting is the fact that a lot of this stuff will arrive bare rooted from November to February when we have Christmas weather. Planting them won't be fun, and I'll definitely need help. Still, that goes with the territory.

Planting Fruit Bushes.

Fianlly got down to some serious planting today.... fruit bushes; gooseberries, blackcurrants, loganberries and blackberries. There's some raspberries as well to go in, but my back was packing up by then and I decided to leave those for another day.
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It was seriously hard work. The soil here is very heavy clay and although it's rained quite heavily a couple of times over the last week, the soil is still pretty dry... to the point that it is beginning to show drying cracks. And this isn't the degraded areas I'm talking about. This is the well worked area that the previous farmer used for growing dahlias on.
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So there's two choices; dig it dry - backbreaking, or hose it down for a couple of minutes and dig it wet - easier, but after five minutes, half the contents of the garden were stuck to my boots and I was walking like something out of the Addams Family.
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Having said all that, I got quite a bit done.
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It has become clear that trying to first mulch the whole area with cardboard etc, then plant through the cardboard is just not practical. The area is simply too big and what appear to be vast amounts of cardboard disappear into the plot with little progress made.
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So I'm taking the easier route.
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Where each plant is to grow, I'm clearing the area of weeds for a couple of feet around the spot - we're quite lucky in having very few perennial or invasive weeds in that area - and the weeds complete with topsoil attached I'm dumping twenty yards away in another area that is supposed to be lawn but is in fact simply bare subsoil (i.e. solid clay). I then plant the fruit bush and thickly mulch it with newspaper (Times Sunday Supplements - only the best at this establishment). The whole area I then drench with the hosepipe.
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Hopefully then end result of all this should be a weed free basis for my forest garden and an area which become established as lawn.
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The lawn itself is actually very useful as an endless source of mulch. i can only use so much in the compost heap of course, but there are plenty of areas where iI can just dump it as organic matter onto rock, clay, subsoil and all kinds of rubbish. Over time the worms can work their magic and we can reclaim some rather badly abused bits of land for something either useful or beautiful.
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There's really something very satisfying in finding a use for everything......
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On a change of note, it's been another glorious April day, and I am very encouraged by the number of ladybirds I am seeing. It bodes well for my local predator population. When the aphids arrive they should have a bad time of it.
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Also encouraging is the number of rooks and jackdaws I see patrolling the fields. I'm not sure what exactly they are after... worms? leatherjackets? but I don't think they would be bothering if there was nothing for them to eat. I suppose this is the up-side of taking over a run-down farm. The previous owner just hadn't been doing many of the things that modern agriculture normally requires. In consequence, erosion and lack of top soil aside, the place is, ecologiccally speaking, not in too bad a shape.
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I'm beginning to think of erecting a polytunnel. To buy all the plants I want will cost a fortune. but I'm perfectly happy to grow from seed and take a year or so longer. But we're talking a lot of seeds here. And a lot of seed trays/pots etc.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Swallows and bumblebees

Today is 10th April. The swallows arrived the day before yesterday. I can recall that around ten years ago I used to see the swallows for the first time around the 20th, but I lived up North then in Lancashire, so I'm going to try to keep track of the date. If I can remember to, I'll diarise it each year.
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I'd noticed over the last couple of weeks that there's a healthy looking bumblebee population around here. Now I've realised why.... they're all hugely interested in a mass of little holes in the pointing on the back wall of the house. These are not just cracks in the plaster, but small round holes perhaps a centimetre diameter. They have a round, well-used look about them.
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I have a dilemma here. I want both bumblebees and sound pointing. I think I'll compromise by researching bumblebees nesting times... perhaps I can renew the pointing in the Autumn. Meanwhile, perhaps I can construct one (or more) of those insect winter nests that get built out of lots of different sized tubes tied together.
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I also notice that as we get the warm April sunshine, ladybirds are appearing in masses on the stems of last year's nettles. That shouldn't be a problem. It can't be beyond the wit of man to keep a few nettles over wintering around here.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Jeff Lawton - Construct a Food Forest

This link is well worth watching... quite long.. around 1hr 22 min... but we're talking ecological engineering here.

http://doomsteaddiary.blogspot.com/2009/03/full-length-permaculture-video.html

Greenhouse

E-Bay has produced again. A greenhouse/conservatory I bid on a couple of weeks ago, and lost, came back to me because the first buyer has let down the purchaser. I'm thrilled to bits and just on my way to collect it.
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It's in pieces of course, so I'll have the worlds biggest mechano puzzle putting it together. Still I've got the photo as a guide.
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It's going to go in front of one of the old out-buildings we're "doing up", so I'll get not only somewhere for my seed planting and propagation, but also free solar heating for the outbuilding... a permaculture classic method.
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Speaking of solar heating; I had a salesman for one of the solar heating companies around yesterday. When I first contacted the company, I told the receptionist that I wasn't ready to buy. I just wanted to talk to someone about the options, but they just can't resist the urge to go for the hard sell. Consequently, the saleman, who might well have had a sale if he'd showed a bit of patience, has defineitly lost the sale through trying too hard. Meanwhile, I have found out what I wanted to know as background information and I'm going to go away and crunch some numbers on how much of a saving we might make on our hot water.
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NB. I'm not even considering the electircity generating version of solar energy. It currently has a pay-back period of about thirty to forty years..... simply not practical or economic.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

March; out like a lamb.

Glorious day: warm spring sunshine and just a hint of cool in the breeze. Absolutely no question of staying indoors. We were both out in the garden all day.
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We cleared up another of the areas left to rack and ruin by the previous occupants; all overgrown with thistles and nettles with, what at first appeared to be, some polythene sheeting amoung the weeds.
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It turned out to have been, long ago, an old polytunnel. Everything was collapsed to ground level and overgrown with turf. It was a complete bugger to dig out.
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Still, by the end of the day you could see where we had been. The bulk of the plastic is out anf burned. The usual assortment of stones, brinks and strange random bits of metal were dug out and sorted. We finally managed to get the lawnmower over the area. We'll treat is as law for while until the weeds are under control and then take it from there.
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The E-Bay shredder works a treat. Super machine. All the old tree prunigns are now on the compost heap.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Soil Testing

Early March.... two solid weeks of glorious spring weather.
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So I set out to take advantage of the molehills and start seeding them with my grass/wildflower "For clay soils and wetlands" mix. Also over the areas where the turf and a lot of the topsoil has been trampled out of existence.
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And I resolved that this week I would start my survey of the land.... depth of topsoil (if any!!) type (clay, loam etc) and pH.
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Sodd's Law immediately strikes. The weather turns very windy and with a bitter Northern bite to it.
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Result, my seeds were carried off by the wind, and as I pulled out my carefully assembled and lovingly laminated map of the farm, complete with penned in notes, half a dozen raindrops splodged down onto it and wiped out half my annotations.
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So those jobs will have to wait until the weather clears up.
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On the positive side, E-Bay has now produced a strimmer and a shredder, so I can work on the build up of my compost heaps. I've already got a great stack of tree prunings to work on, plus all the areas where weeds have run riot. not that I want rid of the nettles.... but I do want them under control..... along with the thistles, which are truly out of hand.
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I saw a video on You-Tube a few days ago, showing how a hot shower was run off a compost heap over some months. It's got me wondering if I can get myself a free heated greenhouse run from compost-power. Watch this space.....
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My comfrey arrived yesterday. Fifty bit of chopped off root. The weather won't allow me to plant them, so I've just popeed them into a bit of soil in a seed tray to get them going.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Ducks

Just walked the dogs up by the pond. It looks as thought there is a pair of wild ducks, mallards, starting to nest up there. As I approached with the dogs they flew up together and starting circling. They didn't fly away, but they only came down again until we moved on.
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I hope they stay. I can't stay entirely out of their way unfortunately, so there're going to have to get used to me.
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If they do stay, they will really have an ideal home and nursery; a pond entirely to themselves and twenty odd acres of rough scrubland as a feeding area.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Bare Soil

There's a definite problem on the farmland with bare soil. This is a combination of mole hills and areas where sheer footfall, sheep, vehicles or humans, has stripped away the turf.
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Consequently, thistles are staging a complete take-over bid on the farm. There's thousands of them.
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So I've bought a mixed grass/wildflower seed meadow mixture for wetlands. Everywhere I see naked earth, I'm sowing a little of the seed mixture.
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Next I have to tackle the thistles I've already got.......

Thursday, March 19, 2009

A Perfect Storm by 2030

And here are the morning's headlines from The Guardian and the BBC

"Food, water and energy shortages will unleash public unrest and international conflict, Professor John Beddington will tell a conference tomorrow.

A "perfect storm" of food shortages, scarce water and insufficient energy resources threaten to unleash public unrest, cross-border conflicts and mass migration as people flee from the worst-affected regions, the UK government's chief scientist will warn tomorrow"

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

A Farm for the Future

This is the documentary that originally caught my attention, and that of many others too.




Everyone should watch it

Mulching is a long process.....

This is the area destined to be mulched and planted. The foreground will have brick paths and be laid out as beds for herbs, perennial vegetables, fruit trees and bushes etc.
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The far end will be planted out with comfrey for harvesting as green manure, compost material etc.
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The mulching is on-going as I can lay my hands on cardboard boxes and cheap reclaimed bricks, along with some corrugated iron scavenged from elsewhere and just there as a temporary measure.

As time goes on I will plant directly through the cardboard and then just let it rot into the earth under other more conventional mulches/compost etc.
But it's a slow process.......















































































Woodpecker at Work

New designer residence under construction. I shall watch progress with interest.......
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Frogspawn at Last!

Frogspawn at last. I was beginning to think there was something unhealthy about the pond. but no... half a dozen clumps in the only edge area shallow enough for the spawn. So that's OK. All I need to do is give the pond more shallows.
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Birdsong - RSPB Link

Dull and misty this morning, but the kind of mist that looks as though it should burn off with the sun in a couple of hours. But nonetheless, the dawn chorus is in full blow.
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Why do people think the country is a quiet place? The dawn chorus is better than any alarm clock..... sounds better too.
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I finally got around to looking up the RSPB link for listening to the song/call of different bird species. It should help me to identifiy my "LBBs" . Beside the song, the link has an "Bird Identifier" guide

http://www.rspb.org.uk/wildlife/

The other thing I need to identify is whatever is living in the pond up the hill. The lack of frogs disturbs me. The area should be seething with them. That pond is not ideal for frogs as it is a little too deep at the edges for them to lay their spawn. But there are shallow areas between the marsh grass etc. There should be something there. I'm beginning to wonder if the frogs know something I don't.
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Perhaps I could find a coarse fisherman who can fish the pond and tell me what he catches??

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Cardboard Mulching

I have rather a large area in which I need to kill off the weeds before I can start to plant my perennial vegetable/herb garden. The answer is cardboard mulch. I've been hitting the supermarkets for all the cardboard boxes I can get my hands on. I think they think I'm a bit peculiar. When I tell them I want the cardboard as mulch, they look at me as though I've grown an extra head.
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So I'm working my way over the area (about 18m by 36m) with the cardboard and weighing it all down with bricks and a lot of rocks dug out of the general rubbish elsewhere in the garden. I hope and pray that we don't get any mighty winds in the near future. I have nightmares about the whole lot lifting off and settling over the neighbours. I've already apologised in advance to the folks at the back - the plot is going to look really ugly for a few months until I can get on top of this.
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Still, the reason that I have used cardboard is that once down, I will not have to pick it up again. The bricks will be relaid as paths (thank heavens for e-bay - reclaimed bricks at an affordable price!) and I'll plant straight through the cardboard. As I get the compost bins going and the comfrey growing, I will then be able to mulch with something rather more attractive and nutritious.
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Why so little frogspawn in the area? One scrawny blob in the pond at the front. One blob in a ditch up the hill, and no more. This area should be crawling with frogs. Where are they????
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To the list of local birds, I can add jackdaws and curlews. The local rook population seems very healthy indeed. There are two rookeries within a mile and there are more rooks to be seen every day.... hundreds of them....

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Comfrey and exposed soil

I've ordered a lot of comfrey plants today... I say plants... I suspect they'll each be a couple of inches of root cutting, but that's fine. There's fifty of them coming, but by the time they have grown up and I've split them up a couple of times, there will be plenty to fill the space (about 30m by 16m). That should keep me in green manure for a long time to come.

I've ordered them to arrive mid to end of April. The area is overgrown with weeds right now and I want the chance to get the site cleared. Next week I'm going to start combing the local supermarkets for cardboard boxes to use as a weed-killing mulch. That should give me a month for the weeds to weaken before I plant the comfrey rots through the mulch.

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I also ordered a batch of meadow grass/wildflower seed. It's only a kilogram of seed, but my main interest right now is to cover the areas of naked soil revealed either by being ploughed up by the over-wintering sheep ploughing up the turf, the walkers on the footpaths wearing through the turf, or by the ministrations of our local moles....... it actually works for me. Most farmers detest moles for revealing bare soil, but I want to start diversifying the plant life a bit. The areas of bare soil are not huge, but if the plant life can get a foothold.....

The flower/grass mix is just a standard "for wetland" mix. I didn't add any "specials". I'm mainly interested in increasing diversity generally while I research detail on what might be specifically useful....... an I need to cover that bare earth, before more thistles move in.

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The thistles need to be dealt with....if I leave them to it they will take over the farm. Perhaps goats? Donkeys? What likes thistles but won't destroy everything else? Goats can be tethered of course..... but I don't like tethering animals.......
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I have a draft layout now for the "herb patch". It's a bit ambitious and semi-formal, but it should both produce the plants I want and look utterly beautiful. And it's right next to the comfrey patch. I'll scan my sketches and add them to another post. But I am going to need a lot of bricks for footpaths.
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Now where can I get that many bricks?????? E-Bay here I come....

Monday, March 9, 2009

Dynamic Accumulators

Having been reading around quite a bit, the plan for the site is gradually taking form.

The big stuff, field trees etc I'll not do anything about until next winter. By then, I'll have a map of exactly what I want to plant where and I can actually do it in the dormant season, but there's no reason why some of the small plantings can't happen pretty much right away, or at least when it's warm enough that I don't freeze my bits off trying to plant.

The far end of the current garden area is "fallow". There's an area of about 80 meters by 20 that was once a bed used for growing dahlias but which has just gone weedy over the last two years. The first part of the job is to cover/mulch over the whole area to kill off the weeds. I'm really regretting all those old carpets I burned.

Still, I'm knee deep in old cardboard boxes. They will do nicely as a mulch. I'll do a ground cover with those. They will kill the weeds and then rot away in due course.

The far end of that plot I'm going to turn over to comfrey and other dynamic accumulators. These are plants that will "mine" nutrients from deep levels within the sub-soil, bringing them up into their own tissues. The plant can then be harvested, and in the case of comfrey, put straight down as mulch, without even the need for composting. The nutrients obtained this way then beneift the other plants that are so "manured".

It's an area of about 40m by 20m and should keep me in green manure for some time to come.

The near end of the plot, and the part mainly visible from the house, is going to be a semi-formal herb garden. By semi formal I mean that the pathways will be laid out in bricks in some formal pattern, but the plants in the gaps between can do the "squeeze in and cover the soil routine". I can plant them stright through the cardboard and make it all look a bit more aesthetic with the comfrey manure on top of the cardboard

The bricks themselves I can scavenge from some junk heaps I found around the back of one of the old buildings, although I will probably have to find more bricks with the size of the area to cover. I think I can set them right on top of the cardboard and let them settle. Later on they may need levelling, but I'll tackle that at the time.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Permaculture Project Progress

Another glorious morning in paradise. Crisp frost, melting almost as the sun kissed the grass, and air fresh enough to make you want to do nothing in life but breath it.
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The gorse has been trying to flower in a patchy kind of way ever since Christmas. But now it's really trying. I'm looking forward to when the air warms up and it fills the air with the smell of coconut.
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The woodpeckers were playing at headbangers today. I couldn't see them, but at the top of the hill I could hear two of them "chatting" with that da-da-da of theirs. .

Weighing up what you got to work with when the land is hilly is pretty difficult. And on 60 acres, it's almost impossible to see some of the detail when you're too close to it. So I've been trying to conduct a kind of photgraphic survey

Funny how, when taking a photo, no matter what the view is, there's a dog in the way..... until you want a dog in the picture, and then there's not a canine to be seen.
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It's not very successful though. The photos can be breathtaking, but the sheer scale of trying to catch the whole landscape in one shot just makes the job impractical.
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So instead I've assembled a map/aerial view of the area taken from on-line images. It was quite a bit of work to put it all together, but the resulting composite has come out splendidly well. It's quite stunning what can be seen of a landscape from the aerial perspective.... ancient ridge and furrow, old ditches, hedges and boundaries which are marked on maps but are invisible at ground level. Utterly fascinating! I got the whole thing laminated in A1 size. Pricy, but well worth it. I've got a super working tool now.
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While I was out, I picked up a PH testing kit while I was at it. Let's see what kind of soil we have. Lots of clay, but what else?
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As I drove back from Cheltenham, a kestral dropped out of the sky right in front of me to the verge, and some small innocent sqeaky thing became lunch. It was one of those two second events that take your breath away. The bird plummented down, and with absolute accuracy struck at the ground. It looked as though it should be certain impact, but it just flapped about whilst it subdued its prey. I'd have thought the poor little beast would have been stunned just from the speed of the impact, but it seemed to be putting up a fight.... not very successfully. I tried to slow down to see the follow on, but it's main road, and the kestral didn't look happy about having me as an audience either.

Mistletoe













Funny stuff mistletoe. Except for hanging over Christmas stockings, I'd never seen it at all until I moved to Gloucestershire, and now I see it everywhere.


Some trees it doesn't seem to touch, and others there seems to be more mistletoe than tree, and that's not just species. I'd always thought (from what I'd read) that mistletoe grew on oaks, or sometimes apples. Well round here, it certainly likes apples, but I've not seen it yet on oaks. I have seen it on hawthorn, poplars and ash, but not oak or willow.
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Just before Christmas a couple of ne'er do wells rolled up here in a battered white van an announced that they were "Clearing the mistletoe out of the hedgerows" and did I want then to clear out mine?
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They must have thought I'd come up with the morning's mushrooms......
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It is interesting to look at.... it's got me quite fascinated.... but I'm not aware of any actual use for it (unless you count druidic fertility rites......).
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The Plants for the Future Database tells me that all its parts are slightly poisoness, and they rate it 1 out of 5 for usefulness.
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Ah well...... at least it looks pretty.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Robert Hart - Forest Garden

Two excellent films on Forest Gardening in Shropshire

Introduction



Design of a Forest Garden

PERMACULTURE & PEAK OIL: Beyond 'Sustainability'

A YouTube film in which David Holmgren, the co-originator (with Bill Mollison) of the permaculture concept and author of the recent book, PERMACULTURE: Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability. He talks about the need to move beyond the lulling hope that 'green tech' breakthroughs will allow world-wide 'sustainable consumption' to the recognition that dwindling oil supplies inevitably mean a mandatory 'energy descent' for human civilization across the planet. He argues that permaculture principles provide the best guide to a peaceful societal 'powering down."

Spring Today.

Winter is beginning to release it's grip. After the blisteringly cold periods between November and February, it warmed just a bit for a few days.... enough to fool me.... and then popped back around the corner last week to bite at my fingers and nip my nose when I took the dogs up the hill.
But today is lovely. It started with a bite to the air and frost silvering the hilltop, then the sun melted away the chill and suddenly the air smelled of clean soil and sunshine.


The buzzards are back. I know it doesn't sound very romantic, but I became rather attached to them last Autumn, and an area that supports six top predators can't be entirely unhealthy. Certainly I found plenty of pigeon feathers in the hedgerows last summer. Over winter they vanished. I must check up on what they do/where they go in winter.
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Listening to "Farming Today" over the last few days, they've been reporting on the RSPB's annual farmland bird count. They use 20 signature species as a proxy for general diversity. The which the skylark is one of these. As I walked by the pond, a pair suddenly flushed out from the marshgrass. I must try to track how many pairs we have. Again, today is the first time I've seen them this year, although to be fair, it's been so bloody cold that I seldom got past the lower fields over the last few months.
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The list makes interesting reading. This is taken from the DEFRA report "Wild bird population indicators for the English regions: 1994 – 2006" I'm going to try to contribute to this for future years. My main problem is that the two lists includes a number of "LBBs" (little brown birds) and I'm not sure that my identification skills are up to dealing with those.

Farmland List

Corn Bunting, Goldfinch, Greenfinch, Grey Partridge, Jackdaw, Kestrel, Lapwing, Linnet, Reed Bunting, Rook, Skylark, Starling, Stock Dove,Tree Sparrow, Turtle Dove, Whitethroat, Woodpigeon, Yellowhammer, Yellow Wagtail, Marsh Tit, Nightingale, Nuthatch, Redstart, Robin, Song Thrush, Sparrowhawk, Spotted Flycatcher, Tawny Owl, Tree Pipit, Treecreeper, Willow Tit, Willow Warbler, Wood Warbler, Wren
Woodland List

Blackbird, Blackcap, Blue Tit, Bullfinch, Chaffinch, Chiffchaff, Coal Tit, Dunnock, Garden Warbler, Goldcrest, Great Spotted Woodpecker, Great Tit, Green Woodpecker, Hawfinch, Jay, Lesser Spotted Woodpecker, Whitethroat, Lesser Redpoll, Lesser Whitethroat, Long-tailed Tit, Marsh Tit, Nightingale, Nuthatch, Redstart, Robin, Song Thrush, Sparrowhawk, Spotted Flycatcher, Tawny Owl, Tree Pipit, Treecreeper, Willow Tit, Willow Warbler, Wood Warbler, Wren

Still, some of them we certainly have at Vine Tree Farm. Since the land is farmland edging onto woodland, I'll track both lists.
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I'll keep up a running report on this. So far I can definitely say that we have:
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Farmland List
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Skylarks (at least one pair), rooks and wood pigeons.
Woodland List
Blackbird, blue tit, chaffinch, some variety of woodpecker, robin, dunnock.
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When I've brushed up my identification skills I should add more. In the meantime, I'll read the report.

First Post - Permaculture


A lot has happened in the last few months. We finally managed to move to the farm last August and then had a brief couple of months of glorious sunshine before Winter moved in.

And of course Sodd's Law says that in the year when you've no central heating and the lighting is dodgy, that's when you get the coldest Winter for a generation.

Ye Gods but it was cold. I almost gave up cooking because it was so bitter in the kitchen that if I stayed in there long enough to cook, my fingers were so cold that it hurt.

But now Spring is, if not here, at least poking its head around the corner.

And last week I watched a TV program I considered truly revolutionary; "A Farm for the Future", by Rebecca Hoskin (famous for persuading her home town to do away with plastic bags)part of the BBC's Natural world series. Why they tucked away an important program like this in some out of the way spot on BBC2 is beyond me. They should have put it Prime Time BBC1 and shouted from the rooftops that everyone should watch it.

I see from the "Points of view" postings that there's plenty out there besides myself who think this way, and there were a number of requests to release it as a DVD.

So what was it about? Click on this for the Mail On-Line accompanying article, "Now my farm will teach the world to live without oil"

The starting point for Rebecca's argument is that experts in the field are all agreed that the "peak oil" point (i.e. "the point when the maximum rate of global oil extraction is reached, after which the rate of production enters terminal decline.") is all but upon us, if we have not even reached it already. From that point, oil production will fall by around 2-3% per year.

And our entire agricultural system is completely dependent on oil. What will we eat when we can't rely on oil?

I'll not go into vast detail here. She explains it much better than I, and you would be better to read the article link above. But the answer put forward is a method of farming very different to what we now use: Permaculture

And this is where I become suddenly excited. Because is where I can genuinely contribute and do something truly useful.

Our farm is not large, a little over 60 acres. But it is ideal for this form of farming, some will call it gardening.

Permaculture is a form of agriculture in which rather than relying on traditional methods of ploughing, planting and harvesting fields, the land becomes permanently planted with useful plants, in layers from ground cover to tree tops and including shrub layers and the under-soil beneficial fungi.

Land used in this way is vastly more fertile and productive than when used in the traditional way.

And moving away from monocultures means that such plantings are robust against disease and pest. The rise of a new wheat virus could currently wipe out major portions of the world's/humanity's food supply, because only limited numbers of varieties of wheat are grown. But no one pest or disease could destroy a developed permaculture system of many species. Some plants might fail, but others would survive. The eggs are in several baskets.

And so, my beautiful Gloucestershire farm is going to "go permaculture".

I've a lot of reading to do, and some courses to attend. I've been walking the fields and hill marking out in my mind where are the ditches and the ancient trees? Where are the marshy areas? Where might the marshes be developed into ponds and how can the water be most usefully be used for the environment? How can I extend the fruit orchards? Where should I plant trees to firm up land slippage?

I'm working on it.