Friday, October 23, 2009

Spring fertility

Sneezing, itching, eyes streaming – wandering the garden like a small walking storm system, watering hankies, thinking how marvellous it is my body can intercept and register so well all this fertility of the plants!

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Spring is sprung!

Here's Ro and Cam preparing the terrace beds ready for their spring planting. Many little seedlings are sprouting in trays in the greenhouse, corn and tomatoes and capsicums and pumpkins, cucumbers and many other delicious things....

Ro aerating the soil with the very fine Gundaroo tiller:



Putting straw out over the slashed green manure crop (oats and broad beans) to keep the carbon in the soil:




Ready to go!



Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Herb harvest

Cam and Yarrow collecting calendula flowers to dry for tea.


Saturday, September 19, 2009

Spawning frogs

One of our lovely students has given us some eggs from her established pond to hatch frogs into ours. I've slopped them in among the water plants and fingers crossed they make it through to frog-hood!




Go well, wee froglets!

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Yarrow puts foot in mouth



Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Fox-proof fencing to keep chickens safe

Cam did a design at the start of the year for a couple in Eltham who are mad-keen bottlers and preservers, whenever they go on trips they scour all the little local op shops for forgotten boxes of Fowler's preserving jars...

They wanted a large orchard plum-full of all sorts of delicious fruit, as well as vegies and chickens and drought-proofing for the whole place, fire-proofing etc. Ro and I came along for the day as Cam took his students from the permaculture diploma course at Eltham College to do some prac about fencing and irrigation at the property.


Here's Cam laying out a "skirt" of chicken wire at the bottom of the fence, which will be buried, so foxes can't dig under the fence into the orchard, where the chooks will be roaming and feasting on fallen fruit and insects, and dropping poo as fertiliser:



The top of the fence is angled out, and deliberately loose, so foxes can't climb over it:


The skirt being buried:



The students tacking the fence to the poles (orchard swales in background):


Meanwhile, Yarrow just adjusting the mirror and getting ready to drive us home at the end of the day:


Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Tree lingering

Out walking with Ro and we came across this tree, for all the world like it had its bark knickers caught in its bottom! 

But stunningly beautiful, even as it made me smile.