Joined:
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04/02/2011 |
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Last Updated:
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04/03/2011 |
Location:
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Sydney/Melbourne/Tokyo, Australia |
Climate Zone:
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Warm Temperate |
Gender:
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Female |
Web site:
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www.ceciliamacaulay.com.au |
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Posted by Cecilia Macaulay over 13 years ago
"If you want to change the world, start at your back doorstep" said Permaculture's Bill Mollison.
John and his big sister Cecilia |
Here is the story of how John and Laura turned a shady dirt-patch into a little jewel-box organic garden.
1. Start by Subtraction
Take out anything thats not lovely, that doesn't contribute.
Seven
different kinds of floor materials, none of them looking like friends
or relatives to each other. Loneliness in a crowd is the worst kind.
We took out the yellow tiles, and searched for stepping stones to go in
their place, for us to land on sturdily as we bounce out the door.
2. Get a vision, take cuttings, go shopping
Helen's garden, where I'm staying this year, is the inspiration. The
longer I live, the more I realize the power of copying, of catching
things from the people you admire. Its not Action that we dislike, its
Decisions, and the chance of making a wrong choice when we do something
pioneering.
With this picture in mind, we did the big treck out to Plantmark,
to get wholesale plants. If you are a designer, you should register
here. Half price means you can buy twice as many plants. Since this spot
has heavy shade for much of the winter, I must prepare myself
psycologically for half of them not to make it through. The problem is, I
don't know which half.
Helen's begonia cuttings will go in when they get more roots.
3. Announce a Gardening Party
If you invite people you like and prepare good food, then hard hauling of rocks is a party.
Since this isn't sitting around chatting, you can go for diversity, and very different people can still enjoy each other.
I've
never really liked opinion-sharing and story-trading as a form of
socializing. Doing stuff, having an outcome is more fun.
Our Politically diverse blend of gardeners included:
*Little brother - John, good at logistics, problem-solving intitative - getting out hidden obstacles, etc. His job is shipping.
*MBA student and former US soldier - Jason, who is good at following orders, even better at giving orders, veiled as delicate suggestions. Good at lifting massive stones, and at stoically works in the rain when all my Aussie workers are having their 5th tea break.
* Architect - Sidney, who put all the stones into exciting and happy relationships.
*Occupational therapist - Jessica the treasure of a housemate
* Economist - Laura, who played tuck shop lady, all day long.
and
*Permaculture girlie. Thats me.
5. Get good soil, make it 3D
Since he has only had his eco-bride for 4 months, John's kitchen-scrap compost isn't ready yet. We brought some commercial stuff in bags, then realized that the massive back garden jungle is one massive potting-mix factory. Under the leaf litter is last year's leaves, now broken down to crumbly, microbe-rich soil. We did a big harvest, to add to our little garden, give it the hills and valleys it needs to feel that its a world of its own.
John's vast back garden. Paul Bongiorno roasts lamb Dec 2010
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A garden to harvest from needs stepping stones, so you don't squash the air out of the soil, and suffocate all the micorobles that keep things lively.
6. Choose plants that want to be there, and you want to see there. The
edible plants that may survive the shade include mint, chives. The
thyme groundcover probably won't cover much till the summer sun reaches
in and gives it the energy. The dill is to attract preying mantis. When
she is done with the dill pollen, she will graduate on to to cleaning up
catapillars. We put the tomatillo seedlings in against the sunny wall, hoping for the best. Magnificent salda verde is heading our way.
7. Train someone brave in manual pest management
The predator insects may not appear till summer, to control the baddies. I trained Laura in how to spot and manage the green catapillars and snails, or by summer she would have no garden. She was horrified at first, but soon got the hang of sending them to heaven, recycling them back into flowers. Eating is never an innocent activity.
8. Thank the cooks
I had battled with John all day, as he tempted my workers away with:
10.30 Second breakfast
11.00 Morning tea - macaroons
12.00 Lemonade break
12. 45 Lunch - mexian soup
3.00 Afternoon tea by the fire - buns
4.00 Coffee break
6.00 Lasagne for dinner.
Will this garden ever produce the amount of calories it took to get it planted?
I'm going to say that it
doesn't matter.
The main harvest is of non-tangibles anyway - connection, being a life-giving problem solver, expanding the world of the things you love.
And after feeling effort in our bodies, and the failures and triumpsh that are inevitable, never, ever complaining that organic is expensive.
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course |
Type: Permaculture Design Certificate (PDC) course |
Verifying teacher: Geoff Lawton |
Other Teachers: steve cran |
Location: Mullumbimby |
Date: Dec 1998 |