Monday, 10 December 2012

Christmas Hamper 2012

 
 
Minnowburn Community Allotments
Christmas Hamper  Raffle 2012

Here it is our delightful christmas hamper for this years raffle there is also a mini hamper and a bottle of wine as prizes. There will be an inhouse raffle on the day of our annual Christmas Party with lots of spot prizes to be won. Hopefully we will see lots of gardners there on the day.




 
 
Good Luck!
 


Monday, 26 November 2012

Moonplot 15!

 
I am just about to eat some delicious potatoes we grew on our plot...some golden-beige, oval beauties. Being city born and bred, there is a certain magic in it all for me...potatoes planted by hand this year on St.Patrick's Day - a Root Day - dug out over the summer and eaten through the autumn and into winter. They taste something like velvet, though I can't truly say I know the taste of velvet. Their flavour is rich and the experience expands the senses. Each time I eat anything from our plot, I feel an immense gratitude. It puts life in perspective, increases my appreciation for the amazing teams globally who sow, plant, harvest, pack, organise, deliver and sell us our food, from the tiny grains to the larger foods we enjoy and on which our very lives depend. This is a humbling experience before me on my plate.

 
Nice Root Crops

 

But back to St. Patrick's day...it was a Root Day and, since joining Minnowburn National Trust Allotments (a year ago), I've been determined to 'moon-plant' as we now affectionately call it. Moon-planting refers to sowing and planting according to the cycles of the moon and thus the (probably not so subtle) rhythms of our cosmos. It's all about timing, it seems - the more precise you are about your gardening, the better the results according to ancient wisdom, since verified by some scientific experiments. Root Day is for planting / sowing root vegetables such as potatoes, beetroots, carrots, onions etc. Leaf Day is for working with many of the leafy herbs, cabbages, lettuces, coriander, celery etc. Flower Day is for those vegetables such as broccoli, cauliflower, flowering plants etc. and Fruit-Seed Day is for peas, tomatoes, broad beans, courgettes, cucumbers etc. We tried it and it worked. The nasturtiums were delicious - some of you tasted them on the Flaming Nora day! Our potatoes were delicious. Our beetroots were delicious. The list goes on. The organic moon planting worked!

A pretty display
 
 
I've also heard this method referred to as 'planting by the stars'. This might be preferable since 'moon-planting' has brought mild mocking from those who think I also have an allotment on the moon.  The method can get quite complex, so I just follow a book. I would have planted anything, anytime, with no understanding of the greater forces of nature or how to respect them, had it not been for a relative who gave me a special book called 'Gardening & Planting by the Moon 2012' by Nick Kollerstrom (published by Quantum) which, if followed systematically, encourages higher yields, better flavours and heightened colour in your vegetables and flowers depending on when you sow, plant and also harvest...The introduction to the book is great - a short two pages - just about all a busy gardener can read in between weeding! It then gets a little mathematical...

 

 

We know from studies about how our vegetables absorb water and nutrients, the rate at which they grow, their metabolic rate, their electrical activity etc., that they are following tidal rhythms. I wonder if our beekeepers at Minnowburn also notice fluctuations in levels of busyness or other behaviours in their bees depending on the cycles of the moon - some evidence of these cycles can be reflected in the activity of bees too apparently. We ourselves are not immune to these cosmic rhythms either, just perhaps a little less sensitive to them nowadays. No doubt, it's full on, what with turning on our axis daily, amongst the other cosmic commitments we have! 

 
Kales show off after moon planting

 

For our plots, the full moon is an especially important time as our plants' metabolic rate and water absorption are at their highest. Apparently, this is the best time to sow plants, which brings me back to St. Patrick's Day 2012, a perfect Root Day (though not a full moon day, as it happened. As I mentioned, it can get a bit complex). The one issue to consider about moon-planting here is the weather. We would have planted our potatoes on an earlier Root Day had the weather been better. Still, it turns out that it was good to wait as the ground had become warmer. 

 Our potatoes resisted the floods and also the blight that seemed to decimate crops elsewhere. It may also have been the case, however, that we got to our potatoes just in time. At a first glance, they looked like they were dead with their thick leaves all black and flattened to the soil. It didn't look good at all. Slowly, we pulled them out and dug below. A few single potatoes had been hit by blight but not completely and to our sheer surprise and total delight, the rest of the crop was good. Actually, good is an understatement. Incredible would be more apt. They were perfect. I will never know if, by planting them on the Root Day, they got a better start to life, which then made them more resilient for a longer period of time. I've heard many other success stories similar to this from gardeners who know moon-planters or who employ the moon-planting method themselves. 

 

The book I followed is also a diary so you can write in what you did and when you sowed, planted or harvested. It conveniently provides symbols as reminders so you know which are your Root / Leaf / Flower / Fruit-Seed days. It even gives precise times in some cases for certain activities.  The only thing the book doesn't mention is which is the best day to enjoy digesting your crop! In my case, it's daily at the moment. Apart from some morning basics (milk, cereal), my food intake is coming from the abundant plot. I notice too, that at mealtimes, I eat the food we grow ourselves much more slowly than other food, honouring its extraordinary journey to the plate. It's true to say that meals have since become a ceremony in appreciation.  

 

Having gone through the process for the first time this year, I marvel at what happens when we cooperate more gently with nature and the complexity of all its elements. If anyone wants a moon planting versus non-moon-planting tournament next year, do let me know! 

 

Róisín, plot No.15 (Nov. 2012)





Tuesday, 9 October 2012

From accessibility to abundance: the raised bed that has changed my life this year!


The idea germinated while listening to a friend in France talking about permaculture principles. She recommended I read a book written by Sepp Holzer, a farmer who has devoted his lifetime to working with nature while farming the mountainsides in Austria.

The book: Permaculture, a Practical Guide for Farmers, Smallholders & Gardeners with its hands on practical advice fascinated me from the start.

I had been looking for new ways to enjoy gardening. Being affected by MS, my mobility had greatly decreased in the past couple of years. My regular visits to Minnowburn, which had always been a precious source of serenity and joy, had slowly become a torture.

My knees could not endure another growing season!

I decided to sacrifice my raised bed to experiment with the idea of creating a bed, shaped like a pyramid and based on permaculture principles.


(Building raised beds: drawing from Holzer, Sepp(2010)Permaculture. p40, Permanent Publications)



With the help of Emma, Tommy and Martin (they did most of the work too be fair, and I am full of gratitude), we started by digging out and emptying the box frame of its soil. We consolidated the wooden frame of the bed with stakes at each corner and hammered a pole in the middle of one of the long sides of the box, to reinforce the side as well as to give me something firm to hold on to when moving around the bed.

Then we built the layers as follows:

  1. Dead wood
  2. Grass sods, grass face down
  3. Horse manure
  4. Compost
  5. Top Soil

 




The height achieved allowed me straight away to start gardening from the seat of my rollator.
 
 
 

Towards the end of May, I started sowing carrots, beetroots, spring onions, turnips, cos lettuce, lambs lettuce, rocket on both sides of the pyramid (or “the mount” as Martin likes to call it).

On the ridge, I sowed French beans and put a courgette plant on the top edge, interplanted with Nasturtiums.

I noticed very quickly that everything was growing at a much faster rate than the rest of my plot, where most vegetables seemed to be struggling to survive the wet conditions in spring and early summer as well as the tedious attacks from slugs and snails.
 
I was onto a winner!
 
The crops have been amazing and abundant. One of the great advantages of this raised bed is that there is very little maintenance required. As most of the soil is covered by vegetables, there is no weed. The slugs do not seem to enjoy the climb up the sides of the box frame and therefore, there is very little damage to young plants.
Other key advantages:
  • The soil is light and loose
  • There is excellent drainage
  • The soil is full of nutrients
This adapted solution has changed my life at Minnowburn this year by meeting my new needs and by giving me the best harvest to date. I truly recommend it!

Muriel Renou

Monday, 1 October 2012

Flamin Nora


Flamin Nora
Flamin Nora made her début this summer in August 2012 where the gardeners got together for a pizza extravaganza. Everyone set to work on making pizza dough and any topping their hearts desired. Sinead took it literally. The men as usual stood around stoking the fire while the women and children helped put the pizzas together. Here are some photographs of the great event.






Would any one like to share Sineads heart?
Is she burning Ian?
            


Yummy




Rolling, rolling, rolling keep those pizzas rolling......

Ian (left) supervising the ladies

















Fireman Finn to the rescue







Here we have the lovley Lorna waitress for the day.....





































MCA would like to thank all the guys and gals who helped in the construction of Flamin Nora.

Fidelma Maher


Wednesday, 1 August 2012

The Dreaded Blight

Looking around the allotments at Minnowburn it's clear we are stereotypical (N) Irish men and woman. Spud munchers! Everyone likes a spud whether it be a nice "dry" spud or a waxy 'spud'. Who doesn't like chips or mash, wedges or roasties?

The spud is generally easy to grow. You just stick it in the ground and one tuber with a small amount of TLC will give you a return of 10 - 15 tubers. That is unless the dreaded blight has struck. 'Blight' is a word lodged within our national vocabulary. Blight is an air borne fungal disease which thrives in the weather conditions we have been stuck with this summer. Humid, wet and warm.  The first signs of potato blight are dark spots appearing on the leaves of the potato plant. It will travel down the mid rib (mid part of the leaf) and then enter the stem of the plant before travelling down and infecting the tubers growing happily underground. Once this happens the blight will turn the solid firm spud into a smelly wet mush. In effect ruining your harvest.

Early stages of blight - time to take action

Leaves removed completely to prevent spread to tubers
There are a few things you can do to prevent blight on your spud crop. It depends whether you want to grow organically or not. First thing is to keep a good eye out for blight. You don't really need to worry until July at the earliest. If you see the tell tale dark spots on the leaves cut them off and remove them from the plant. If you have missed the chance to do that and your plants are clearly infested what you can do is cut the entire plant back ie. cut all the foliage off right down at ground level and get rid of it (preferably in your brown bin- not the compost heap). If you get there in time you will be able to prevent the blight travelling down and infecting your spuds underground. You can leave them in the ground and use them as you need them or after approx 3 weeks you can dig them for storage and put them in a Hessian sack. By this time they will have developed a nice thick skin that will make them ideal for storage.

 If you want to use chemicals you can spray with Bordeaux mix. This is based on copper sulphate and really is not something I would recommend, but each to their own.

If you want to avoid blight entirely you can concentrate on growing early varieties. There are also some good blight resistant ( much more resistant than most) varieties. These include Sarpo Mira and other Sarpo varieties. 

Check out the short 5 min' video on growing spuds at: http://www.giyireland.com/videos/detail/potatoes
Also a really great project that is worth checking out is http://www.spuds.ie/

Mick MCA