Thursday, 15 August 2013

The mycelium is running!

These are some of the fungus's that are fruiting in the three month old sheet mulch I have laid over my front lawn. I was terribly excited to see mushrooms in the garden because 
1) Reading Mycelium running by Paul Stamets will turn you into a full blown fungus fan and
2) Fungi are the 'teeth of the soil'. Their presence in the garden means that humus is being created and that their is life in the soil. The fungi are the decomposers of ecosystems and they are important in turning death into new life. Fuck yeah
So far I have only seen these two types of fungus, but I cannot wait to see what else will pop up over time in my very first ever forest garden...

The sprouts all around are from a broadcast of seed to build the soil, shade the soil and give me something to eat; obtain a yeild! I have sown: Alfalfa (nitrogen-fixing, edible), Mustard (edible, build soil with root mass), Dandelion (healthiest vegetable ever tested by US Dept. Food and agriculture, nutrient accumulator, remedies soil compaction) and Garlic (just for kicks) among others.


I had never seen this peculiar fungus but was so stoked to see it I jumped right ouf the car all excited. I probably have seen it before I was a fungus fan actually, but just never acknowledged it.

Monday, 12 August 2013

Wicking Bed/Self-watering container

 Here is an easy garden project that once set up doesn’t need much maintenance. We were inspired to do this after seeing the lettuces my sister was growing and were lamenting the fact that we didn’t have any fresh salad greens growing. So using some scavenged materials we put together a wicking bed, a salad garden that waters itself.
Plants do really well in these because of the constant access to moisture they enjoy. This means plants never suffer water stress making their growth vigorous and more pest/disease resistant. Leafy greens do really well and plants that need extra attention are not a problem when grown in wicking beds. As with any plants in containers though, nutrients need to be added over time. To address this problem I thought I would put some “worm towers” (mini worm farms) in the corners and see what happens. I just put a handful of worms from my worm bin in with some scraps and shredded newspaper. I could go on forever about the benefits of wicking beds but let’s just get stuck into it, shall we?

To make one of these you need:
Some kind of container, imagine a plant pot but without the drainage holes- the bigger the better
A drill or other holemaking thing
Some soil
Some seeds or plants
A length of PVC pipe (optional)
A fat length of PVC pipe for worm towers (optional) with 2 lids for the pipes
Some gravel or rocks

Fill your container to about half with the rocks or gravel.

The PVC pipe may be inserted here to use a refill tube. Watering in this fashion may prevent some degree of nutrient leaching from soil.  

Then lay down some sort of permeable barrier, we used old hessian from my pallet garden but I have heard that shade cloth or a thin layer sand works.
This permeable layer allows water to leach into the soil and plant roots and prevents the soil from washing into the rocks.


 Drill a hole in the side of your container for an overflow. This hole will mark the high water level, it needs to be level with the rocks.
Now put soil in and plant.

Drainage holes in wormtowers for worms and their poos and wees to move into the soil.
Mulched and planted with brahmi, chives and seeded with salad greens

Sadly our container buckled and began to sag on the sides because it was old and weak in places. The buckling hasn’t affected the bed much; it just looks ugly. Watering is done very occasionally, using a dipstick in the refill tube can be useful.

Happy Gardening!


Tuesday, 6 August 2013

What I am reading...





A DIY mentality and a small concern about the future of civilisation have led me to research all kinds of things. After a while the impression is gotten that I absolutely need to know how to do everything! Well Jackie French does and she is the bomb! Robert Heinlein said something once about specialisation being for insects. A man needs to know a great many things. However, how does one remember everything that one has read? How does make the most out of reading? And how does one manage to study for a degree without disturbingly unbalanced levels of stress?
The answer: Tony Buzan.
What a flippin’ revelation! Buzan comes through early in his book ‘Use Your Head’ with some big calls. He says things like he’s gonna show you how to unleash your mind, give you a ‘Swiss army knife for your brain’, show you the way to greater memory and make studying any subject a breeze. Sounds pretty good, but, come on…
However, after reading the book I am sold on all he has to say. He is a legend. He is the guy who created MindMaps, a concept most people are familiar with. Like Mollison and Holmgren (co-creators of Permaculture [capital P?]) were doing around the same time, Buzan drew inspiration from patterns found in nature to come up with solutions to human problems. Buzan had trouble studying and began to enquire about how to use his brain better. He found that unlike our preferred method of transmitting information linearly with books and words, our brains do not operate that way. Our brains are more complex, non-linear, integrative and associative things. So Tony created Mind Maps to match studying to the way our brains work. A Mind Maps inherent characteristic is a complex branching pattern that efficiently and effectively links, orders and presents information for the purpose of remembering; the brain cells in our brains, the mycelia of fungi and the internet (most likely the entire universe as well) house and access vast amounts of information in similar ways.
i-0aa460d015222abd617b077607022646-Internet.jpg
Visual representation of systems sharing nature of the internet


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Dark matter (majority of universe is made up of this apparently) on the left and myclelia of mushrooms on the right

After some minor experimentation with mind mapping for some exams I found it to be very helpful. It is especially relevant to studying systems and permaculture type stuff because of its integrative and visual aspects. Complex ideas and theories can be simplified and presented in a way that is pleasing to the eye. Also, studying is actually fun with mind maps, with all the drawing and the colour and you get to kind of create your own mini work of art; and each one is different. I reckon everyone with a brain should know about Tony Buzan and his Mind Maps and study techniques, get on to it and spread the word!
Here are a few of the first Mind Maps I have done





Monday, 5 August 2013

Humanure part 2

Some of my favourite things about Humanure composting are:
·         The pile never needs to be turned!- The use of straw traps pockets of air which aids aerobic digestion of the pile, plus turning the pile would destroy the helpful bacteria
·         The collection of urine means the pile is not in danger of drying out. A waterwise compost pile is an asset to gardeners in dry climates like mine
·         The compost pile is not fussy and will digest everything from the kitchen and nothing needs to be done to the scraps, just chuck em on and cover ‘em up
·         Its low cost to start and maintain
·         It is resource recovery as opposed to the current thinking of poos as waste that needs disposal
·         It’s off grid living baby!
·         I can’t think of anymore just now
From a permacultural or systems perspective this system closes an otherwise very open-ended nutrient cycle. Energy comes onto the site via food, exits through you, is captured by the compost and returned to the soil where more food is created. This ‘closed’ cycle is sustainable and resilient as it consumes less energy and resources than an ‘open’ cycle by keeping energy and resources cycling through the system and by making use of renewable resources like trees and straw. An ‘open’ system in comparison relies on constant, expensive, unsustainable inputs (fossil fuels for sewage treatment and water purifying, off-site food, infrastructure and water to carry poos and wees from site, etc…) to construct maintain it.

Bearing all these benefits in mind it is still important to remember that ecological solutions and designs need to be aware of context. For example, adoption of this method would not be appropriate for people living on flood plains because the risk of raw faecal matter coming into contact with freshwater would be very high- the solution does not fit the context.
The need for composting humanure could be eliminated entirely if a new house is being built. Homeowners could design systems that take all the manual labour and work out of dealing with the poo’s a la Earthship style septics and treatment cells. Composting humanure works for me as I am a renter with a long term lease in a suburban area who thinks and cares about the effect my life has on old mate Mother Earth. I seek to adopt sustainable living strategies that are low-cost, effective, efficient and also high yielding so this method works for me. The small amount of infrastructure I have put in is easy to remove. The downside is that I if we decide to leave we need a year to let the compost decompose to make moving easier. Ways to transport partially composted fecal matter could be conceived but my guess is it would expensive, risky and unpleasant.

The chooks were let out under careful observation to investigate the pile, it was found that they CANNOT be trusted!
Another pallet makes a chook proof door


A star picket rammed into the ground on one end creates a hinge