FLOODED KITCHEN & SKIES

Marking out the second earth bag bed in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Leveling the base for the earth oven in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Gracie dog heps measure out the polybag in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Gracie dog inspecting the compost pile in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Worker taking a nap on the earthbag garden bed wall in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

We woke at 5am to a nervous knocking at our bedroom door. Our housemate had awoken to a steady wooshing noise. The origin of the noise soon became clear as I stepped into our suddenly torrential kitchen, water and steam flowing steadily from under the bathroom door, wet feet confusing sleep dazzled brains. The hot water pipe under the sink had burst and drenched everything! After the water was turned off the damage only seemed superficial, but the most pressing danger was the water lapping against the timber stairs. (Thank goodness for stone floors!). So our day began with a 5am mopping session after which instead of starting bright and early on our final preparations for the Blitz we staggered back to bed. Our housemate Laura, disturbed by our night mopping got up early and decided to bake, so we woke at a more respectable hour to a much pleasanter sound and I might add smell or baked oat biscuits.

It has been a week of working bees with friends and family stopping by just when we needed an extra hand. Laura and I marvelled at just how much faster two extra people could make the earthbag building. Tarps barely holding the spring showers at bay, and ominous forecasts for Sunday. Our most surprising little helper was the little girl next door who was sent over as punishment for naughtiness (a convenient way for her parents to get her out of their hair), who was astonishingly dedicated to the task of filling and rendering the garden beds and wore a air of serious concentration the whole time.

Piles of sand and clay in the driveway in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Playing in the pile of sand in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Little helpers filling buckets full of clay in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Little helpers building earthbag garden bed in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Rough first plaster layer on first earthbag garden bed in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Rendering the earthbags in preparation for the Flemington Permablitz

Filling in the gaps between earthbags with earthen plaster in preparation for th eFlemington Permablitz

Please comment on this post if you found it interesting, I’d love to hear about your gardening exploits!

 

YOU MIGHT LIKE TO CLICK:

Link to A PERMABLITZ IN COBURG PART 1Link to Flemington Permablitz Part 1

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3 Comments

  1. Hi Guys,
    I’ve just ordered bags from Bundaberg Bag Co, and hope to get a fair bit of work done building garden beds in the next 3 weeks. Can you tell me about how you rendered the bags walls, and did you render on the inside? I plan to do wicking beds throughout. Any advise you can provide would help greatly. Thanks heaps.

    1. Hi Jason,

      Sorry I’m so late getting back to you my computer has been out of order for a few months.

      I’d love to hear how your project went. What render mix did you end up using? We didn’t render the inside of the beds and we used 3 parts bricksand : 3 fine white sand : 1 lime : 1 cement (plus a little colour).

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