urban permaculture

It’s been six months since we had to say goodbye to our old house and garden. It’s sad to lose all that productive space, anyone who has bought or built up beautiful new soil will know how it feels, but I guess the positive is that it has really driven me to pour my heart and energy into the community gardens I’ve designed.

I had a lovely email from Annelies asking me to answer some questions for her research project on backyard food growing and I thought this was a good chance to share my last thoughts and photos of our garden which six housemates could get a salad out of for every dinner and a lot more in peak harvest season. It wasn’t going to replace farming, but with nearly every baby spinach encased in plastic nowadays it sure cut down on our garbage, water waste and pesticide ingestion. We’re not going to cover our wheat and rice requirements in a 9x9m backyard but salad is easy, and everyone, even an apartment dweller can do it and be a lot healthier for it.

It was actually really therapeutic to reflect on our first permaculture garden journey and I’d like to thank Annelies for the idea. I had forgotten how much we actually got from that garden and it has given me the inspiration to transform our new garden! I hope it inspires you too!

I love reading your comments and enjoy responding to your questions, so keep them coming! 🙂

no-dig-1-square-metre-garden

 halloween backdrops cheap
From humble beginnings

earth-bag-garden-bed

raspberry-canes-celery-snapdragon-salvia

elderflower-banana

Earth bag raised garden beds filled wit herbs and salad plants.
Earth bag raised garden beds filled wit herbs and salad plants.

How much of the food you eat do you grow on your property?

SALAD NOT STAPLES

– know your gardens limits & understand your climate

We didn’t grow staples such as rice, wheat, lentils, chickpeas or corn. We have experimented with them, but with our climate, space constraints, time required in ground and their nutrient demands it just wasn’t feasible.
We concentrated on growing greens and fruit. We were about 90% self-sufficient in greens (e.g. lettuce, spinach, chard, bok choy, tatsoi, etc). We grew almost all our herbs including bay, rosemary, oregano, thyme and chives. Our fruit and nut trees required a few years to fruit productively but by the time we left we were getting: bananas, avocados, apples, nectarines, peaches, almonds, plums, babacos, strawberries, lilly pillies, oranges, lemons. We also had kiwiberry, currants, pomegranate, elderberry, passionfruit, goji berry and lime trees that were yet to fruit. In a few years this would have easily been enough fruit for the year, but not enough nuts.
Other seasonal treats such as tomatoes, cape gooseberries, eggplants, broccoli, pumpkin, zucchini etc were enough for 1-2 months of the year when they were in season, but there was not enough to preserve for the rest of the year.

basil-mint-earthen-render

microclimate-mlebourne-vegetables

sorrel-perennial-purple-basil

How have you managed to grow this quantity?

PERENNIALS, KING OF THE LOW MAINTENANCE POTAGER

We had raised garden beds for annuals, but from experience you can get a greater yield with less maintenance from a food forest system primarily comprised of perennial edible plants.

FOOD FOREST GARDENS PLANTING GUIDE

25 edibles that survive utter neglect


GROW UP – make use of vertical space in small gardens
Where space and light is limited using fences and other vertical space is important.

KNOW YOUR MICRO CLIMATE

Careful analysis of miroclimates on your site is important, for instance our garden was south facing, but one corner in the south west got sun all day and this is where we planted out cool banana.

Goodbye earthships

WICKING BEDS

– save time, water and grow more resilient deep rooted veg
The most effective annual garden beds are wicking beds as they require less time for watering in summer and plants in them are more resistant to extreme heat which were are getting a lot of in Melbourne.

community rehabilitation garden – stage 1

CROP ROTATION

We practiced a four year crop rotation to reduce the risk of disease and keep proper nutrient balances in our soil. Plants from the same family generally have different nutrient/pH requirements as well as propensity to fall victim to the same soil borne diseases so letting the ground have a rest from a plant family for three years helps avoid issues. Green manures and legumes help fix nitrogen in the soil and improve its quality.

4 YEAR CROP ROTATION FOR A SPOTLESS LIFE

The tropical corner, a microclimate warm enough for a 'Cool Banana' to fruit
The tropical corner, a microclimate warm enough for a ‘Cool Banana’ to fruit

avocado

apple-tree-fruit

AVOID CHEMICALS

Chemicals are a quick and dirty fix that lead to long term problems. Killing pests will stop beneficial insects immigrating to your garden to take care of the job for you and might even harm the good guys you already have. Likewise herbicides & fungicides damage the delicate balance in your soil not only getting rid of weeds but killing off the good bacteria, mycelia fungi and earthworms that contribute to rich beautiful soil.
It might take a few years to get your garden in balance and some plants might be sacrificed, but once it is filled with soil life, ladybugs, birds and bees you’ll never look back.

COMPANION PLANTING

– nurse maid plants, beneficial pairings and alleopathy
In Australia we have plenty of light so the English way of planting in neat little rows with a halo of dirt around in unnecessary. Grow plants tighter so they shelter each other and use a mixture of plants to confuse pests with silhouette and smell. Some plants work especially well together such as carrots and onions.
companions-planting

RETHINK WHAT IS A WEED

Nutrient filled, hardy, self-propagating, edible, when is a weed not a weed? Instead of pulling out those dandelions why not try the leaves in salad and the peeled root in a stir fry? Nettles make a tasty pesto and attract butterflies and protect their larvae.
edible-weeds

WORM FARMS & CHICKENS

– garden helpers to improve your soil
These permaculture pets area great source of manure and soil conditioner without the need to increase your lettuce’s food miles with the bought stuff. Worm castings also help your soil retain moisture and both are great way to quickly process food scraps.
diy-worm-farm
pascoe-vale-permablitz

MULCH

Protects your soil from drying out and adds nutrients as it decomposes. Why note try 1. Living green mulch – ground covers such as clover, 2. Chop & drop, 3. Seaweed.
seaweed-mulch
using-seaweed-mulch
chop-drop

bamboo & bananas need a lot of water, but can tolerate the salts and soaps in grey water.
Bamboo & bananas need a lot of water, but can tolerate the salts and soaps grey water. They also grow very fast and are great for screening out neighbours to the south
In our garden edible flowers are fixed with vegetables, not just to add colour to a salad but as bee forage.
In our garden edible flowers are fixed with vegetables, not just to add colour to a salad but as bee forage.

Where else do you get your food?

FIND A FARMER’S MARKET

– buy direct from farmers (reduce food miles, buy fresh, organic & ethical)
We are very lucky in Flemington, every Sunday there is a farmers market at the local high school.
flemington farmers market
vic farmers markets
australian farmers markets

SHOP LOCAL

– support small business rather than the duopoly supermarkets (people versus corporation)
We also support our local Foodworks grocery store where the owners know us and we feel loyalty towards them. For staples we visit various organic grocery stores and buy things in bulk and use our own containers. Some include: friends of the earth, Ceres, Lygon organics

BUY IN BULK

(affordable organics, dried staples, less packaging)
Organic food is more expensive and as backwards as it seems things made in Australia can also be! If you buy dried instead of tinned and buy in bulk organic is a lot more affordable (about the same as the small packets of non organics in the supermarket. Plus there is the added bonus that you use your own containers so you don’t have to feel guilty about packaging.
wholefoods
friends of the earth
ceres grocery

homemade-baked-sourdough-bread

tomato-harvest

buy flower girl dresses

edible-leaves

What changes have you had to make to your diet to source food sustainably?

ETHICAL MEAT

(reduce over consumption of meat, degradation of land, animal cruelty & trawling)
We now eat mostly vegetarian with the exception of fish/seafood we have caught ourselves or sustainably sourced. Dylan also has a little bit of kangaroo or beef from the Farmer’s market where you can talk directly to the farmer about how their animals have been raised.
fishing adventures

BUY AUSTRALIAN GROWN & MADE

We limit tofu and soy in our diet and try to get bulk NSW rain fed rice and Tasmanian quinoa. This is starting to sound a bit Portlandia so I might as well go all the way there…we eat a lot of Australian nuts, seeds and berries. (Yikes what hipsters! ha!)

only oz
aussie farmers
buy australian made

EAT SEASONALLY

Affordable, fresh, local, nutrients not lost, well-rounded balanced diet

David Holmgren’s wife Sue told us how one year she didn’t eat tomatoes all winter because she hadn’t grown enough and couldn’t bear to buy any. She said she felt really good, better than she had felt in ages and although she would preserve tomato for the coming winter it illustrated how even good things should be eaten in moderation because toxicities can build up. It’s good to give your a body a break every now and then like we would have before cheap oil made all year tomatoes, bananas and strawberries a thing.

sustainable table
http://lifehacker.com/why-eating-seasonally-and-locally-is-better-for-you-an-1563025065

LESS PACKAGED & PROCESSED

(reduce waste, fewer chemicals ingested)

I try to limit packaged foods to reduce waste and plan on trying a rubbish free month this winter which hopefully will help me develop better habits.
We try to eat as seasonally as possible and buy organic preserves such as canned tomatoes if we can.

abdallah house
no trash in 2 years

BE PREPARED

(don’t get caught out when your at your most vulnerable – tired, hungry, under pressure)

Being prepared is a must: soaking dried pulses for future meals, making excess so we have meals to take to work makes a huge difference so we don’t end up having to head out for a sneaky takeaway too often. We try to make eating out a fun treat not a lazy convenience (but we haven’t perfected this one).

I work full time and Dylan is at uni so our blender has made a huge difference in making it possible to quickly and painlessly make pasta sauces and soups from scratch come dinner time.

harvested-greens

crimson-flowered-broad-beans

chard

broccoli

purple-capsiscum

leek

Has there been an impact on your wider lifestyle?

With only a small shady backyard there has been a real incentive to actively contribute to local food security. The Flemington Food Forest I designed with the support of The Farnham St Neighbourhood learning centre has morphed from a fun community garden in a local park to an education tool with signs for school students and I get a lot of joy from it. I have also taken over organising the Flemington Food Swap which my housemate set up, I am really trying hard to develop a nurturing sustainable community in my suburb to bring together like minded people and make sustainability fun and social. Someone’s glut is someone else’s zucchini brownie after all.

What are the groups/networks that you utilise to source your food? Both formal and informal.
Flemington Farmers Market
Racecourse Road Foodworks (if you ask them to get something organic or ethical they are always happy to oblige)
Organic Wholefoods Brunswick & Flemington
Friends of the Earth
Ceres
Natural Tucker Bakery

viola-chamomile-pea-purple-sage

brick backdrop photography

What food items have you found difficult to source locally and/or sustainably?

Coffee
Tea
Fish/seafood
Chocolate
Coconut
Monocultures – corn, rice, wheat, etc
Bananas and other tropical fruit
Sugar
Cashews
Pine nuts
Brazil nuts
Pepitas not hulled overseas (many are grown here then exported to China for processing)
Dates

baking-biscuits-earth-oven

watermelon-shallots-garlic

building-chook-house

Are there any alternatives to this?

We use a lot of beans for our main staple as we can grow some at home and they add nitrogen to the soil.
Almonds are the main nut we eat and we occasionally make almond milk as it is not so easy to find milk such as Elgaar where they rest their cows and reuse their glass bottles. No soy milk!
Honey instead of sugar and maple syrup, we keep our own bees. We are also growing yacon as this is meant to be a great sugar substitute. We grow stevia, Dylan likes it, but I don’t.
Peppermint and other herbal teas
Dylan likes his coffee but he gets it from Streat where it is Faritrade and they hire & support local homeless people.

broccoli-hens

raspberry

isa-brown-hens

our beloved chooks, more trouble than they're worth, but lovable all the same
our beloved chooks, more trouble than they’re worth, but lovable all the same
Continue Reading

SPRING HAPPINESS PARTY – PART 1

pineapple-punch-sugarless

SPRING HAPPINESS PARTY

PART 1
Come celebrate with us!


honey-comb-newspaper-recycled-sphere-ball-decorations

In a week of downpours and plummeting temperatures the weather saved up its sunshine for Saturday, and well it should for it was the Spring Happiness Party at our sharehouse! We bade people leave their winter blues at the door and dress in their spring finery for a very special garden warming party. Almost two years since our Permablitz our garden was filled with laughter and the delicate scent of climbing roses and savoury treats. No one came dressed as a squirrel or possum, but a very busy bumble bee fairy made up for it.

I’ll be the first to admit that this was an outlet for a full blown girlish childhood relapse for the three of us, crochet flowers and jasmine wreaths and all, but despite this, even the gentlemen of the house had smiles on their faces, but this might have had more to do with the icy beers than the colourful paper lanterns. And a lapse of a day into shenanigans can be endearing, where as a lapse into hello kitty bedecked bedrooms would be far more alarming. Let’s all be greatful for small mercies people!

It was the perfect place for a party.

I was proud and delighted to see earthbag garden beds, so carefully crafted to create intimate spaces, being so happily used for a myriad of little catch ups and introductions. I hope a lot of new friends were made on the day and old ones strengthened.

Jess and Carly has to be shooed from the kitchen to enjoy the day, but their efforts were appreciated by the masses. Mini quiches were washed down with pineapple punch and every inch of the house was decorated with flowers that looked amazing next to rainbow fruit skewers. My carefully monitored, food intolerance based diet, took a major fall when a chocolate mousse, dairy filled, sugar fueled, gluten glistening delight arrived, but if your going to fall you might as well fall gloriously like that! I’m only human!

More photos tomorrow, there were too many lovely ones for one post, stay tuned!


mint-chocolate-cupcake-diy-cake-stand-secondhand-plates

fairy-wreath-pink-jasmine-flowers

rainbow-fruit-salad-scewers-bee-costume-fairy

university-architecture-friends-young-pretty

chalkboard-paint-wall-decoration

superadobe-earthbag-garden-bed-entertaining-seat

guests-spring-party

bee-pinata-party-fiesta

bee-fairy-costume-paper-lanterns

baby-cute-phil-anderson

spring-happiness-party

Continue Reading

late summer preparation 2013 – d.i.y. worm farm

In our sharehouse the scrap container is always overflowing and the compost bins are so stuffed full that it takes three or more inhabitants to turn it. (It is amazing how difficult it is to find the requisite crew, twice a year if we’re lucky!) And why do we have the world’s most finicky chickens? I’ve detailed my trials with their refusal of snails before, but why do they refuse perfectly good veg scraps? Spoiled little beggars!

So it was with desperation and a rising swarm of vinegar flies that we made a worm farm!

But one wasn’t enough, oh no to handle six people we had to expand the enterprise! And with our never ending supply of broccoli boxes we could do it all for free!

The Drainage Container

This is where all the excess water from the worm farm goes to prevent the worms drowning. You can collect “worm juice” by placing a plastic container underneath. Dilute this juice to look like weak tea before applying to your garden to prevent burning your plants.

The jury is out on whether “worm juice” is the miracle elixir people claim it to be, but as it is in effect diluted worm castings it is still beneficial for the garden, just don’t expect your plants to sore skywards with a backing choir of angels.

The Worm Residence

Protected from the elements, sun, rain and cold. The worms within are not your hardy garden variety earth worm, their delicate little red worms that live at the surface of forest floors in places like the Amazon. They need things Well drained, but moist, well-ventilated, and protected from extremes of heat and cold.

Placing the farm in a sheltered corner close to the house is a good idea. Being from the southern hemisphere we chose the south side of our house, under an eave, protected from the western sun and next to our back door.

what-you-need-homemade-worm-farm-free-materials

re-use-plastic-bottle-soda-drink-recycle

ingredients

2 polystyrene broccoli boxes + lid
plastic bottle
electrical tape
6 bricks
plastic container
shadecloth/hessian
shredded paper
coco coir
compost
cow manure
garden soil
compost worms

tools

scissors, knife
pen, ruler, screw driver
bucket, trowel, watering can

how-to-guide-step-by-step-worm-farm

ventilation-drainage-holes-marking

step 1

Cut the end off you plastic soft drink bottle, this is your drainage “tap”. Un do the lid when you want the jucie to flow into your container. I tend to just leave it off and empty the container underneath regularly. Just make sure your worm farm doesn’t dryout by regularly watering it.

step 2

Mark and cut a hole the same size as the bottle mouth in the centre of the bottom of the drainage poly box. Thread the top of the bottle through the hole and tape in place on both sides.The lid side should face outward.

step 3

Elevate the drainage box on bricks high enough to easily place the worm juice collection container underneath.

Place two bricks inside to weight the box down, and to create “worm islands” for any worms that fall through so they don’t drown.

step 4

In the second box punch drainage holes 6cm apart with a screw driver in the bottom. Place a piece of shadecloth or hessian in the bottom to stop the worms falling through before the farm is established, you won’t have to worry about the hessian breaking down because these worms are surface dwellers and as the worm casting build up they will move upwards.

step 5

Punch ventilation holes in the top edge as well at a similar spacing to allow the farm to “breath”.

shredded-paper-recycle-worm-bedding

step 6

Mix together the ingredients for the worm bedding and place in a 6 cm layer on the cloth. This will be both their bed and all they food they need for the next two weeks while they get settled.

Coco coir, shredded cow manure, aged compost, shredded newspaper/paper and garden soil to add a host of friendly bacteria.

The bedding material should absorb moisture, create pockets of air, contains elements high in carbon so it is slow to breakdown. The worms will be able to snack on this as they settle in, but will prefer the veg scraps when added.

step 7

Water this in and test to see the farm drains properly before adding the worms. If you have bought warms they will have come with their own bedding, but we just took a yogurt container full from an older worm farm.

step 8

Add damp carboard or hessein on top to keep the bedding moist and dark, thes worms are very UV sensitive.

step 9

Add lid and leave for two weeks.

step 10

After 2 weeks add finely chopped food scraps. No acidic citrus or onion,they won’t eat it. The finer, the quicker they will digest it. A worm will eat half its body weight in food a day. They will double their population every 90 days so over time you can add more scraps without worrying about them going mouldy. Ground up eggshells will prevent the farm from getting to acidic and smelling, it will also help the worms digest their food by grinding it up in their stomach. Just feed them small amounts at first, don’t add more until most of the last scraps are gone.

Dilute the worm juice with water to 1:10.

Don’t worry if you go away, the worms will eat the bedding and carboard. Just don’t let it dry out!

diy-polystyrene-box-worm-farm

worm-juice-collection

late-summer-worm-farm-preparation-diy

Continue Reading

D.I.Y. Chalkboard Calendar

A D.I.Y. chalkboard calendar is the perfect winter activity, and you probably have the materials lying around already!

With rain falling outside and breath forming indignant clouds inside, winter is not a time for us to slow down, we might just freeze where we sit! That is how I found myself up a ladder one wintry morning paint roller in hand… some people might call me spontaneous, perhaps our new housemate considered it impulsive. But in the end it was a triumph in transformation!

Our shed overflows with old paint cans, boring whites, charcoal leftover from some craft activity or other, tiling grout and random rollers galour! I don’t think this is an uncommon sight, it’s a crafter’s goldmine!

Link to my inspirations one, two, three.

ingredients

White interior paint
Black paint (interior or acrylic, any colour you like)
White tile grout
Masking tape
Containers with tight lids for mixing (1 per colour)
Spoon
Stick to stir paint
Small roller or paintbrushes
Old sheets to cover floor to prevent splashes
Paint roller tray, any shallow flat container will do

materials-diy-chalboard-paint-homemade

Hover over to help shake the paint! 


method

That’s it, too easy! The only problem after I finished was realising I really didn’t have that perhaps my social life isn’t exciting enough to display at that scale!

  1. Cover floor with sheets and put masking tape on light switches, skirting boards and window jambs, anything you don’t want to get paint on.
  2. Masking tape the area you want for your chalkboard, I just did the whole wall because there was some unfortunate post party graffiti up there, you know the kind!
  3. Mix tile grout with white paint in a ratio of 1:8 (about 2 tablespoons for 1 cup of paint)
  4. I put both in a container with a tight lid and shake it like mad to mix it thoroughly.
  5. Pour this base coat into the tray and apply to the entire surface you want to cover with a roller.
  6. After this has dried layout your basic pattern in tape, as some lines will overlap you’ll have to do this in stages. If you are doing shades of grey like me you might want to layout all the white shapes first, then light grey and so on with black last. I didn’t do that, that was dumb!
  7. Mix colours/shades as for the base coat, just adding different ratios of black and white (or colour).
  8. If you don’t have many brushes start with lighter shades first and work your way up to black, to reduce time spent washing brushes between coats.
  9. Let it dry! Some people recommend sand papering it and conditioning by rubbing chalk over everything and wiping it off. I didn’t, I’m lazy that way!


organisation-feature-wallcreative-interior-design-ideas

Marking triangle locations by dangling a weighted string to line up the triangles.


making-shades-grey-black-white-chalkboard

Hover over to see before and after! 


Continue Reading
1 2 3 11