our garden transformation

It’s 8:14 and the sky has only just shaded a dusky purple. I’m so glad it’s spring!

This winter was particularly dreary because I spent the entirety studying and taking my architecture registration exams. Darkness and endless pages of notes to read, that dragging unending exhaustion. So this spring is particularly special, I’m filled with the energy that only comes after being tied to a desk for the last four months. There is just so much time to enjoy life!

So I funneled all those bouncing beans of energy into a project I had been dreaming of through dark winter evenings. Raised garden beds to capture the sun that brushes a fingernail of light across the back of our south facing garden in winter. Ever the demanding apprentice, I kept a fire lit under Dylan to ensure a Cup Day planting of tomatoes. He did such an excellent job mainly using hand tools, what a champ! It’s so fun to see how the garden has transformed.Next post, filling the wicking beds…

Bare fences begging for edible vines + green starting to invade the concrete pavers. Hanging baskets, strawbale raised garden + seat positioned to capture that sliver of sun.

2014 our garden when we moved
2015
Winter 2017

human hair U part wigs


Charlie given a boost in 2014

 

fences down

 

Taking the fence down was another step towards creating our little patch of resilient retrosurburbia and doubling it! The fence divided our house and my parents and with it gone we have brought light into their garden and a mini “bushland” aspect into ours.

Charlie was particularly pleased with the extra pats!

 

Continue Reading

barley runner

DSCF6163

DSCF6184

DSCF6180

DSCF6179

DSCF6171

DSCF6170

DSCF6176

Tomorrow we would be riding the 30 miles towards Brighton, whenever we had spent an extended amount of time somewhere we were itching to move on, but not this time, I was missing it before I even left. I finished off carving some chainlinks around the fire that morning and then we finished off battening the roof ready for waterproof membrane and sedum. After some gorgeous days the sky grew temperamental and between bursts of sunshine it showered down upon us, no swimming today.

The end of the day approached and Millar got a text message, ‘free food from the wake’. We trooped down the road double time towards the holist. There is something about travellers and I guess poor apprentices in the woods that lights up at the words free food and we go into survival mode. We hovered up the leftover sandwiches on the bar, dips and pita gone, tabbouleh finished. the barmaid proudly told each customer how Sally had said the food would need to be thrown out if they couldn’t find someone to eat it and she knew who to tell “Millar free food, now”. We felt we had done them a service.

It was a beautiful golden evening, we trooped back to the campfire to make nettle pesto, a goodbye meal with Ben. My fingers burned with stings and good company and good food made it a memorable last night. We shared millionaire’s shortbread and as a final farewell, Barley did his routine disappearing act at dusk. Dylan ran after him calling and he returned half an hour later tail wagging, it wouldn’t be a late night for Ben waiting for the call to pick Barley up 10 miles down the road. A goodnight sleep for all.


DSCF6187

DSCF6185

DSCF6191

DSCF6192

DSCF6194

DSCF6193

DSCF6196

DSCF6195

DSCF6198

DSCF6199

DSCF6197

DSCF6206

DSCF6205

DSCF6203

DSCF6202

DSCF6201

Ingredients

saucepan of nettles
chard leaves
pinenuts
2 sorrel leaves
4 cloves garlic
6 garlic chive leaves
2 sprigs thyme
1 sprig rosemary
2 sprigs marjoram
butter

Nettle Pesto

Bring nettles to the boil in a saucepan full of water to remove stings. Add chopped up chard leaves to boil for 5 minutes longer, reserving stalks. Take off heat, strain and chop up finely.

Meanwhile toast pinenuts and set aside. Fry chopped garlic in butter until golden and add chopped herbs for a further minute. Add chopped sorrel and sliced chard stalks cooking until soft.

Combine with all ingredients and stir together until warm, add to pasta and serve with Parmesan shavings.


DSCF6162

DSCF6156

DSCF6211

DSCF6210

DSCF6213

DSCF6212

Continue Reading

changes

DSCF6052

DSCF6067

DSCF6062

DSCF6056

DSCF6055

DSCF6051

DSCF6049

DSCF6046

DSCF6042

DSCF6050

DSCF6054

I‘m lying between garden beds in the sun. I’ve spent the day weeding, whilst the boys got on with the bar roof, it’s been so long since I’ve been in a veggie garden even the stinging nettles and snapping roots of thistle can’t get take away the buzz. Being in the woods has made me realise how a well managed Australian Permaculture gardening is like a well managed woodland, a healthy mix of plants of all ages, things self seed when the time is right, survive if they have the sun or die off if there is not enough, the forester knows when to intervene or not. Bens veggie patch is very English beds of one thing spaced for sun earth between.

It’s all rather idyllic, fluffy white clouds and white chickens slumbering in the sun. I’m preparing the beds for their summer occupants, everything but the weeds in their English rows. Under the soil there are treasures: tiny self seeded potatoes, a frog that leaps from the dirt to give me a heartattack.

An email from Dylan’s mum has interrupted our fantasy, we knew it was coming one day but we are reminded that reality awaits us back home. The house is being sold, nobslipping back into the same old routine, we have decisions to make, big ones, I guess it’s a good thing. Where is home? This is our chance to rent a house in the country, just the two of us after years of 6 or 7, are we ready? We’ll be returning home with the change in our pocket, it’s time to take stock.

An orange butterfly floats into view. We must be mindful, look to the future, whilst still glorying in the present. For now there is sun, the sound of hammering and a row of leeks waiting for a weed.


DSCF6035

DSCF6031

DSCF6032

DSCF6028

Ingredients

15 rhubarb stalks, diced
2 granny smith apples, diced
1/2 cup honey

1/2 cup brown sugar
1 butter pat, cubed
3 cups spelt flour

I thought it might be fun to add some simple recipes I’ve tried backpacking. They will often contain harvested ingredients, be very simple and sometimes even only require a campfire or camping stove. This one we used a woodfire oven, but it can easily modified so you cook the rhubarb in a pot over the fire with the addition of some water and the crumble toasted separated in a pan and sprinkled on top.

Rhubarb crumble

Mix the rhubarb, apples and sugar together in a baking dish. Bake for 30 minutes at 180C, or until soft.

Meanwhile use your hands to combine the butter, sugar and flour until it is like breadcrumbs, but more on the lumpy side.

Cover top of cooked rhubarb mixture with crumble and bake for a further 30 minutes, until browned.

Serve with ice cream!


Continue Reading

extraction

wpid-dscf5646.jpg

DSCF5931

DSCF5935

I was standing ankle deep in mud with oversized bright orange overpants, bright blue raincoat and a green bike cap, I looked like the lovechild of Mario brothers and an oompa loompa. It was raining and we were putting chains around logs, attached to a pulley around a tree attached to Ben in a 4wd. We slogged up the hill guiding the logs out of the way of stumps and ruts, throwing a fluoro vest in the air when we hit a snag, Paul throwing up a yellow hardhat further down the road for Ben to see in his rear view. It sounds awful, but it was actually kind of fun. For a day that is, we had our hats off to Paul and Millar who did this all winter.

Up and down we went, by the end the logs had dug themselves a trench and as Paul said it looked like we were just taking a log for a walk. It would have been a sight to see, mud from head to foot. At the end of the day we had 16 logs at the top of the hill and we were relieved to know that today was shower day. The day the fire was stoked and the apprentices invited in to Ben’s house for a shower and a meal.

It was nice to see the house in the flesh, actually lived in. Ben was running an experiment, that being letting the house age without maintenance to see what would happen. He said that things that use to annoy him because they were mistakes are now his favourite parts because they remind him of the people who helped him build the house. An Australian who had never done a tenon joint before (it wasn’t that good, but it didn’t fall apart), the squeak upstairs because some other fellows put all the joins in the same place, did they ever build their own house? It was a lovely attitude to have.

Clean and ravenous, a feast was delivered. Every dish had something from the woodland. I never knew how delicious crispy chard stalks with capers could be, I vowed never to throw out the stalks again. Then out came more delicious cider and Millar returned with tales from the welsh border. Then my rhubarb pie fresh from garden to oven to table was devoured, a nice comforting meal after a long day.


DSCF5922

DSCF5921

DSCF5920

DSCF5946

DSCF5934

DSCF5933

DSCF5932

DSCF5929

DSCF5941

Continue Reading
1 2 3 5