Tag Archives: Permaculture

David Suzuki Digs My Garden

SuzukiGnomeVancouver’s most famous Environmentalist, David Suzuki, is running a contest for pesticide free gardeners this summer. They say you don’t have to be a master gardener to play a starring role in the ‘David Suzuki Digs My Garden’ contest. They want a passionate storyteller who believes pesticide-free growing is the way of the future–which needless to say I do–that they can follow this summer in video, pictures and print, from soil prep and composting, through seeding and weeding, to reaping the harvest.

Without hesitating, I filled in the contest form on Thursday night and promptly went to bed. On Friday, I received an email saying I was accepted to the second phase, the video audition. How exciting! There are, of course, many problems with this: I don’t have a video camera, I don’t know anyone with a video camera, I haven’t ever used a video camera, I live 500 kilometers from the nearest store with a video camera, and no, I can’t buy one over the phone from the Vancouver camera stores. Consequently, I spent Saturday hunting down some options and finally a friend in Vancouver came to my rescue. He bought the camera and put it on the plane to Bella Coola this morning.

It arrived at 1:30 pm. I have since then been reading the instruction booklet whilst charging its batteries. I’ve managed to write my script and practice it twice on an old tape-style video camera (that won’t let me translate it to an AVI file so I can upload it to You-tube as the Suzuki Foundation requests) and hone it down to about 90 seconds. Now, I’ve gotten half way through what was going to be my final take–on the newly charged fancy digital jet-lagged camera–and I’ve hit something that has made the whole thing mute, and can’t figure out how to undo it!!! It will be a miracle if I manage to get this completed by Wednesday night! Wish me luck.

If I successfully manage my way out of the nanotechnology quagmire I’ve waded into, I’ll put it up on the blog for all to see. In the meantime, you can view Suzuki’s just over one minute promo video by clicking here.

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Filed under Developing Community, Just for fun, Sustainable Farming, Vegetable gardening

The end of composting…

as I know it!

September 21st, it was the last day of summer and I was down at my friend Clarence’s garden helping him harvest some potatoes. I had been by his place a few days before while he was harvesting some fingerling potatoes. He was unsure of whether or not he was going to bother with them. “I had these in my garden years ago but got rid of them,” he told me, “but now they’re back.” He shrugged, as if the potatoes had decided on their own to re-colonize his garden.

Some of Clarence's Ozette potatoes sitting on my porch; notice the knobbly one in the centre, that's all one potato!

Some of Clarence's Ozette potatoes. Note the one in the centre, that's all one potato!

Today I was back to help harvest the tasty little beauties. (I also wanted to ensure I would have the seed for next year.) After searching through various web sites and photos of potato varieties, I found not only the pedigree of Clarence’s ‘Indian’ potato but also the reason behind the name. The original seed was obtained from Anna Cheeka, a Makah Indian of the Neah Bay Tribe, and introduced to the market by David Ronniger, of Ronniger Potato Farm LLC, in the late 1980s. According to their web site:

The Ozette is one of the tastiest of all fingerlings. Classic in appearance with pale gold skin and creamy yellow flesh. The slightly earthy, nutty flavor comes through beautifully when lightly steamed or sautéed. Late variety.

See Potato party for one for more on the Ozette potato.

While in Clarence’s garden, I noticed he was doing something foreign to me: placing the potato tops and any rogue weeds back into the hole where the harvested potatoes had come from. Having just harvested all of my potatoes and carried the potato tops, along with the weeds, to a compost pile inside my garden, I asked him about it. “I’ve always done it this way” he said, and then shrugging, “It’s what my dad taught me.” By spring, it would be rich soil, while my compost may not be completely biodegraded. “It feeds the worms too” he added as an afterthought.

While digging potatoes, he uses the tops as back-fill to be composted directly into the soil

While digging potatoes, he uses the tops as back-fill to be composted directly into the soil.

I had thought that I was being clever by having the compost pile inside the garden, saving myself two steps: heaving the weeds and garden waste out to the pile, and then heaving it all back again in the spring as composted material. In the spring, I would simply spread it around the garden here and there and then turn the chickens in to do the rest of the spreading work. But what Clarence was doing eliminated both steps and produced a better result.

“You know, that soil scientist who was here last year? He told me I had the best soil in all the tests he’d done in the valley,” Clarence boasted while picking out a small rock as he continued to dig the potatoes.

one for keepers, one for rogues, one for rocks.

The three-bucket system: one for keepers, one for rogues, one for rocks.

This man has a system. A three-bucket system: One bucket for the ‘keepers’, one for the ‘rogues’, and one for the rocks. The keepers he stores enough for his family and sells the extras, the rogues he gives away to those who can’t afford to buy, and the rocks he disposes of. He’s been maintaining this system in this garden for longer than I’ve been alive. “You know, people say their gardens are too rocky for vegetables” he says while continuing to hoe, “So I ask them, Have you ever thought about digging them out?” He goes on to tell me about the thousands of rocks, small and large, that he’s taken out of here over the years. One of them was too large for removal he tells me, “So I spent nearly two hours digging a hole beside it …you know, and tipped it in” he stops hoeing long enough to give me a visual aid in gestures, and then nods towards an area in the garden, “It’s still in there, under the soil deep enough for my rototiller to pass over unscathed.”

Diligence with roguing out even small rocks has made the soil what it is today.

Diligence with rouging out even the smallest of rocks has helped make the soil what it is today.

Clarence is eighty-three. Originally from Pennsylvania, he is now a great-grandfather several times over. He has outlived his wife (but enjoyed a fiftieth wedding anniversary); survived the deaths of two children; endured 295 days as a POW “guest of Mr Hitler” as he likes to put it; lost his thumb end to a dynamite mishap at the tender age of 5; hunted countless troublesome cougars, and even got the better of one which attacked him on January 24th, 2000 (when he was seventy-four!). Luckily for me, he is also a master gardener keen to pass on his knowledge.

Like the Ozette potato, Clarence came north when young and flourished in a new climate. He too is a master survivor. No wonder he’s got the best soil in the valley!

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Filed under How to..., Potatoes, Sustainable Farming, Vegetable gardening

Food Sovereignty Challenges

eggs, meat and to help turn the soil in the spring.
Chickens’ work is threefold: eggs, meat and to help turn the soil in the spring.

PERMACULTURE PRINCIPLES

I’ve concluded that everything my garden must have three functions. For example, chickens are my gardening helpers and free range at every opportunity. They eat the bugs and add their manure like I’m paying them to do it. They also provide eggs and meat. Ducks provide eggs and meat, and slug patrol.

Helping with the beginning of fall clean-up in the garden.

Helping with the beginning of fall clean-up in the garden.

GOATS, another story:

Malcom X, the baby of the goat herd. He's the sweetest of them all.

Malcom X, the baby of my goat herd.

Goats here at Howling Duck Ranch are the ‘princesses’ of the farm. Basically, they don’t really pull their weight with respect to the permaculture principles. Thus far the goats help the fall clean up and clear undergrowth for our expansions; they clean their hay of seeds and then mix in their nitrogen. Primarily our goats are live lawn ornaments that provide great entertainment value: they are better than a crossword puzzle for keeping an alert mind. They will eat everything you don’t want them to and escape anything you try to keep them inside of. If you do spend time worrying about whether or not the goats are doing X, or Y, then that is exactly what they are probably doing!

WEATHER

Farming is always dependent on the weather. This year (2008) has been our second poor summer in a row, so our production is down. Despite re-plantings, lettuce and spinach refuse to grow, spinach comes up with two real leaves and then promptly goes to seed and don’t get me started on the beans’ complete and utter refusal to participate in the project!

PREDATORS

In the valley we also have a serious predator problem: cougars, foxes, sparrowhawks, black and grizzly bears also share our property. Yes, grizzly bears can be a problem in a veggie garden, they love carrots and parsley! One invasion could destroy our herds or our garden. The neighbour has just lost his whole flock of chickens to a marauding dog. The dog actually broke a window to get in at the chickens. Then what? The bottom line says that all this effort is actually not worth it. Especially when the supermarket a kilometer away beckons seductively.

KEEPING THE FAITH

My bottom line, I’ve learned this year that there has to be laughter and lots of entertainment (enter the goats). It has to be fun for me to be out there dawn to dusk, good weather and bad, unpaid. With my hunting license I will be able to have food sovereignty and food security, if I want it. But my fantasy of supplying all our needs except for olive oil and coffee I see now is a fantasy. Even with my husband’s help throughout the summer, we cannot achieve food sovereignty. Therefore I’ve moved to food security: I trade with other farmers in the valley (we practice the hundred meter diet, usually!), the tapestry of our community is being woven tighter.  And we (me and my farm) have become part of the community.

I’m starting to feel secure now. And I know that if I had to, I could stretch myself to personal food sovereignty as well. At the moment though, I am glad I can still reach for the olive oil…

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Filed under Politics of Food