Goodness Grown (GG), a newly established tomato farming business with a 20 hectare, state of the art and ultra modern glasshouse, has entered into a marketing & distribution partnership with Premier Fresh Australia (Premier). This partnership will ensure the availability of Goodness Grown’s locally grown…
Since I have a piece of land that is mostly flat, with small mounds or indentations due to it being plowed two years ago, although it’s obviously not perfectly flat since the land which is of 3.3 hectares goes from 101m of altitude to 99m of altitude to the other longest side. I would like to understand how to create swales here. The contour lines are definitely there, since it cannot be perfectly flat, but they are difficult to identify because the fact that is flat, and because of these surface irregularities since it hasn’t been leveled, so I’m not sure how to identify the contour lines. Even thinking about using an A-frame, I’m not sure how to go about it.
I can identify a keyline, which is a line that cuts through some parts of the land where water runoff is clearly visible. What should I do there?
Is there anyone who can explain this to me and give me some guidance?
When I stumbled across permaculture, in the form of a small hill farm many years ago, everything went click. It made sense to me and was pretty much the first thing that had done for me. I wanted in, but how? I ended up volunteering on that farm and a couple of others for the next couple of years before I started to think about how was I going to be able to do this in my own life, I was never going to be able to buy a farm, and this place where I had been was far away from where I came from, I knew I had plenty of challenges ahead of me. Jump forward a few years and I find myself living in a rented cottage in a small village in Wales where i had headed in search of like-minded people. The news I was hearing was that a local eco-centre was planning to host a PDC, the permaculture design course, and although at the time I thought I knew all about permaculture, as I had run a couple of farms designed through permaculture I signed up for the subsidised course not least to meet the other attendees. This was another huge turning point in my life and did indeed meet several like-minded soils, in search of similar goals as myself.
To cut a long story short, I made enough connection on the course to action the plan I had been hatching for the previous 9 months, which was to set up a housing co-operative with 8 members and leverage the small amount of savings we had between us to raise a commercial loan from an ethical bank to buy a run-down farmhouse, outbuildings and a couple of fields. That was 30 years ago, and I have since been the founder member of 3 more housing co-operatives, and I live in one now.
Somewhere along the line, 2006 it was I convened and ran by first PDC. I invited a couple of guest tutors to lead the teacher, but I soaked up every word of it and knew that this was what I wanted to do gong forward. If nothing else I felt I owed the world a payback for the huge boost the course experience had given me and the resulting networking and connections that had come from it. Life has taken many twists and turns since that time, and my youthful zest and optimism has been dented somewhat by intervening events, but the permaculture passion has held true, every project and venture I have since been involved with has taught me more and here i am all these years later, ready to convene my first full PDC since 2021. We will be embedded within a local farm, and working with people with a lifetime of experience in the field, it feels like the most positive thing I can put my energies into right now, so the countdown to the end of June begins.
Get in touch with me directly if you want to know more about this particular course, and we are planning a series of them, should the first one go well and according to plan, then there will be more. I have finally managed to get myself into the perfect setting to run these courses, and I have nearly 35 years of hands-on experience to draw on.
I’m sharing a video (https://youtu.be/SQavUbSkYhU) from our permaculture project in Si Sa Ket, Thailand, where we’ve been transforming a former rice field. While the video focuses on ‘smiles’, it’s really a reflection on how we navigate the challenges of implementing permaculture in a real-world setting.
We’ve faced issues like stray dog predation on our ducks and chickens, balancing animal integration, and the financial considerations of sustainable solutions. However, these challenges have become opportunities to apply permaculture principles like ‘integrate rather than segregate’ and ‘use small and slow solutions.’
For example, our approach to the stray dog problem wasn’t to build a wall, but to train and integrate guard dogs into our system. This not only solved a practical issue but also created a positive dynamic within the farm.
The ‘smiles’ we share are a testament to the resilience and yield we find within these systems. They demonstrate that permaculture isn’t just about technical design, but also about fostering positive relationships with the land and its inhabitants.
Have you ever wondered what space food looks like? A recent study published in Scientific Reports by Romano and collaborators, explores the adaptive responses of duckweed to space-simulated conditions and confirms its potential as a sustainable food source for space missions.
A national election campaign is days away and the focus in Canberra is on a federal budget that wasn’t going to happen until a tropical cyclone threatened southern Queensland a fortnight ago. The climate crisis and environment are expected to get passing mentions.
But there is a strong case that they should be at the forefront of debate over the next six weeks, understandable cost-of-living concerns notwithstanding.
I rarely go to nurseries anymore since I work part-time at one and another reason being that I don’t have much room for additional plants. When a garden fanatic runs out of room, the brain goes into overdrive, dreaming up ingenious ways to incorporate more plants. And another thing happens – a burning desire to obtain rare and unique plants.
I’ve been moving plants around, a tricky process that has a domino effect. A plant is unhappy – it is getting too much shade or perhaps too much sun. There is a plant that did not get as large as you thought it would or it is just a slow grower and now it is hopelessly hidden behind a taller plant. Sometimes a plant is just a dud for reasons unknown (Rhododendron ‘Golden Gate’ anyone?). I find the plant in question a better home, but it means that another plant will have to be moved. And the merry-go-round continues to turn…
However, for those plants that are to be discarded, a space opens up for a new one! I decided to move a Mountain Laurel, the slowest-growing plant I’ve encountered here. It was hidden behind a large rhododendron and the beautiful blooms were totally lost last year. I moved it to the front garden but could not find an appropriate plant for the old spot.
There are lots of great nurseries in our region with unique plant choices and one of the best is Cistus Nursery. I also like it because it isn’t too much of a headache to get to from our house. I browsed their website and made a list of possibilities for a taller plant that would do well in dappled shade.
Cistus is known for their zone-pushing plants but plants that have been proven to do well in the Portland region. I saw many plants there that I’d never heard of, such as a “Tree Dahlia”.
There were many beautiful camellias blooming –
I’m not sure what the story was on this –
The night before I went, I went through their entire inventory on their website and made a list of possible candidates for my empty spot. I was excited to find a plant that I had admired long ago in Pam Harper’s garden – a Five leaf Aralia with the tongue-twisting name Eleutheroccous sieboldianus. Here it is in Pam’s garden, photographed back in 2012 –
So I went to Cistus Nursery to get that one plant and came home with six. Neither I nor the nursery worker could find the aralia so while she was getting help from another employee, I was looking for possible substitutions although I had my heart set on the aralia.
While looking, I came across Viburnum tinus ‘Bewley’s Variegated’ and it sounded like it would work. In the meantime, good news – the aralia was located. Hooray! However, I liked the viburnum so much that I decided to get it too. Where is it going? I have no idea.
Viburnum ‘Bewley’s Variegated’
Cistus has a wide selection of Podocarpus, a plant that I rarely see at Yard N’ Garden Land although I have had one for many years called ‘Shima’, growing in a pot, that came from them. It is a fantastic plant. At Cistus, I got ‘Red Tip’ that is a more moderately-sized grower.
Podocarpus ‘Red Tip‘ (Photo: Cistus Nursery)
I then picked up Burpleurum friticosum, with the odd common name of “Shrubby Hare’s Ear”. I have heard raves about this plant and it is a top pollinator.
Another plant that I thought about getting was a Correa, an Australian fuchsia. I decided against that one and felt that I did pretty good by just coming home with six plants. I was practicing restraint!