Saturday, June 26, 2010

Soil Care



Poor soil with courgettes struggling


My lads were making choc chip cookies last week and they missed out one ingredient, not something obvious like chocolate either. We didn’t have any vanilla essence. This made a really big difference to the final taste and instead of them being eaten as soon as they were taken out of the oven piping hot like they usually are, they were left on the kitchen table.

Our dog hasn’t got such a critical palate though and managed to eat the whole plateful in just a few seconds after the lads walked out of the room. They will complement the pound of butter she ate last week.


Good soil, the courgettes are thriving

Soil care
Soil, just like ingredients in baking, needs to be mixed in just the right quantities to make plants grow well. Getting a good loam (soil structure) to hold plants in place and store nutrients until the plant roots need them requires a mixture of sand, silt, organic matter and clay. In my experience, most gardens have a varying mixture of both good and poor soil. In our garden, we have an area where the bulk of the vegetables are being grown. We set up the raised beds and added loads of organic matter such as well-rotted horse muck, and the contents of the compost bin (lovely stuff). At the top of the garden we cut a long narrow bed out of the lawn to increase our veggie produce. This bed is very near to a mature escallonia hedge and willow tree, which both starve the bed of water, light and nutrients. We also had run out of our horse muck and compost so it this bed wasn’t so well fed –just a few handfuls of chicken pellets We planted the same batch of courgettes into both the good growing area and the poor bed. The lush leafy growth of the healthy plants compared to the diseased looking stunted growth of the courgettes in the nutrient and water starved one makes for interesting comparisons between the two areas.

Weeds
Weeds are also a good indicator of how a soil is performing. There are some types that like to grow on nitrogen rich soil, such as nettles, whilst others take over poor ground without competition from rivals. We were on Inishtrahull Island last week with the Inishowen Organic Group and I saw a large area on a hillside that was just covered in daisies. There was no soil to be seen and the plants were seemingly hanging on to the hillside by wrapping their roots around the scree, hardy or what?

Summer Bedding - Getting it right
Getting the right mix of soil is very important in summer bedding plants and containers. There are generally a lot of plants in a very restricted area, especially in hanging baskets. A container might have ten plants all battling it out in soil that would normally be used for just one plant. Most shop bought composts only have enough nutrients on them to last the plants four weeks, so regular feeding and watering is needed. Slow release organic fertiliser can be mixed in (or scattered onto the top if you forgot when you planted them up). Water retaining gel is a good idea too. Again if you forgot to put them in, all is not lost. Simply push a topless plastic pop bottle with the bottom cut off into the basket and fill it with water every day. It is important to keep your containers and baskets well watered –even during wet days.

Home made mix
I was always proud of how well my containers and baskets looked in the summer. I used to make a mix of peat, compost, sand, osmocote and garden soil. One year I didn’t quite get it right. I had got a load of free mushroom compost from the old mushroom polytunnels in Umrican –great for the veggies I have to say. However, it was a disaster for my summer displays. The mixture wasn’t rotted down well enough and the straw leached the nitrogen from the soil. Without a decent environment the poor bedding plants succumbed to all sorts of pests and diseases. The effect was devastating and my displays were pitiful hardly filling the baskets, yellow spotty leaves and barely a bloom in sight. My reputation went downhill fast, but you live and learn. As I am writing our windowsills are covered by pots of strong, healthy tomato plants and even though each one is only in a two-litre pot, they are quickly making their way up their sticks to the ceiling. This is because of good compost, regular watering and constant feeding (three times a day at the moment) With all that constant care and dedication, it doesn’t look as though I will be going on holiday this summer.

Monday, June 21, 2010

Competition


Two Acupressure Mats worth €35*to be won

Gardening.ie have joined up with Shakti.ie and have two Acupressure Mats to win.

What are Acupressure Mats?

Acupressure Mats have thousands of tiny spikes on a soft cotton base that release endorphins in your body when you lie on them. They are a great way to relax and ease the muscles (especially after a hard day in the garden)

Are they just for Gardening?

The mats can be beneficial when you feel low in energy, experience high stress levels, suffer from insomnia, have muscular tension, lumbago, sciatica, migraine, digestive problems, and depression. Research also claims benefits for people with: Back and neck pain, sciatica, insomnia, digestive problems, poor circulation, fatigue and excess weight.


We have a new Business Section on the site so you can find suppliers. And let’s not forget the forum and FREE Classified section.


*includes postage

Closing date: August 15th 2010

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Water Conservation


Yea Butt No Butt yea Butt….


“It’s nothing really, just an old wheelie bin and a downpipe”. I’m talking to Mickey Donaghay from Carry Garden Sheds in Fallask on the outskirts of Buncrana and he’s being very modest about his inventive water butt design. The idea is simple enough. When he needs water from the butt, he lowers a six-foot long pipe from the top of the bin to the floor and “gravity does the rest” Mickey says, demonstrating how the flow of water starts when the pipe gets lower. It’s so practical, why didn’t I think of that?

Water seems to be a bit scarce this year. Our natural garden watering hole is usually brimming with aquatic life at this time of year, but at the moment it’s bone dry. I have even had to use one of our washing up bowls filled with tap water for the poor tadpoles to live in. Most of them died scrambling around in the resulting mud when the last of the water drained away. Water rationing is probably not far away so collecting rainwater from the roof is the perfect alternative.

Mickey usually specialises in making garden sheds, hen houses, bird feeders and more recently, raised beds for the garden. But today, I’ve popped in to see how he is making good use of one of our natural resources- rainwater.

Reasons to make your own butt

By making your own water butt, you will benefit in a number of ways.

· You can site several water butts around the garden or allotment, so that you don't have to trek to and from one water source.

· Rainwater is free, so if you have a lot of watering to do, you want have to rely on your drinking water supply - extremely handy if you're on a water meter or the well is drying up, like our pond.

· Some plants really benefit from rainwater, as it is slightly acidic

· Making your own water butt helps the environment and can use recycled materials.




BUILDING YOUR OWN WATER BUTT

· Find a suitable container to hold the water. Mickey used an old wheelie bin, but you could use anything that is watertight that hasn’t had any toxic chemicals in it (steam clean if in doubt).

· Stand the butt on a firm base of gravel and concrete slabs, preferably slightly above the ground so you can get a watering can easily under the tap, or in Mickey’s case allowing gravity to expel the water.

· Check that the water butt has a secure, childproof lid. As well as protecting children it will also prevent debris and midge larvae from entering. If it opens like the wheelie bin, you can access water from both the top and bottom of the container.

· Select a downpipe that is not in a prominent position with plenty of room to stand a butt nearby, Mickey chose to use his on a large shed away from the house. You can always mask the butt with some willow weaving if you feel it’s unsightly.

· Cut the downpipe at the desired height and fit a diverter, you can get these from any DIY shop.

· Make sure that any water butts have an overflow pipe fitted so that any excess water will drain away from the house wall and check everything is watertight.

· That’s it, job done, all we need now is a drop of rain.


Other Options

Let’s have a look at some other interesting options to save water.

Rig up a plastic sheet over a hole in the garden, with a stone weighing it down in the middle and an old baked bean can underneath, then watch drops of condensation collect as the sun passes overhead. It has saved many a life in the desert.

Underground water storage tanks such as the one used in the gardening area of Buncrana UDC could be installed into your garden. Collecting water from the house roof could supply the toilet, washing machine and any other use besides drinking (although you can get filters for this if you wanted to be totally independent of the mains water)

Water facts

· Water is the most common compound found on Earth.
· Four fifths of the Earth’s surface is covered in water.
· 99% of the World’s water cannot be used because it is either saline or is locked up in glaciers and ice sheets.
· Most of the remaining water is present in rocks as groundwater (approx. 0.6%), while just over 0.3% is present in rivers and lakes.
· Our bones contain about 72% water, our kidneys about 82% and our blood is about 90% water.
· Each of us need an intake of about 2 litres of water per day. This water may be taken as part of our food or drink.
· A person can live about a month without food, but only about a week without water.
· A person uses about 150 litres of clean treated water per day.



Dublin City Council offer water butts for €40. Hopefully soon all local councils will follow suit.

If you are interested in contacting Mickey about a shed, bird feeder or his other wooden products you can phone him on 086 607 2194

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Bloom Visit 2


Bloom in the Park visit 2010


We’re just leaving the Bloom Festival in Phoenix Park Dublin to miss the rush hour traffic on the way home. We’ve been at the event for 5 hours and in the heat of the sun we thought it best to leave before my bald patch set alight.

My lad and I took the initiative to come down from Inishowen yesterday, calling into Newgrange and Knowth in the Boyne Valley. At 5000 years old, these structures show that landscape design is certainly nothing new. People have been manipulating the land for thousands of years either for recreational use or for worshipping or for protection from marauding invaders.

We stopped over at relative’s house close to Phoenix Park, and after a lie in, we set off, all fresh faced and enthusiastic, to join the long queue of cars full of eager visitors to Ireland’s largest gardening, food and family festival.



Show Gardens
Our first port of call was the Show Garden area to get photos of the new innovative garden designs. There are twenty-two gardens this year so between us my lad and I had cameras to cover all angles. This year, I notice, Bloom is far more eco aware. There are energy saving gardens that collect your rain water and filter it back into the house. There are recycled wine bottles pushed into a lawn. The influence of energy conservation spread to Bord Bia too. They worked with the Carbon Trust to measure Bloom’s own carbon footprint this year, which included tightening up on waste management controls, reusing materials when possible and increasing the use of public transport to the event.


Forfree
One of my favourite gardens at the show is Forfree by Sophie von Maltzan. Sophie took garden design to another level. The garden provides a platform for Crann (the national tree awareness organisation) to showcase their service of distributing free native trees to schools around the country. There were four rows of trees in the design, all mulched by old cardboard to keep the weeds down. Around the perimeter were bails of used paper and packaging up to a height of about eight feet to produce a dramatic wall. It asks a few questions. Do we need so much packaging? Can waste be reused without being sent to China? I like it because it reminded me of my own garden.

Versatility
This year has seen a real increase in edible planting mixed in with more traditional ornamental arrangements. 2010 is the UN’s International Year of Biodiversity. And this theme is reflected in some of the designs. There are gardens that attract a lot of wildlife, gardens that produce food for the family and gardens that are a practical usable space for the family who with the recession are spending more time at home.



There is also an emphasis on children this year, which is highlighted by the fact that children get into the event for free. The Irish Preschool Play Association were onsite with their imaginative garden, again made from recycled materials such as straw bales, wooden structures (also making excellent use of old car tyres). Dublin zoo were also there entertaining the young ones and the children’s museum based in Sandyford supplied the education with a “Good to Grow” feature to get children interested in food sustainability.

The event is big enough to house all types of approaches to gardening. And everyone will get something different from the event. As my lad and I moved around the garden designs I concentrated on the ecological side of things. When I get home and trawl my way through the five hundred photos I will no doubt see a lot of other features I missed.

Another new addition to the event was a Lost and Forgotten Skills Marquee. Bord Bia recruited some of the top craftspeople in Ireland who demonstrated cheese making, butter churning and fish smoking as well as spinning, clay pot making and quilt making.

Seeing all that cheese made us realise we were quite hungry. Luckily there was no shortage of food stalls. The Artisan food market had over fifty producers of quality produce and they were giving free samples. Our diet for the day consisted of slithers of meat, sausages, cakes, olive dips with tiny bits of broken cream crackers, orange juice, topped off with chocolate and marshmallows, not the most balanced diet but enjoyable never the less. Bord Bia also gave hourly cooking demonstrations. Well known chefs including Neven Maguire and Donal Skehan (author of “Good Mood Food”) were preparing mouth watering wholesome dishes.



Frugal living
It is time to head on and as I negotiate my way through the local rush hour traffic, I ponder the sights and experiences of the last couple of days. On one hand there is the megalithic tomb at Newgrange, where everything was built for a practical useable purpose with natural materials. The latest trends at Bloom, too, emphasises sustainability and care for the environment.

Perhaps the gap between the Newgrange and Bloom styles is closing, and perhaps that’s a good thing.





Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Must have gadget of the week

The bladeless Dyson Fan



Like one? Click on the image for more information.



The Dyson Air Multiplier™ fan works very differently to conventional fans. It uses Air Multiplier™ technology to draw in air and amplify it 15 times, producing an uninterrupted stream of smooth air. With no blades or grill, it’s safe, easy to clean and doesn’t cause unpleasant buffeting.

How does it work?


Friday, June 4, 2010

Northwest Garden Show 2010 Castlefinn Donegal

Atlantic Domes Geodesic designed structure displayed at the NW Garden Show last week.

“You could get a GPS from iPod, but they are cheaper for a PSP”. My lad is suggesting a sat nav for the car, as I’m not totally sure where I am. We’re on our way to the Northwest Garden Show in Castlefinn, and although I have been there before I am considering out loud that I should have taken a map with me. I get lost in Buncrana most days and I’ve even been known to get lost in my own house occasionally, so a sat nav would be a good idea, I’d probably lose it though.

There is no need to worry, it is well signposted to the Partnership Initiative Complex on the main street of Castlefinn. As we arrive, one of a multitude of fluorescent jacketed stewards direct us to a field a few hundred yards from the venue. There is a shuttle bus ready to take us across the road to the event, but as it’s a sunny day, we decide to walk in.

8 Acres for 5 euro

The Garden Show is on the 8-acre site and on a normal day is a recreational park, with a public allotments scheme. It also boasts the much admired Alphabet Park. The concept of the park is based on tree or crann ogham, the ancient Irish alphabet. The site was reclaimed from wasteland ten years ago and very impressive it is too. We pay our 5-euro on the door and are given a free entry to win a lawnmower from Robert Kee’s and a floor plan map of the site (so I won’t get too lost).


I am sometimes a bit reluctant to part with money at the gate of events that are just trade fairs. It’s a bit like paying to go into a shop and then get pressured into buying stuff that you don’t want. The Garden Show doesn’t feel like that though. The 100 or so stallholders and sponsors have a very laid back and friendly approach to the visitors and thankfully we aren’t being pounced on every few steps to buy. I am still cautious about asking any questions to sellers though; just in case I go home with something I had no intention of buying.


The choice of products is amazing, and most of the companies are local and Donegal based

Ice cream time

We’re sitting on some ornately carved wooden chairs eating an ice cream and looking at a beautiful geodesic dome that is a smaller version of the ones at the Eden Project in Cornwall. These state of the art structures are the brainchild of Peter Ellis and his company Atlantic Domes. We go over to talk to him. “The domes are multifunctional,” Peter tells us. “They are used as classrooms, exhibition places, growing areas and extra rooms. They instill a bit of magic into the places they inhabit.” Peter is very enthusiastic about his design. “ The structures can be either made with glass or plastic and can even be double glazed if needed”. The prices are comparable to a very large garden shed and they come completely installed by Peter’s team.

Next we’re over to the stallholders, I suggest we visit them in a methodical manner, calling on each one in turn. My lad has other ideas and decides to just go to whatever catches his eye. Whilst he checks out the Garden Challenge area where amateur gardeners lay out their ideas, I am looking at Greenhill Farms array of fine looking tools, some of which I haven’t got yet. Next to them are some really stately looking gates made by Iron Style. They are made from galvanised steel and oiled cedar wood. Each gate is beautifully crafted, I think they would make fantastic partitions in a small garden. You would enjoy looking at them for years.

Gillespie polytunnels are here showcasing their new concept of raised beds. Not content with just a bed, they have decided to put a mini polytunnel over the top of an eight foot by three foot bed and call them Hobby Tunnels. What a fantastic idea. It’s more than a cloche and perfect for tomatoes and salad crops all year round.

Mini Gardens

My lad pops back from the Garden Challenge for a moment. “ My favourite garden is by Janice Campbell from Dunwiley Nursery. She stacked wooden logs for hibernating ladybirds to live in, in the urban garden”. He’s away again wandering over to the Donegal Donkey Sanctuary.

I make my way to the Mini Gardens. These are pallet sized gardens made by pupils of the local schools. Dromone NS came up the idea called “Thinking outside the Box”. Ballyraine NS had an equally entertaining title of “Roots, shoots and Wellington boots”. St Safan’s school were very inventive with their metre square garden and used upside down plastic bottles with their bottoms cut off as bedding plant holders. Ballylast NS planted vegetables in their “Healthy eating” display and Youthreach Letterkenny used waving grasses to good effect in their world cup entry, complete with small model footballers on the pitch. Another topical entry was from St Mary’s NS in Castlefinn. The 1st and 2nd class used New Zealand flax inside a papier-mâché volcano to give the effect of the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull erupting causing havoc for aeroplanes. White alyssum gave the effect of a surrounding glacier. Very clever.

Value for money

I met up with my lad and we watched Chef Brian McDermott give one of his imaginative outdoor cookery demonstrations. We’re now very hungry and decide to check out the Catering Zone. We are thinking of buying a burger, but there are no prices being displayed. I am always a bit wary of this, assuming I’ll be fleeced at the tills. “We’ll go to Leo’s (Burnfoot) on the way back”, I say. “They put all of their prices on the menu, and they do chips”.

We’ve been here two hours; good value for money, but decide to leave, as the lure of chips is strong. Walking past the main hall we hear Diarmuid Gavin having trouble with the PA system, he’s tapping the microphone. No one seems to mind though, hanging on his every (other) word about how to get the best from your garden this summer.

My lad has a suggestion “ How about getting on the shuttle bus to take us back to the car?” he suggests. Not a bad idea. As the service is there we might as well use it. Clambering on to the busy bus, we hop over the collapsed baby buggies and take a back seat for the 500-metre trip to the car park. There’s a sign on the front of the bus next to the driver that states. “Don’t ask me, I’m lost too.” I can relate to that, maybe he needs GPS too.

See the rest of the images HERE

First day at BLOOM Phoenix Park









































 










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