Tuesday, 25 October 2016

Vulnerable


Vulnerable



When you choose to garden without toxic chemicals your plants become vulnerable to insect attack. If you are at all identified with your crops you can feel under attack yourself. You might find yourself saying such things as “I put a lot of time and effort into that and now look at it “It is your food after all, you might even say something like, “dam it”.

However, before you go marching off to the shop to buy chemicals please look carefully at the picture bellow

I had been away for four days providing raw food cuisine at a festival with muriel and friends. When we came back our Brussel sprout patch was crawling with cabbage white caterpillars. What had been a few small caterpillars had in the few days away become an infestation. I am wishing that I had taken a picture then as it would have been a brilliant before and after study. I was too devastated to think of taking a photo. However, if you look at the scars on the lower leaves in the picture you can estimate how badly the plants were damaged. In fact, the whole crop was skeletal. And it crossed my mind to cut my losses and pull them all up.

I didn’t pull them up, trusting in the amazing powers of recovery that the cabbage tribe possesses. there followed a week of picking the caterpillars of by hand. It is amazing how cleverly they can hide at first it seemed that though I removed loads, they were back next day in undiminished numbers. Gradually though, through persistence they were visibly diminished, then just a few lingers, then the odd one or two then finally gone and my ragged patch began to recover. I guess it was a little over a month later I had that “oh my god” moment when I realised that the Brussel Sprouts had recovered beyond all expectation and We were going to get a crop after all.

The resulting picture is a great symbol of recovery of hope, of not giving up. Not only did they recover but (I don’t know if the picture really shows this) but with such tender new life








Another spin off of keeping to the “ chemical free way” is that I have a growing population of Ichneumon wasps. Look at the picture below. Not just an amazing insect in its own right, but also a valuable ally in keeping the cabbage white under control next year as these wasps predate on them.

If I had poisoned the caterpillars these wasps would have been killed off too, along with a small but highly significant part of myself, and my relationship with the environment, which brings us back to the beginning. Its…. vulnerable.



p.s I have just pulled this couple of photos of the internet. Our Brussels looked like this or worsre.

       


Tuesday, 18 October 2016

Tips on making and using compost



tips on making and using compost.the second video shows a stand of mixed sunflowers and grazing rye. very mature compost can be scattered in between the plants. Incidentally the sunflowers have reached maturity at such a small size because they were sown after the longest day and they had to race.I will be harvesting the seeds to use as green manure seed next year.I am very curious to see if the sunflower seeds actually ripen to the point that they can grow. will they be very small seeds ?wait and see




Any crop can benefit from this top dressing of mature compost. Although I would be  careful with lettuce or anything else that I was going to eat any time soon Not to get compost into the leaves..It is a great way to feed your growing crops,and improve your soil at the same time.



Tips on making and using compost



tips on making and using compost.the second video shows a stand of mixed sunflowers and grazing rye. very mature compost can be scattered in between the plants. Incidentally the sunflowers have reached maturity at such a small size because they were sown after the longest day and they had to race.I will be harvesting the seeds to use as green manure seed next year.I am very curious to see if the sunflower seeds actually ripen to the point that they can grow. will they be very small seeds ?wait and see




Any crop can benefit from this top dressing of mature compost. Although I would be  careful with lettuce or anything else that I was going to eat any time soon Not to get compost into the leaves..It is a great way to feed your growing crops,and improve your soil at the same time.