Showing posts with label Gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gardens. Show all posts

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Disposition before acquisition --- please consider

What does your shopping list look like? Whether its clothes or groceries or furniture and furnishings, the motto should be Consider Disposition before Acquisition.  

In short, as we make a decision to purchase we should be considering what to do with all the stuff we acquire after we have finished with it?

What do we really need?

On the shopping list on the left, all that is necessary is the fruit and vegetables.  And as for that category, there can be a great deal of culling if we grow our own.

I am a renter and so have my limitations with gardening. Almost all of it is done in pots - and I have a wide definition of what is a pot.  Irrespective of size or what it is made of, it is surprising what can be a pot. In my yard, I have the sort of pots one buys at Bunnings, old saucepans and pots, a watering can, pallets lined with weed matting, storage jars, storage crates, a Woolworths shopping basket, and there are the pots I 'acquire' - from others' throw aways  mostly.

I love a good forage among my herbs and veges in preparation for the evening meal.  And I don't stop at what is in the pots.  You see, I take an interest in edible weeds - particularly dock and plantain.

And if I have fruit and vegetable waste?  That's easy - a no brainer, in fact.  Things like onion peels and citrus skins and crushed eggshells go in the compost (and I add, through the compost's life span, stuff like lime and blood and bone to my compost). The other stuff - the vegetable peels, skins, cores etc - go into my busy farm of red wriggler worms who convert the stuff into worm poo and worm juice which goes back to the garden.

This way my food waste becomes beneficial
and part of an on-going cycle of life and death.



Sunday, December 11, 2011

Interconnectedness and new life in a country garden


Two of the great lessons of the universe are interconnectedness with other humans, other species, and the planet itself; and care for each other, the species around us, and the planet that sustains us.  Waste, neglect, and thoughtlessness work against these universal themes.

The story of Mrs Gray's Garden is a simple one. It's basic appeal is one of interconnection in an Australian regional city, Wodonga - which, with its Twin City, Albury, straddles the Victorian-New South Wales Border and the mighty Murray River.  It shows how resources lying dormant, neglected or wasted can be reclaimed and put into service.  Mrs Gray's Garden, it is hoped, will become just one of many which will thoughtfully establish interconnectedness and contribute to the needs and the well-being of the communities in which they are situated. 

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Unsustainability in Docklands with raspberries to VicUrban and Lend Lease

Last week, I wrote a post highly critical of Docklands.  Working away in Docklands to build community and sustainability over the last two years or so has been a community gardens mob....


First prize for Unsustainability
to VicUrban and Lend Lease

Just think of all that education and all those resources
that have produced the engineers, the planners, etc
at the above corporations.

Yet, it seems, they are unable to plan and build
with people, community and nature in mind,
and certainly don't have an inkling about sustainability.

In the format of the Twitterverse,
#VicUrbanfail #LendLeasefail