Friday, August 27, 2021

!!! COURSES WOODWORKING AND GARDENING !!!

 ... LATEST PCF COURSE NEWS ...

At 9th September 2021

It's brilliant to have had so much interest in the first courses we've been running since lockdown, three Basic Woodwork Level Ones have sold out, and been a big hit with our participants, well done to you all :-) There's a link below to another one in about two weeks' time.

Our first Level Two course, planing and sharpening etc, went down very well, and there's a link to another one below.

No takers for the Gardening Beginners course so I think I'll change the format for that, 

COMING UP NEXT...

BASIC WOODWORK LEVEL ONE - 21st SEPTEMBER 2021

Next chance to do this course for complete beginners, women and men welcome, over 18's please, just four places on these, so plenty of personal attention, also we will try to explain and demonstrate everything in a way that suits your style of learning.  

BASIC WOODWORK LEVEL TWO  - 28th SEPTEMBER 2021 

This course carries on from level one, starts with planing, one of the most useful things you could ever learn, goes on to sharpening, cutting a simple joint and more. With a small group like this there's time to talk about specific projects you have in mind.

MORE WOODWORK - I'm thinking about how best to help people practice and progress. One idea is to have project days where people can work on various different things, combining reclaimed, salvaged and green wood, simple things like a stool, plant stand, small table, maybe a work bench, bookshelf...  course should be hatching out soon :-)

SIMILARLY WITH GARDENING AND ECO STUFF GENERALLY...

There is so much to show people at Perth Community Farm, practical gardening skills, orchard and woodland care, and also the thinking and patterns that will help us to live in a sustainable way with (rather than on) our planet. I'd be delighted to put on some kind of Eco Day with an overview of Permaculture, look round the farm, time for people to talk about their hopes and fears for the future. We are not powerless as individuals, we can make a huge difference in all sorts of ways - and what is a government anyway but a collection of individuals? why shouldn't government individuals take personal responsibility for climate emergency?

 

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Our first ever level one course :-)


Second level one course

first level two, mostly planing, sharpening and a first simple joint

a flight of planes resting before level two...


Friday, January 8, 2021

2021 - Perth Community Farm - getting ready for the growing season

Happy New Year Everyone! Sure 2021 will be an interesting journey...  it seems to be going a bit crazy already... 

I don't think we can do anything much more useful, lock-down or no lock-down, than gardening: growing some food, looking after our local area and finding out more about how to help it regenerate its wonderful complexity, and learning more and more how to change from our crazy industrial way of life to something our local area could actually support - and have fun with it all too.

I've been looking after Perth Community Farm through 2020 with a small but dedicated band of friends and plan to keep on doing that this year. We'll be sorting out what to plant, getting any seeds we need and getting some plants started off soon. We'lI take all possible covid precautions for now, I hope we can get more people down again soon and start the courses and classes we've been wanting to put on for ages. See you soon!

A photo of last year's summery abundance - it doesn't look anything like that at the moment, everything's frozen solid...


Monday, November 9, 2020

Perth Community Fam Nov 2020 - WOODLAND AREAS

The areas of woodland at the farm are some of the most interesting, especially since they're developing in a very natural way, without much conscious planning. Also very pleasant to explore!

A couple of years ago at the start of our farm project, we had an idea to develop the area to the back of the site for more fruit and veg, possibly even putting a polytunnel along the line of the fence. We never got round to doing any of that, so the area started to grow out into scrubland, regenerating naturally towards woodland. This is such a fascinating process in itself that we decided simply to let it happen, using it for teaching and demonstration, and making paths into this area to link up with an area of existing mature woodland and the existing wheelchair-access paths made by the Westbank project.

The top of the wheelchair-accessible walkway built by the Westbank project
Looking down towards our new enormous polytunnel

Very interesting to see that there can be life after Spruce... light getting in and a thriving under-storey

THE MORE YOU LOOK THE MORE YOU SEE
There's so much going on in there! Looking around as you walk along the pathways you can see regeneration and succession in process, how different light levels effect what will grow, what grows in and around the different trees, the effect of a full canopy and how it's different to the woodland edge, the difference bewteen the North and South sides, the abundant and varied under-storey, various edible plants and berries, loads of insects, birds, squirrels... and that's just a start...


Also mature broad-leaved trees...


Loads of elder, great for flowers as well as berries

WOODLAND YIELDS
We have a rough plan to continue to allow the area to develop naturally, with minimum management, so as to gain a variety of yields while allowing its general diversity to develop. Yields, not just of berries and other food but also of poles for woodwork, medicinal herbs, blossom to support the bees on the site, and mushrooms to name just a few, though it's main yield will no doubt be as a teaching/demonstration asset.
Our idea is to show how abundant local woodland can lie at the heart of a sustainable, local, natural, healthy economy and support this with a range of courses on the necessary skills such as treecare, foraging and green woodwork.



I've already been using poles from this area of willow for furniture

BY THE WAY...

Much of my personal input for the woodland development comes from a visit way back in 2008 I made helping on a project in Wales where a large area had been allowed to regenerate back into woodland, Tir Penrhos Isaf. The result was a fascinating journey of observation for the owners, Chris and Lyn Dixon. Being permaculture teachers, the woodland became an excellent teaching resource for them. Chris says, "Doing nothing produced our best yield".

Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Tiny Gardens can actually be HUGE !!

Ruth and I don't have a garden of our own at the moment, so that situation combined with the lockdown effect has meant I've had loads of time for Perth Community Farm - a post about that brilliant project coming up next. There is, however, a wee kind of courtyard space at the back of our flat, and I've made a tiny garden there. It's actually been really useful and interesting, and it's made me think about how much we could accomplish with all the other tiny and larger scraps of untended ground in and around town.
OUR TINY GARDEN: tatties, mint, yarrow, sorrel, lemon balm, marjoram, thyme and my comfrey nursery (on from which I've sold plants). Also the start of our salad garden at the back and notice clover in the foreground. I've got several clover experiments on the go, I think it's got huge potential as a nitrogen-fixing-bee-friendly ground cover.

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Worms, weeds and clover - things ticking over at Perth Community Farm

We're very keen to keep things ticking over at the farm, in spite of all the current challenges - such an important project! It's time to build local food security and community and I would hate to see the site revert to a carpet of weeds after all the hard work everyone has put in over the last couple of years. A few of us are keeping on top of the weeds in the main growing area, plan to grow a few easy things, try a few experiments we can maybe build on in the future and keep on building up the quality of the soil.

Easy to keep a safe distance... Julia, Gary and I have got the worst of the weeds in the main growing area under control.

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

OIL... get your pants up !!

The oil issue is going to catch us with our pants down if we don't wake up!
Guardian: "Over a barrel" here

Some of us have been expecting an end to the age of oil for years, but I never though I'd see a negative oil price. How long do you think producers will produce the stuff if they have to pay to have it stored? Then if production collapses and demand rises again what do you think will happen to the price?
And what happens if and when governments stop propping up the oil industry with subsidies, (put at $20 billion annually in the US, see here).

And where we will feel our lack of pants most suddenly in the industrial world is in our stomachs, as oil's used every step of the way in our food production - figures vary but something between 10 and 20 fossil fuel calories for every single food calorie.

So get growing! 

It's time to produce our food locally. If you have a garden, get some fruit and veg going, if you don't, grow stuff in jars or pots on your window ledge, if you don't have a window get some lights! Or help locally, there's loads of people with gardens they can't manage themselves and there's brilliant community projects like our own Perth Community Farm to get involved with. Even if you're a complete beginner you'll soon learn and have a lot of fun. It can be hard work but it's also very rewarding to see your stuff growing. You get more and more of a feeling of self reliance and a soul-satisfying connection with the land around you. The alternative is empty shelves in the supermarkets and at home, and empty stomachs.
At some point soon we need to be thinking at a local government level about local food security and larger scale local food production - have you seen an electric tractor yet?


Saturday, April 11, 2020

Fifty Pioneering Acres - a bit more about Lammas Ecovillage


So how do we move on from industrial agriculture to a sustainable way of producing food (...and everything else we need)? Here's a bit more about the Lammas project which certainly has at least some of the answers.
I thought it sounded brilliant when I first heard about it back in 2008 and went on to volunteer there several times. Check out their website too.
BEFORE: the fields of the 50 acre site were heavily grazed by sheep and didn't produce much of an income for one family

AFTER: a group of nine families bought the site and moved on, each developing their land and building their home on it in their own way. Planning permission was possible because of the Welsh One Planet Development initiative, many more sites have now been developed in this way. One of the planning stipulations was that each family should gain part of their income from working on the land, which they successfully do in various ways. I love the way it's teeming with life now!

There's a lot of preparation work in a project like this, planning roads, paths, fences, gates etc etc etc

Serious road making equipment, I wonder how many man hours it would have taken to put in the roads without fossil fuel...

Nigel and Cassie's plot, they're the couple I initially got in touch with and volunteered for, mainly on their roundhouse.

Start of the roof going up.

That's Simon Dale of grand design fame helping with the reciprocating timbers. His own website has more about his wonderful buildings and natural living philosophy.



That's me! Always though it was funny to be wearing hard hats when you were in much more danger from those wicked hazel spikes used to fix the straw bales to the wall.

The project attracted loads of volunteers and has had a wonderful rippling out effect of inspiration and experience. There's nothing like a practical demonstration of something - worth a hundred books.



Nigel, dry for once...


Nigel and Cassie's finished home.

At the top of the Lammas plot, This is Simon Dale's first house their, another roundhouse, nestling into the hillside.


Reclaimed windows form the inside of the Earthship style passive solar heating.


Simon let the roof timbers to the back of the house go down to the ground, making some useful storage space and allowing a very natural looking turf roof to sweep up over it.

The attached green house gathers the suns heat which is stored in all the earth mass.

Looking comfy!

Home sweet home.

Here's links to my original Ian's Eco Blog posts from 2009 about volunteering at Lammas:First Building Work at Lammas
Lammas: Nigel and Cassie's Roundhouse
Volunteers everywhere!
Simon and Jasmin's Roundhouse