Archive for 2010

Latest News

Well exciting thngs are afoot. Firstly, I can’t remember if I told you that we are being donated another 20 trees through the hard efforts of Judith from the Mount Eden Village People. They have already obtained local board funding for many fruit trees around our area including other schools and kindys and have already given us 3 trees, but another 20 to come is fantastic. We have not made any decisions yet and most likely new trees will be planted next year as some of the trees we wanted were sold out and the planting would have been a little too late. So a BIG thanks to Judith who is a great advocate for our school also. She speaks highly of us and our gardening efforts to anyone who will listen. Take a look at her website. Judith and her group are making amazing changes over in Mt Eden.

The next exciting thing is that we are about to apply to become a funded school on the Garden To Table programme. Take a look at their website for more information. We have been in contact with the trust for the last couple of years as we have watched them run 3 pilot schools through the programme and in June they had a group of interested people visiting 2 of the schools. Kusam and I went to Meadowbank Primary and East Tamaki Primary and were blown away by the amazing vegetable gardens and cooking facilities that have been developed at these schools and to see how much the kids loved being part of it.  It would be fantastic to see this happen at Edendale. The application form arrived yesterday and I will let you know how we get on. In the meantime, here are some photos from those schools:

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Mini Working Bees x 2

A few weeks ago in the playground after school it was suggested to me that some folk would like to do a bit of work in the orchard from about 2-3pm since they had to come to school anyway, so hence we had a tuesday and thursday working bee in the week with about 3 - 4 ladies at each one. And man was it hot that week! it made me think of the january/ feb sessions we had last summer where retreating to the shade with a cool drink every ten minutes was essential to survival. It certainly is a suntrap down there. I have jandal tan marks and it’s only november.

Anyway, jobs included the neverending weeding, but really it’s not too bad because of all the mulch. Also some of the wilflowers had tried to take over many of the paths so it was just a matter of taking back a little control. These are all self seeded flowers and so we shall be enjoying them (and fighting with them at times) every year.

We also checked the stakes were secure and ties not getting too tight and fed citrus fertiliser to the citrus trees. Plus dead headed the dafodils. We left the leaves to wilt so they can take in more energy for the bulbs next year. At least we did that after the girls told me not to chop the whole lot of greenery off and why. See there’s a common assumption that I am an expert at gardening and it’s really not the case, I certainly know more now than 3 years ago but much of it is new and learning on the job and being really keen to not kill everything whilst you are all watching.

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Spring Update (since spring has nearly sprung off already)

Woah, what happened to the last few months?!! I haven’t posted since the end of August! Well actually, what happened was training for the Auckland half marathon took all my time but now it’s done and I am back in the garden and back to blogging and I have seen the orchard is looking mighty fine considering my recent neglect.

So what’s been going on over Springtime? Well I may have enthused in a previous post about all the beautiful dafodills and bluebells coming up and they really put on a great show for the end of winter. I had been expecting them all to come out together but being new to bulbs, I didn’t realise dafodils were first and then as they were finishing all the bluebells came out. So it means we get a longer show while waiting for everything else to wake up and put on some green. I waited for ages and checked all the time for the first flowers to come up and then while I was out running I stopped looking and the next time i went to the orchard we had a riot of poppies and calendula just as the other flowers were finishing up. At the moment it looks amazing and we have loads of birds, bees and butterflies in the mix aswell.

Now to the fruiting stuff – well firstly I pruned the grape vines carefully in august and did what the books said, not realising you are supposed to prune them in early winter, not late winter, because their sap is beginning to rise again and this, apparently, can kill your vines. Ho-hum, too late to do anything except watch what happens next. So I was delighted and relieved to see the vines spring back to life this season, when they just looked like so much dead wood. Once they start growing it’s amazing how fast they go and now we even have several tiny little  bunches of grapes beginning. Does anyone else get excited about that? No? Just me? Well I am. Do go and have a look.

The passionfruit vines are typically climbing everywhere and have lots of lovely flowers all over them.

All 8 apple and pear trees are looking good and have lots of leaves and flowers. Again I did some brutal looking pruning on these guinea pig trees over winter, but I did go on a pruning course so I did kind of know what I was doing and I did practice on my home trees first. The plan is to keep all these trees with easy to reach fruit so keeping control of their height and growth direction is important. Most are dwarf anyway, but it’s always good to know which bits to chop to keep your tree healthy and with good airflow through the branches.

Bananas are growing fast with lots of new pups all around the base of one of them which will need moving before too long. They are heavy feeders so better not to have too many in one spot. And if it means we can have a little banana grove somewhere else then so much the better. Actually the poor orphan banana seems to have given up so I may put the pups over in his corner.

Tamarillo – after growing some beautiful coloured fruit, dropped all their leaves and looked sad. They had some kind of fungus which I didn’t manage to get rid of so I have cut them right back and we will see if they regrow.

Avocado trees have looked great all winter considering they don’t like to be too wet and, well, this is Auckland. However, one looked a bit yellow the other day so I have treated it for phytothera, which is a common root problem for avocado trees and also for lack of magnesium, which also gives yellow leaves. So now we wait and watch. Which is half the work of gardening really.

Feijoas are looking healthy and are flowering again already, beautiful spikey red flowers. Thank you feijoas for not giving me any more jobs.

Citrus trees, of which we have 8 I think, are mostly looking healthy except for the 3 in wine barrels up by the vege garden which are mandarin trees. I have emailed Incredible Edibles about them and they said not to worry, first year in the ground they just need to sit and get their roots strong and do nothing much else. I have pulled off all the flowers and fruit so they put their energy into roots although I find this ridiculously hard to do, so you will see I have only done this on the trees that look a bit dubious. Really I need to harden up and do this to all the citrus this year.

Chilean guava hedge, if anyone is still reading, also is thriving. It has had one haircut and is ready for another. Anyone who wants a cutting please feel free because soon there will be lots. I put one in water for a few days, then into potting mix and now it is a little plant all on it’s own. Marvellous. And Free.

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Re-homing some orphans

Last week we were given 2 more trees by Judith from the Mount Eden Village People, a banana and a mandarin. You may have seen the banana tree down by the back gate to the swimming pool and you may not have seen the mandarin tree at all but noticed a kind of new stick in the ground just by the orchard. This poor fellow is the new mandarin tree – he was on public land in Mount Eden and has been vandalised so needed a safer new home which we were happy to provide. The trunk is still very sturdy and he has a good root system so with plenty of compost and tlc he will probably survive. I have no photos yet but will try and get some in the week.

Plenty of daffodils are showing their faces down in the orchard but no bluebells as yet. It’s lovely to walk down there each week and see more and more opening up. I have also noticed an increase in the bird life over the last few weeks; rosella’s, tuis and finches have been visiting for a while but for the first time last week Lloyd and I saw 2 kingfishers and then on friday I was surprised to see 2 ducks down there. Hope they ate a lot of snails while they were visiting.

Finally, a big Thank You to Ben Goodwin, a friend of Karen Jane’s who donated that great big pile of mulch to us a couple of weeks ago. Ben contracts to Kaurimu Garden Management which is owned by Mark Baddeley, so thanks to all involved for getting that to us. Mulching saves us so much time and energy with watering and weeding that it’s importance to our garden cannot be overestimated.

This post has also just reminded me to say that another great part of being involved with the gardens at school is the community connections we are making. It is a collaborative effort and once people get to know what we are doing many are keen to help in one way or another, which is a nice and positive antidote to all the constant bad news and sad news we find in our media every day.

Looking forward to the first day of Spring on Wednesday and daylight saving in 4 weeks time!

See photos as a slideshow

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Three new trees

Yesterday I collected our free fruit trees from the Mount Eden Village People. One meyer lemon, one satsuma mandarin and one feijoa whose name escapes me currently.  Thanks again to Judith who has organised this for us. I’m soooo glad we pre-dug the planting holes last week, with compost and mulch ready, because the weather was not great and to get the trees in the ground took probably less than an hour. I met our new caretaker Lloyd for the first time, he just started at Edendale and was a fantastic help getting the trees in and the stakes. The ground was a bit rocky in places so putting the stakes in was the longest job.

The trees are a bit exposed and small at the moment so we will get a protective barrier around them, hopefully this weekend. This should give them a fighting chance against kids, basketballs and the elements. Although for their first night in the ground they would have had a bit of a bashing already after last nights storm.

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Down came the rain

What a great turn out for the working bee last saturday considering the weather was pretty yuck. Thanks to all you amazing ladies (and Hamish, but he kind of has no choice really) for getting into the rain and mud and making it an enjoyable afternoon digging and weeding. If you weren’t enjoying it you were doing a top impression.

We were digging three holes up by the vege garden ready for our donated trees from Mount Eden Village People so I’d like to say a big thank you to those guys also for the trees. Check out their website and you’ll see they are doing some great community work up there. I’d love to see something similar in Sandringham, but one thing at a time I guess.

We also did some pruning of grape vines and passion fruit vines and did a general clear up and re-mulch. It’s looking very tidy now and all ready for Spring. I am going to a fruit tree pruning workshop this weekend, held by the Mt Eden Village People as it happens, so I will soon have a better idea of what I’m supposed to do in that area. It is important to know that some trees produce their fruit on new growth and some on wood that is 2 years old etc etc, so pruning incorrectly can really mess up your fruit harvest. I have read plenty, but will be good to ask questions and get answers from the experts.

Ok folks, latest photos, taken Saturday afternoon of August 7th 2010

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Not long til Spring

Wow I can’t believe it’s the first of August today, only one month until Spring and I did not manage one post in July. So a few things to catch up on.

Up in the vege garden Brian Coleman has organised the upright posts so they are strong enough to support  melons, pumpkins and cucumbers growing up them. We will also soon have three new fruit trees around that area as on August 14th I will collect the trees donated by Mount Eden Village People. They are giving us a lemon, a mandarin and a feijoa and after walking around school with Rosemary and Kusam looking for the best site, we decided there was plenty of space there and already enough trees in the orchard. So if you see folk digging holes in the grass next week, that will be why. These will all grow to full size trees rather than dwarf stock.

Down in the orchard we have had our first daffodils opening – someone removed the head from the first one, but with so many to follow I guess it doesn’t matter too much. Lots of the trees are leafless and dormant at the moment so the daffodils bring a welcome bit of colour to the area.

We were the lucky recipients of a great big pile of lovely mulch last week. A friend of Karen Jane’s brought it down for us – I must get his name so I can say thank you properly! It’s fantastic to have more mulch for free. Last year when I got quotes it was more than $850 to cover the whole area, so was way out of our budget. Now we don’t have to worry about where to get it and it will save a whole lot of weeding work and watering over summer.

Last week I drove up to Koanga gardens (recently renamed Kaiwaka Organics) to collect the pear tree we ordered in February and today Hamish and I went to plant it with the kids, accompanied by our neighbours Sam and Kat who’s kids will soon be at Edendale. We had dug the planting hole and filled it with compost last year so we had an easy job today. Plus it already has spring bulbs appearing around the edges intermingled with lavender and nasturtiums so it should feel at home very quickly.

So we now have a dwarf, heritage Seckle pear tree – here’s what the blurb says about it:

“Seckle is the pollinator of all other pears that need pollinators- excellent small sweet fruit – the old “honey” pear of Bohemia. Ripe end of Feb through March. Self-fertile so does not need a pollinator. If you’ve only got room for 1 pear tree this is it! The bees love it too.”

The main jobs in the orchard now are just a bit of weeding and clearing the paths a bit (nasturtiums are trying to take over). Also I need to learn a bit about pruning grape vines. We have three vines and now they have lost all their leaves they need to be cut back to their main branches, so that will be my reading for today :-)

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One year on (almost)

June 10th and in one month our fruit trees will have been in the ground for exactly one year, although the planning was begun almost two years ago. At times it seems like slow progress with gardening but I think when you step back now and look at all those healthy little trees we can see what a collectively great job we have all done and it is easy to imagine this little beautiful corner of Edendale thriving for years to come and providing  our kids with fruit and not least, the knowledge of where it comes from and how to grow it.

This morning I took a walk around school with my camera to take a few pictures of all the food producing plants we have put in the ground over the last year. Our most recent arrivals are three mandarin trees from Incredible Edibles which we have planted in half wine barrels around the vege garden beds. We have Neal Catty to thank for the wine barrels which he got very cheaply from his employers at Matua Valley Winery out in Waimaukau. Incredible Edibles as usual gave us great prices on the trees. They are called Mandarin Bay Sweetie and they are an easy peel mandarin/tangerine cross. They will grow to 2-3 metres high.

We also planted 8 blueberry bushes out in the big garden bed in the front courtyard. They must be liking it there because even though it is not time for them to fruit, 2 of them are trying to do so anyway. Either that or they’re so stressed they’re trying to reproduce. We shall see.

Our brassicas have been thriving over the last few weeks and I saw some kids skipping home with brocolli and cauliflower yesterday which is great.

People have been asking what the tall posts around the garden beds are for – I think the plan is to create climbing areas for crops such as beans and peas, and also next summer we will try to grow melons, cucumbers and pumkins, which is why they need to be more sturdy than just a few bamboo canes. (correct me if I am wrong Rosemary and Brian??)

Down in the orchard it’s a bit chilly in the mornings at the moment but this has helped our first mandarin to ripen! Did you know that citrus fruit need the chill to develop their beautiful bright colours? And so we have a grand total of one mandarin to share out between us, but since it can be 2-4 years before these trees produce I am happy to get one just as a taste of what is to come.

Finally, I noticed that our blog has been linked to and written about by Very Edible Gardens in Australia. This company was established by our first permaculture guru Dan Palmer, who helped us design our orchard and vege gardens and he has been kind enough to mention us on his website and call our gardens Spectacular!! So I just had to mention that.

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A Tidy up working bee

May 16th we had a working bee of just a few of our regulars, for a bit of a tidy up. With all our previous hard work of sheet mulching the weeds don’t get much of a look in so really it’s a matter of picking up any rubbish that has blown in, making sure the trees are secure on their stakes and are not outgrowing their ties and clearing away any old wildflower debris. Lots of these have reseeded themselves, it’s great to see the calendula and nasturtiums thriving and multiplying so well and the tansy is trying hard to take over.

These companion plants are there to attract beneficial insects to protect our fruit trees from the destructive insects that may want to chomp on our trees for themselves. Nasturtiums are great sacrificial plants – we like to see the insects enjoying them and keeping away from our fruit trees. They are also edible, both flower and leaf and their red and yellow colours are keeping the orchard bright even as we head towards winter solstice on June 21st.

 This affects our orchard because it is the time it gets the least sunshine. Our permaculture guys Dan and Finn who helped with planning our orchard, had us put mainly deciduous trees in the shadiest spots because they are dormant in winter anyway. However, having said that Finn did place a banana in the shadiest corner of all and though it is not as big as its friend in the opposite corner, it is doing remarkably well. The site is very sheltered and by a warm stone wall which helps all the trees and protects them from the wind. Anyway, enough rambling for this post, time for some photos of late Autumn in the Edendale Orchard.

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Daffodils and Bluebells

So Saturday afternoon, April 17th, a few of us gathered in the orchard to plant 500 daffodil bulbs and 150 blubell bulbs ordered from http://www.gardenpost.co.nz/ , who gave us a fantastic discount. Our thanks to Liz Brunsden who helped us with this order. To help make this task a bit quicker we also had 5 bulb planters, they are the green things you can see in the photos and thank goodness for them, made the task much quicker than it otherwise would have been.

I had not been to the orchard for the whole school holidays and it’s not often I leave it for that long, and it was wonderful to walk in and see ripe feijoas, plus tamarillos and passionfruit growing. It’s still early days but it’s great to see a taste of what is to come over the years as the trees get more established. Hope you enjoy the photos….

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