Garden Pictures

It seems like I don’t often post pictures from the garden, so here are a few. Here is the garlic with the straw:

Garlic and Straw

I planted nearly 80 different garlics, but not all of them seemed to have survived. I guess I have about 70 left.

In the background you can see the dike that keeps the garden dry. The garden is at about sea level, but the area would regularly flood if it weren’t for the dike. Because of this the ground is almost always at least a little wet, and usually the only time I have to water the garden is right after sowing seeds. For this reason, I have to pull back most of the straw in the spring from the garlic, or it will just stay too wet and rot. You can see some of this straw in the pile in the back.

Here’s a view from the dike:

Garden from Dike

The garden runs from the green structures, up to and along side the long brick barn. It’s not very clear from the picture, but the garden is surrounded by canals on three side; along the front where the black plastic is, the area in the middle of the picture that looks like dried grass and along the side where the two trees are.

You can see in the background most of the land in the area has been cleared for agriculture, to the left and right of the garden where it is grassy is owned by people who live in the area.

The land where my garden is used to be a very small dairy farm, but is now a vacation home.

I used to be able to use a house here regularly in the summer, but that’s not the case as much this year. This garden is also too far from my home in Amsterdam and I need to spend time on other things this year. I plan to scale down the garden and look for something closer to home, hopefully for next year.

Tulips and Amsterdam

The bollenjongen (flower bulb guys) recently visited here.  They have an online business, as well as a blog, including some great pictures of my neighborhood in Amsterdam, the Jordaan!  Of course a blog like this would not be complete without pictures of flowers and bulb fields, and you will find these too, all really nicely done.

They also have a friend in Amsterdam who runs the Tulip Museum, a place I had never heard of before even though it’s just down the street.  I plan to go and have a look soon, it looks interesting. It’s funny how it takes someone living on the other side of the Atlantic to tell you about something so close by.

New Blog!

It’s not often I get to announce a new blog that at least in part is mine! Together with Rebsie of Daughter of the Soil, we have created a new joint blog, Root Cause. Be sure to add it to your bookmarks and RSS feeds! Please visit now and have a look at our first post concerning Perennial Onions.

I don’t know about the future, but for now our emphasis is on things people do themselves. Many people have a blog they use to gather information, create a journal, have a platform in which to express their opinion, talk about products they like using or just to write about things they think are important. In the beginning at least, we are trying to offer something that is none of those things, but rather emphasizes things that people are doing themselves and want to talk about.

Rebsie and I are both gardeners, and plan to share with you what we are growing. In particular Rebsie is an amateur plant breeder, and will almost certainly be showing off some of her creations. I hope we can find people who are raising animals, farming, cooking, building things, working on self-sufficiency projects and anything else people do themselves. Of particular interest would be things of a heirloom or heritage nature, or things related to biodiversity.

Are you doing something that you would like to write about? Maybe you don’t want to go to the trouble of having your own blog, and would just like to write something one off? Maybe you have your own blog, but would like an excuse to post somewhere else as a way to promote it and interact with other bloggers? Whatever your reasons, if you would like to make a guest post on this new blog, please get in touch with us!

More on GM and Bees

The possible link between GM crops has been in the news more lately. An article in the German newspaper Der Spiegel revealed a recent study that showed an AIDS like syndrome in affected bees, and exposure to Bt caused a significantly faster progression of the disease.

Jouni Ylinen recently pointed me to a study that was done 2001-2004 which observed a similar problem, so it’s not like it’s been a secret this whole time. Note near the bottom of the page, where it says:

A chance infestation by parasites (microsporidia) resulted in more significant damage to the Bt-fed colonies. The underlying mechanism which causes this effect is unknown.

Bt works by damaging the gut on certain insects, and causing it to rupture. Until now Bt was thought to only attack very specific insects that are susceptible to it, and be non toxic to others. Apparently the toxicity of Bt may not be fully understood.

A seeming unrelated story has emerged in South Africa, on babies with HIV. Transmission of the disease is lower in breastfed babies, and the reason they think is because infant formulas irritate the gut, which more easily allows the virus to pass into the body.

Could these two unrelated news items actually be related?

Keep Gardening Free!

‘Free’ can mean several things, and all of them are important when it comes to gardening. In September I wrote a post comparing heirloom gardening with free software like Linux, and those of you who are involved in free software or intellectual rights reform will know exactly what I am talking about here.

There is increasingly an encroachment of unnecessary commercial products into gardening. All of us should consider using products that are really useful, but at the same time make sure we don’t lose free or cheap alternatives. We also shouldn’t waste our money on unnecessary products, just because they are marketed to us, because then only large companies will benefit.

For many of us heirloom plants are exciting because we know that with few exceptions they are better than commercial alternatives and are free (or at least cheaper). Most of us are also aware that heirloom plants are hard to come by, and many of them are endangered. For some reason a lot of people don’t fully make the connection that this is because large companies aggressively and successfully market alternatives.

Don’t give your money to the wrong people! Buying commercial alternatives endangers the availability of cheaper and often better products, and can have environmental and social consequences you don’t expect. Choose cheaper and/or local products from a local source, over expensive imported items. If you can, grow or make them yourself.

Your Plants Don’t Need Vitamins!

Companies that sell food make huge profits by breaking down what we eat into a series of components like vitamins, minerals, starches, sugars, carbohydrates and so on, or even just into food groups like fruit and vegetables, dairy, etc. By promoting these individual components (or expensive alternatives like artificial sweeteners) and encouraging us to eat more of the right ones, or more of their alternative products, they get us to buy and eat much more than we ordinarily would. What we are all now realizing is that the secret to health are in Michael Pollans 7 words: Eat Food. Not too Much. Mostly Plants. The similar term often used with plants is ‘feed the soil, not the plants’.

For 98% of gardeners, fertilizers are not an issue, they are simply unnecessary and a waste of money. Most people who use fertilizers do so because they are afraid of what will happen if they don’t, not because they really need them. The most common commercial fertilizers available to gardeners are waste products of industry, and they sell and promote them to make money, not because they are useful products. Fertilizers are an issue for commercial farmers because they grow more intensively, don’t normally practice crop rotation and the use of products like compost is not economically feasible. Gardeners are not farmers, and don’t need the products farmers use!

The only thing your garden needs is sensible crop rotation and homemade compost. Maybe you will need a little lime, with some plants and if your soil is very acid. For beginning gardeners you may need to purchase some compost to get started, but generally you don’t need very much. Together with a few tools, this is all you need!

Don’t get caught up in the ‘what if’ logic of vitamins! What if you are missing something, and you don’t know it? Maybe you will get sick if you don’t take a multi vitamin! We spend all summer in our garden, what if the ground is missing something and what if we end up wasting our time? Don’t fall for this.

Don’t Buy Expensive Potting Soil

Besides garden tools, potting soil is one thing most gardeners buy. Of course it’s always best to use your own compost, but it’s not suitable for starting seedlings because it contains too many micro-organisms and most people consider compost too dirty for indoor use. Most potting soil is based on peat, and there are some environmental issues with this, so it’s really best to avoid peat products if at all possible. At the same time, it’s important to put things into to perspective, and not use an expensive alternative without thinking about it.

Peat is naturally occurring, and grows in bogs. Peat lands cover about 3% of the world’s land mass, and about 7% of this has been commercially exploited. Unfortunately a part of this exploitation has taken place in environmentally sensitive areas, often in unsustainable ways. Why with so much to choose from do they need to take it in an environmentally destructive way? I suppose it comes down to profits. It seems like it is the same with many things these days. Finland is currently generating 2.6% of it’s energy by burning peat, and in the process releasing more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere than all of it’s cars combined. I don’t have reliable figures for peat consumption from the various sources, but consider that industrial use like this probably dwarfs consumption by home gardeners. In addition, consumption by gardeners is very small when compared to the world’s total peat reserves.

As gardeners, we should not allow expensive commercial products to replace a cheap natural resource like this in our gardens.

Being the one thing almost all gardeners buy every year, there is the potential for companies to make huge profits by marketing peat in different ways. For example marketing it as an environmentally unfriendly product, and encouraging you to buy alternatives. Probably the most common way is to sell you value added peat moss, in the form of mixed potting soil. By itself peat does not have enough nutrients to sustain plant growth, so nutrients need to be added. By adding a few cents worth of chemical fertilizer, companies can sell it at a much higher price as potting soil. Are you an organic gardener? You’re not if you use commercial potting soil or seed starting mixes!

One of the best and cheapest potting soils can be made by mixing peat moss with compost. As little as 25% compost is suitable for most plants, but of course more compost is better and 100% compost is the best. Again, this would not be suitable for young plants or starting seedlings, because of the micro-organisms in the compost.

Don’t expect making your own peat/compost potting soil to be easy. In my area, potting soil is such an important source of revenue that garden centers which stock peat moss at all, generally won’t sell it in the spring when it would be in competition with their potting soils. I always have to buy it out of season. Often when I am able to find it for sale, a clerk in the store comes running up to me warning me I am buying the wrong thing, and tells me I should by potting soil instead. Don’t be surprised if you have to fight for the right to buy it!

Botanical Gardens Are Not Your Friend

The Convention on Biological Diversity, implemented in 1993 and since then been the source of much criticism, dramatically changed the way public plant collections like botanical gardens and research institutions function.

Before this time public plant collections were funded to different degrees by local governments or through individual donations. The problem was many seed collections we underfunded, and vulnerable to failing governments and other financial difficulties. In addition, large seed companies like Monsanto and Syngenta depended on these seed collections as the source of the genetic material for commercial products they developed like their F1 hybrid or GM varieties, and were increasing finding it difficult to patent their varieties under these circumstances.

To very briefly summarize a very complex treaty, a compromise was worked out where large companies who had an interest in the genetic material would guarantee funding for these collections. What these companies got in return was the exclusive rights to use the genetic materials, and the right to patent them. Nearly every country is bound by this and related treaties, obliging them not to release and plant material to the public. This effectively means these collections have been turned into museums, and they only way we as people have the right to use the plants is if large seed companies decide to sell them to us.

So what does this really mean in practice? It means botanical gardens have become platforms for large companies to promote their products. By declaring themselves ‘peat free’, in order to save the environment, they really mean they are promoting peat alternatives for their own commercial commercial interests.

When you go to a public collection featuring edible plants, for example fruit trees, expect to be told wonderful stories of old varieties and biodiversity, be given delicious samples, then be herded into their store where they only sell commercial varieties. Because the old tasty varieties are fresh in your mind, and none of what they sell is clearly labeled, they expect you will probably buy their products without thinking.

If you want to grow the kinds of plants in public plant collections, you need to buy them from some place that specializes in old variety plants or get them from a fellow gardener or a seed exchange.

How do you know you are buying the right thing?

Buy local products from local sources, avoid brand named items and choose the cheapest alternatives. For many people buying the cheapest alternatives is counter-intuitive, because they feel they can get a higher quality more environmentally friendly product if they spend more money. This may be true with locally made products, but for commercial products the reality is that it almost always comes down to marketing, and if you spend more money you just give your money to the wrong people for the wrong reasons.

When you buy plants or seeds, buy them from a place that specializes in heirloom varieties. The reason for this is most places that sell commercial variety seeds and plants have signed an agreement with their suppliers not to distinguish between commercial and heirloom varieties. This means nothing will be clearly marked, and you won’t know what you are buying. The only way to get around this problem is by buying your plant materials from a company that doesn’t sell any commercial varieties. If you want Open Pollinated or heirloom varieties, don’t buy them unless they are clearly marked as such, or the company you are buying them from doesn’t sell anything else!