New Permaculture Blog!

Cmarion has left several really interesting comments here, and just started her own blog Gardening in the City.

Her plan is to create an urban food garden, based on permaculture principles, together with her partner, in their new house in Hartford CT.

They’ve started with layers of cardboard, newspapers and mulch, and made a really interesting post on her plans for remineralizing the land. I don’t know anything about remineralizing, so I’m really looking forward to reading about their experiences with it.

Botnet Shutdown

If you’re like me and have noticed a big drop in the number of spam posts on your blog in the last few days, this is probably why.

The FBI in the US estimates 1.3 million computers were infected with a virus and under the control of a New Zealand teenager.  These computers were apparently used among other things to spam blogs.

Mike on Planb posted about this recently.

The Oddities of Google

Google seems to be a popular blogging topic. Mostly because Google seems to be quite broken right now, but also there are always people around amused at the search terms people use to find their blog or other strange things about Google.

Robin of Bumblebee Blog had a good idea. She suggested her readers post some of the the search terms people use to find their blogs, then she would then make a post linking to them after December 5th, so we could all compare. Here’s my contribution. I’ve been meaning to post about this anyway.

Of course people find us for the ‘right’ reasons, by searching on topics relating to this blog, but I’m going to give some examples here of some unexpected things.

The first thing to realize is Google has really changed a lot over the last few years, and search terms people were finding us with before are not the same as now, with one exception. Before and now, the single most common term people use to find this blog is ‘weed burner’. I made a post about weed burners very early on, and I seem to have become the main Internet information resource for weed burners.

As a result of using the word ‘weed’ in a popular post, and posting a little later about cannabis, we also have no end of people who find us wanting information on this:

pics of weed

weed

cheap weed

I also made a post about my 325 year old wooden house foundation needing to be repaired, and a lot of people started finding us looking for information on foundations:

Why is my house sinking?

sinking house foundation

How do I know if my foundation is bad?

What does a bad foundation look like?

For a long time, people were finding us searching on information about carrots:

Can you grow carrots in a bottle?

What do carrots look like when they are underground?

What types of carrots are there?

history of carrots

pictures of carrots

how do I grow carrots

To be clear, I’ve never particularly posted much here about carrots.

For a while a number of people were finding us searching for missing bees and Colony Collapse Disorder. The popularity of the topic led me to write a number of followup articles afterwards.

A number of people have found us recently looking for pictures of different kinds of garlic. This was part of the reason for posting the pictures recently, because there aren’t many pictures of garlic on the Internet.

By far in a way the biggest ‘Google event’ happened when Steph made this post on Sierra Nevada Pale Ale.

For those of you not familiar with this beer, in recent years it’s probably become the most popular ‘alternative’ beer in the US, and it’s particularly popular among students. When Steph and I were students in Chico, California, where the brewery is located, we went on a tour of the brewery while it was still in a garage. A few days ago we bought our first bottle in Amsterdam! It still tastes the same after all these years. At 15 euros (about US$21) for six bottles it’s not going to become our daily beer again anytime soon, but it was still a nice treat.

Anyway, after Steph made this post people started ‘borrowing’ the picture by linking to it within blog posts, forums, myspace pages and so on. It’s all over the Internet now, and a search on Google images shows it’s now the most popular image above even those released by the brewery itself! The picture itself is probably the single largest source of Internet traffic for our domain, I think more than everything else combined.

Like I said, Google is broken now, but until recently it was including all of these links in our page rankings. I like to think I’m popular for other reasons, but surely this has had the greatest impact on our Google rankings!

Ewa in the Garden

There is a new organic gardening blog, Ewa in the Garden.  Ewa recently left a comment here, which prompted me to have a look at her blog.  Located near Warsaw, it makes her the first Gardening blog I recall coming across from Poland.

She’s built a great looking pond in her yard, something I’ve often thought about doing and don’t recall seeing anyone blog about before.

From her recent posts I see she is an excellent photographer, and likes the international aspects of blogging.

Organic Guide

Several weeks ago I was contacted by the people behind a new gardening/food blog and website called Organic Guide. The reason for contacting me was to ask me to consider adding them to my blogroll.

I must admit, I was a little apprehensive at first. While I am very much an organic gardener, I don’t often say this because I feel the term has been a bit hijacked recently by corporate interests. Regular readers of this blog will know I have said some unkind things in the past about ‘certified’ foods, including such things as organic or Fairtrade. How could I be against such good things as certified organic or Fairtrade foods? It’s not so much that I am against them, but rather they are only a very small start and many people use them as an excuse to ignore larger issues. I feel I can do a lot more good by making purchases as directly as possible from the people who produce the goods, locally where possible, and based on personal knowledge. I have always felt this was a better approach than buying certified mass market products.

Another thing fresh in my mind was some recent attempts by newspapers or magazines to create their own gardening blogs. Many of these have been at best uninteresting, and in some cases bordering on arrogant.

While I might have expected Organic Guide might turn into a blog run by mainstream journalists, full of banner ads for mass market organic products and articles promoting the health benefits of Omega-3 and oily fish — nothing could have been further from the truth!

In recent days they have published some really outstanding articles, some touching on things I’ve mentioned in the past:

Preserving the cultural value of food

Interview with Sandra Slack from Garden Organic

Public unaware that most milk, dairy and pork from GM

These last two are probably of more interest to Europeans. These are also just a few of the best articles, there’s lots of other good stuff there to read.

While the people behind the blog are professional journalists for sure, they are also bloggers and very much aware of the issues facing biodiversity, gardening and food production. Their definition of organic goes far beyond supermarket certified foods.

This is definitely a site worth paying attention to. They are also looking for input from their readers, as well as guest writers.