The Deep Living Project- Exploring Regenerative Living..
Identifying Edible Weeds
I had a chance to go for an edible weed foray with my friends..
It was early autumn here and quite dry but I still managed to find some of their favourite edible weeds including dandelion, purslane and sow thistle.
here why are weeds important to pay attention to and how to broaden your diet by including some super charged edible weeds jammed full of nutrients to keep you healthy!
This is a great place to start if you're new to edible weeds and a great way to learn to see your landscape as a foodscape.
look out for an incredible book called "The Weed Foragers Handbook" that you can find at eatthatweed.com
How To Grow Tulsi - Sacred Basil
Joel Orchard from Future Feeders tells about his Tulsi bushes growing around the market gardens. The tulsi plant is a perennial bush that is used for medicine, to make tea and for religious ceremonies in India.
Polycultures and Companion Planting - A Story of Three Sisters
The three sisters also known as the three wives is a companion planting technique developed and refined by a number of different native american tribes using corn, climbing beans and a squash variety. There is a synergy between the three crops in a handful of different ways. The corn provides a trellis for the climbing beans, the beans, being leguminous, fix nitrogen and the squash plants, with their rambling nature, smother out weeds.
Attracting Beneficial Insects to the Garden
my neighbouring gardener at the community gardens, shared some observations he made around his well established mugwort plant. Mugwort is no stranger to me,a friend of mine is a Chinese Medicine practitioner and uses mugwort extensively in her practice. What I didn’t know was that mugwort is a haven for beneficial insects,I notice a dozen or so different species of beneficial insects on and around a mugwort plant even when it wasn’t even in flower.
Propagation from Cuttings
a simple plant cutting technique to help get your herb garden growing on the cheap.
You'll need
• A sharp pair of secateurs or a knife
• Some free draining potting mix (low in nutrients)
• A well established Stock Plant to take cuttings from
• A sheltered spot out of direct sunlight to let your cuttings strike (form roots)
You can boil down taking herbaceous soft stem plant cuttings to 3 simple steps
1. Remove most of the leaves from your cutting leaving a few near the top
2. Cut the stem just below a plant node
3. Plant the cutting in moist free draining potting mix
That's about as simple as it gets. Meg goes into detail in the short video, talking about plant nodes, stem and root cells and the reason why it helps to remove most of the leaves from the cutting.
Some easy to strike herbs would include
• Mint (this one is easy peasy!)
• Pineapple sage (featured in the video)
• Vietnamese Mint
• Lemon Balm
Remember to keep your cuttings in a nice dappled shady spot and the potting mix damp while your cuttings form roots. After 2-4 weeks give the cuttings a gentle tug. If there's some resistance it's a pretty good sign that your cuttings have formed roots. But don't get too excited and pot them on just yet! Let them get established and really take hold for another week or so and then you can pot them on to their own individual pots.
Happy Growing!
Pasture Raised Chickens- Regenerative Agriculture on New Zealand
This Farm is truly a wonderful place to witness. The farm focuses on producing pastured poultry,with laying hens moved onto new pasture every few days. It is a great combination of high tech and old-world, using electric fencing to keep the animals on fresh grass. This style of animal management helps to keep the animals parasite free, eliminates the problems of over grazing and gives the pastures a good hit of natural fertility! The Farm is passionate about regenerative agriculture and was more than happy to show us his systems that he's worked out to keep the farm highly productive and chemical free.
How To: Worm Farm -Gardening and Soil Fertility
Here Urban Bounty shows us their approach to boost soil health and feed the soil. Worm farms are easy to maintain, produce an excellent soil improver, and can be set to run through the irrigation system for a more passive fertilising approach.
Brilliant!
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The world as you know it - all that you see, taste, feel and touch, comprises only about 5% of all of the stuff of the universe. The other 95% is what we have considered "nothing" or the "firmament" or dark matter or the heavens or mystic Other Worlds. This 95% is multi-dimensional and consists of potential realities that may be perceived.
A single thought...a mere whisper, ...... barely upon a breeze that catches a spark... all is tinder before the firestorm... and yet.
ONLY that whisper
ONLY that thought
the world is forever changed beyond the fears and dreams of cardboard men.
Freedom and change starts within:
It is encouraged by truth and courage of people who love
Built by the respect of true beings standing as one before each other.
Lets us cross every man made borders
without fear stare into eyes and hearts of all our brothers and sisters: within our words without shouting,or force to hold each to our truths; and let us without fear freely share what works...
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