Saturday, January 30, 2010

A bit more about pruning olives...

Here's a few photos of olive pruning in process - this is a tree which probably hasn't been touched for 7 years or so and has gone very bushy...

... the dead stuff goes...

...and vertical shoots and stuff growing back into the centre goes...

... going for the goblet shape ...

... and a clean airy centre which will let in the sun and air.

Some of the trees end up pretty sparse but they seem to be very tough and respond well to the treatment:

And here's an old tree in a nearby town - I wonder just how old it is. It's obviously been pruned well back for many years - maybe several hundred?

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Portugal - Quinta Serrinha

I wish you could smell the air here! This is the olival at the top of Janet and Clive's quinta in the footlills of the Serra da Estrela. It's right on the edge of wilderness and is just one of the most peaceful places you could hope to find. The scent in the air changes everyday, a mixture of wild lavender, pines, eucalyptus etc etc. The trees here haven't been pruned for many years as you can see and it is a wonderful experience spending time with them, slowing down to tree-speed, cutting away the dead wood, clearing their centres to let in air and sunlight and choosing the best shoots to leave. The trees love the attention and its all in a very pleasant 15 degrees or so in January...

This is a very un-developed part of Portugal and all the better for it. You might hear a petrol engine a couple of times a day, mostly you hear the wind in the trees, or bird song. Rush hour is when a flock of sheep goes by with their bells clanking. Above, the farmhouse nestles in the hillside. In the distance you can just see Monsanto and again below more clearly with the benefit of telephoto in the gorgeous morning light.

It's all hugely restful and healing after all the emotional and physical upheaval of splitting up with Debi and it's lovely to be working outside in a t-shirt in the sun after such a cold, wet winter back in the UK. Much more soon!

Latest Steve Stuff - Permaculture Courses and Blog

Check out Steve Jones' latest Permaculture Design Course coming up 15th - 29th May 2010 and read about Permaculture etc on his excellent new blog - lots of thought provoking, fascinating inspiring stuff. As Steve says, "Trying to make sense of living in a crazy time", maybe the craziest time ever?

ON PEAK OIL, Steve: "Oil prices are creeping up again – bare in mind especially that the $85 per barrel mark seems to be where the US economy goes into melt down, I cant help but think that 2010 could well be the year we hit the big energy crunch. The mad wavering of the oil price is part of what is predicted in Peak Oil theory, considering how dependent we are on oil for everything, this is something that we should be really concerned about."

Too damned right we should be concerned about it but here we are en masse drifting along pretty much as before. Two separate psychic sources have predicted total collapse of the international financial system in February this year, my own intuition is its not far away...

Tombreck - another roof on

I looked in to catch up with Sue and Tober and friends at Tombreck who have been having a very cold but very beautiful winter up there - minus nineteen or thereabouts. Down South everything grinds to a halt at a mere minus one of course...

Willy and Wendy's straw bale house is on the left of the picture above, see more about that via the link in my previous post along with some excellent pictures of the winter scenery up there.

The South Byre roof which I worked on last year is now all slated and Ewan and Tober have a lot of the internal partitions up as well.

With the cold weather they have all been using lots of fuel up there, above is the log burning boiler which heats Sue and Tober's house - I know it well! It takes a whole barrow load of logs in one go, a couple of loads heats up the enormous hot water tank on the right of the picture. Sue said they got down to three days supply of logs at one point during the really cold weather - a bit scary.

Lammas - roof on Nigel and Cassie's roundhouse

I have been travelling around with a van load off stuff after moving out from Debi's. Thanks to all my friends who are looking after things for me - I dropped off stuff in Wales, England and Scotland, if I just had some stuff in Northern Ireland too I guess that would be the whole of the UK...

My yurt is now at Lammas - it was good to catch up with Nigel and see the progress on their roundhouse. Their roof is on and they have part of the wall up too.Above you can see how the straw bales locate on to the low stone wall I helped to build.

And here is Nigel himself looking unusually dry...

A COUPLE OF LINKS FOR YOU:
If you are interested in straw bale building/roundhouses, Willy and Wendy have kept a blog on the straw bale house they have built at Tombreck: click here and Espion has put up some great photos of the work on Simon and Jasmine's roundhouse at Lammas: click here