Friday 26 February 2010

Whole Carob Pods, wild, 300g £4.95

It seems one could do better than the co-op when it comes to selling carob beans. I came across this link when, after writing the last entry, I thought I should actually learn a bit more about this crop as there are a good half dozen carob trees on our land. Having tried eating them though, I suspect that they will be slow to catch on as a snack food. In Mallorca the only references I've heard to humans eating them were in the context of famine.



The start of a veg patch - sheet mulch

A two week visit in February, and made the first steps towards establishing the veg patch. I've chosen the widest terrace and using the space between a large olive and carob tree, there is room for about 50 square metres of beds plus, at a later stage, about 10 linear metres for asparagus. Plans are for an "Indian garden", as in native American, further along past the big carob, rotating pumpkin, corn and beans. This would add a further 20 square meters or so.

There was also a smaller carob right in the middle of my chosen area. Feeling bad about it, but without seeing much alternative, I cut it down. There are some much bigger and finer examples on the land of this handsome but, I suspect for my purposes, rather useless tree. I once gathered half a dozen sacks of carob to take to the co-operative (it's used as pig fodder), and got enough pesetas for a small round of drinks. If anyone has any ideas what can be done with carob, other than making compost, mulch or not-chocolate, I'd be interested to hear.

I set out to prepare two thirds of the bed area, the bit I'm hoping to grow something on in September. I had thought of working it over with a fork and sowing green manure, but given the wiry tangle of grass and wild asparagus covering the ground, decided that sheet mulching was a better idea. A lot of work but hopefully fulfills 4 functions: getting rid of the perennial weeds, adding some organic matter, increasing the earthworm population and, given the amount of pine needles involved, nudging the soil pH downwards. In theory. We'll see in 6 month's time how well it has worked.

Anyway, once done with the obstacle in the middle and various stumps of ancient lemon trees from the times the land was irrigated for citrus, the real work started. Given the amount of schlepping involved, I decided to only do the beds, covering the paths with cardboard and some grass to make it look less ugly. Having tracked down a source of free horse manure - moltes gràcies Joaquín - I got 2 loads, in polythene bags in the back of the hire-car, in all about 250kg. I have read that around 2,5kg to the square meter is enough, but that seems to be spreading it very thin. Only doing 2/3 of the veg patch, I ended up using more like 7kg to the square meter.

Next the weed barrier. Getting what I could reach from recycling bins in the way of newspaper and cardboard, plus lots more cardboard from the back of the Eroski supermarket, I used about 4 sheets of newspaper to cover the beds and cardboard for the paths, plus the third of the patch which I didn't get to do this time (will be interesting to see if the covering alone gets rid of the grass).

The greatest bulk in the process is the mulch to cover the weed barrier. I used mainly pine needles, which form quite a mat under pines, the stuff underneath alredy quite well composted. I've heard some dismissive remarks made about pine compost, but it's there and should do a little towards lowering the pH. I also used a bit of encina (holm-oak) leaf mold, which is generally regarded as superior, bit only what I could get from the concrete driveway under some small encinas, so the bulk of it was pine. Having read that you need about a 15cm layer (Mollison, in Introduction to Permaculture), I got as much as I could, but in the end I think it was more like 10cm once it settled down.


Having finished the job in 8 days, doing a few hours every afternoon, I admired the work and took this pic. The bit on the left is only covered with cardboard to try and get rid of the grass, the plan being to only start working it in a year's time. Might try some green manure on it in the autumn. Now we just have to hope for plenty of rain over the next few months to get it all going before the summer drought. Total cost of the job: EUR 2.40 for a roll of 10 large poly bags. True I did have to make a detour of about 200m in the car, x 2, to collect the horse manure, so that adds something to the environmental impact of the op, but a minor one compared to the car journeys it was tagged on to.

Thursday 4 February 2010

Alconasser: not edible yet


The focus of this blog is the attempt to use a 2000 square meter plot of neglected land at Alconasser, on the northwest coast of Mallorca, to produce vegetables, fruit and other edible things for a family of four. The land and the house on it have been my family's holiday place for about 35 years and there have been a couple of attempts to plant fruit trees. Fortunately they haven't succeeded, or now I'd be cursing them for being in quite the wrong places. In retrospect they never stood a chance as none of us really knew anything about getting trees established in a climate where there is virtually no rain at all in the summer. This time I hope to do a bit better as we will be living there and therefore be around to do the watering.

Water is problem number one. It rains plenty, but as mentioned, not a drop in the summer. We do not have water rights but do have metered water and a 5 cubic meter tank. We have to go very easy on it in the summer due to the Mediterranean water curse: on top of no rain when plants need water to grow, the population swells with people wanting to fill swimming pools, flush loos, have long showers etc. So often there's just not enough to go round. At some stage I hope to build a tank big enough to store rainwater from the roof to see us through the summers, but in the meantime it'll probably be a few water butts and re-using grey water. And of course trying to use it in the most economical way using plastic bottle drip-feeds and lots of mulching.

Mulching introduces problem number two, the soil. It's not as bad as it could be because the land is mostly terraces and there is some soil, but it's stony, very compacted, probably very low in organic matter and nutrients, and like everything in Mallorca, calcareous. I tested one sample and it was about pH 7.3, so it could be worse in that respect, and there are plenty of pine needles around to help lower the pH. I've been reading up on sheet mulching and green manures, and hope to try a combination of these to get things started.

Problem number three is, oddly enough, lack of winter sun. The land faces WNW in terraces, and much of it is shadowed in winter by some big pine trees. In summer it gets plenty of hot sun, and bakes right through the afternoon until the sun sinks into the sea. With a little clearing I hope to get 3 hours sun on the veg patch in mid-winter and 6 hours from around the equinox. It's a lot less than my current veg patch gets, but then my current veg patch is in the Cevennes on the northern fringes of the south of France, in a frost hollow just below the ramparts of freezing central France. Last year I had reasonable winter veg, this year nearly everything, except leeks, green in snow, cavalo nero and a few bok choi was wiped out by -11C in mid-December. So Alconasser might be a bit shady in the winter but I am really excited about having a FROST - FREE VEG PATCH! No more messing about with floating mulches and other attempts to protect plants from frost. True there has been snow on the north coast of Mallorca, right down to the sea, but that was once in 35 years. The valley of Soller, 5km away, gets the odd touch of ground frost but its main crop is oranges so these are pretty light. Alconasser is out of the valley and above the coast, so I think near as never gets frost.