September 10
The
big news is that we have a humanure
system in place (see The Humanure Handbook: a guide to composting human manure, by
Joseph Jenkins). Guy has become our in-house sanitation technician, building first a
privy that we used all of our first year here, and now developing the bucket-with-wood-shavings recipient and the composting bins that will receive the weekly
deposits. I must say that it’s all very neat and clean and I can’t imagine
anyone having a problem with it once they give it a try. It’s a long term
project because the final product, months of layering the humanure/sawdust mixture
with hay or straw, needs to compost for a year, so that we probably won’t begin
using this composted manure until sometime in 2015.
Guy collected the bamboo from the stream banks near our house. |
A thick layer of straw will line the bottom of the bin. |
The first bin will take several months to fill and then a year to compost. |
The first section of the horse shoe garden that we're preparing for vegetables. |
We’re
putting in our vegetable garden, following the Square Foot Gardening System
combined with tips from permaculture manuals and from gardening books for this
part of the world (similar in some ways to Florida). Our vegetables last year
never thrived the way we expected, after our successful gardening in Bethlehem,
and we’ve realized that in addition to the insects and the cows the soil itself
failed us. One important solution is to use indigenous edible plants that
thrive naturally in this climate and soil. But almost no one is doing this
because centuries of immigration has meant the introduction of all the typical
European, Middle Easter and Asian vegetables.
Greta at the wood stove. The gas stove is directly behind me. |
Back in April my my neighbor gave me her old six-burner stove when she acquired a newer one - well, today I tried out the oven for the first time. We still have a lot of squash left
over from April; I cook it up for lunch in a variety of combinations such as
sautéed with onion, garlic, green beans, tomato and turmeric, but I love baking
it in a Betty Crocker recipe for Zucchini Bread. The problem with my stove is
that one of the burners doesn’t turn off, so once the bottled gas is turned on
that burner has to stay in use. Can’t use the oven without using that burner.
Solution: cook up a tomato sauce and let it simmer for as long as the bread
takes to bake.
I only understood the secret of a good tomato sauce a few years ago,
long after my days at The Green Café. I read these words, “The secret of a good
tomato sauce is letting it simmer for at least an hour.” Olive oil, chopped
onions, ripe tomatoes, lots of minced garlic, a few dollops of tomato paste,
herb of choice (eg. basil or oregano) mix well, allow to begin sticking to the
pan before adding water, then simmer, simmer, simmer. Yum.
We're enjoying the wild pineapples that have proliferated on the farm over the years. The trick is to harvest a few before someone else does - they're very sweet now at the end of the dry season.
Abondanza! |
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