Olcovar Gardens Blog


major hiccup
April 21, 2009, 3:37 pm
Filed under: general information | Tags:

Unfortunately some residents in Olcovar are opposed to use of communal grounds for a raised bed scheme.

They are writing to the directors of the management company and are seeking legal advice.

At this stage, one can only assume that the community garden project will not go ahead.



Get Ireland Growing now live
April 21, 2009, 9:51 am
Filed under: resources | Tags:

The Get Ireland Growing website is now live. It is full of information about allotments and community gardens.



cost of timber
April 9, 2009, 1:44 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags:

Recently, I priced rough sawn timber, which is suitable for use in building raised beds. When building raised beds, it is often preferable to use un-treated timber as this will not leech chemicals into the soil used to grow vegetables. Timber lengths cost approximately fifteen euro for 4870mm length that is 225mm mide and 22mm thick. Thicker lengths of timber cost more. A 48700mm piece of timber will allow you to build a raisd bed that is 1200mm by 1200mm wide, giving 1.44 square meters of growing space. This bed would be 225mm high.
A four meter by two meter bed would require three lengths of timber, or 45 euro.

Other costs for building raised beds are fairly minimal, screws/bolts to secure the timber lengths together.

Topsoil and manure are often free if you collect it yourself.



Irish Times gardening article series
April 9, 2009, 1:33 pm
Filed under: media | Tags: ,

New gardeners need to dig up the basics first

In a new series on growing your own, garden designer Fionnuala Fallon on how urban farmers can get the basics of where, when and how to begin

WHEN MY husband and I first bought our very old and very ramshackle, country farmhouse on almost five acres, it was the garden that we immediately fell in love with.

Not that you could call the wild meadow, which sloped gently down to the nearby river, a proper garden, but it did hold out the firm promise of one.

As a garden designer, I began to daydream of blowsy herbaceous borders, formal avenues of pleached lime trees and delicate wildflower meadows. More than anything else, though, I lusted after my own beautiful and productive fruit and vegetable garden, crammed full of fresh, seasonal produce and native fruit trees. Four years later, as the inch-by-inch, often DIY renovations limp to a close, I’m finally putting pen to tracing paper and sketching out the rough design. I can’t wait to get going, and I’m delighted to discover that I’ll be in good company as more and more people discover the pleasures of producing their own food.

But what’s particularly interesting about the recent surge of interest in growing your own (GYO) is that it’s not just amongst country dwellers with large gardens. As sales of vegetable seeds soar, waiting lists for allotments lengthen and productive school and community gardens pop up all over towns and cities, a new species of gardener, fondly nicknamed the “urban farmer”, has begun to appear.

They’re young-ish, enthusiastic and as likely to grow their own in a window box, tiny balcony or community garden as in the more traditional back garden veg plot. They’ve already decided that the best kind of garden is the edible kind – their only stumbling block is a certain lack of know-how.

It’s the very basics of where, when and how to begin GYO that’s sometimes causing difficulties. As Bruce Darrell, founder of the Dublin Food Group, said: “The primary limitation for most people is not space. It’s the lack of knowledge about how to grow food that is our biggest issue.”

My own conversations with friends and relatives, many of them recent converts to GYO, confirmed this. “It’s the practical things I want answers to,” says a friend and recent GYO convert. “Like where to source organic seeds, well-rotted manure, decent top soil and railway sleepers to make raised beds.”

“What exactly,” asked another friend, “is potato chitting?”

“What I’d really love,” said another, “is a hands-on, weekly guide to GYO, that’s particular to the Irish climate.”

Great idea, I thought, and decided that a visit to the OPW’s newly restored, Victorian walled fruit and vegetable garden in the Phoenix Park was just what was required. Along with interesting, economical and labour-saving design ideas, I was on the hunt for more practical information on the nuts and bolts of GYO food.

Opened in 2007, the organic walled garden at Ashtown Demesne is maintained by OPW gardener, Declan Donohoe, and his two young protégés, Brian Quinn and Meeda Downey. All three are graduates of the National Botanic Gardens in Glasnevin, so when it comes to the practical, nitty-gritty business of gardening, they know their stuff. Over the last four years, they’ve helped to transform a former wasteland, knee-high with weeds, into the truly beautiful and productive garden that it is today. If anybody knows the answers to the who, what, where, when and how of beginning to GYO in Ireland, they do.

Over the next three months, this column will be following weekly events in the garden at Ashtown and featuring plenty of useful advice gleaned from the gardeners, as well as a weekly “to do” list. By the end of it, you should be well on your way to growing your own fresh, delicious food and, hopefully, you’ll also see a big difference in your food bills.

Even if you haven’t used a rake since you were a teenager earning some pocket money, you’re also likely to discover that GYO can be fun, creative and curiously addictive, as well as highly competitive.

Just ask the gardeners in Ashtown: according to Declan Donohoe, his fellow gardener Brian Quinn has become so caught up with beating the world record for the biggest pumpkin that it’s becoming something of an obsession.

“It’s just getting ridiculous,” says Donohoe, rolling his eyes to heaven with a grin.

“It’s all he wants to talk about these days. We’ve had to start asking him to change the subject.”

When?

Now is the time to get started as the growing season has definitely arrived. Prepare the ground/ clean out plant pots and get ready to GYO. You’ll need a decent garden fork, a spade, a hoe and a rake (unless you’re gardening only in containers).

A hand trowel and a decent watering-can/garden hose are also fairly essential, as is a good wheelbarrow for those with largish gardens.

Follow the weekly “to do” list from next week, which will give details of which vegetables can be sown/planted out each week.

Where?

Vegetables and fruit trees/bushes like a rich, fertile, well-drained soil in full sun (consider pots, containers and window-boxes if you’re an apartment dweller with limited space). If you don’t have your own garden, think about renting an allotment or joining a community garden. Check out the Dublin Food Growing Group at http://dublinfoodgrowing.org as well as the Cork Food Web at http://corkfoodweb.ning.com and the Waterford Food Producers’ Network at www.michaelkelly.ie for more details.

Alternatively, perhaps a friend or relative with a large, little-used garden might be happy to lend you a corner of it in return for some of your produce.

Start small: a well-tended raised bed will produce far more than a badly maintained half-acre.

Why?

There are so many reasons. For better flavour and greater variety; for the fact that you’ll be eating truly fresh food that is always in season; for peace of mind as regards hidden pesticides or chemicals and wasteful food miles; to save lots of money; but most of all for the satisfaction and pleasure it will bring you.

How?

Get the basics right and you’ll be pleasantly surprised by how easy it is. Always start with the soil: experienced gardeners enthuse about great soil because they know from bitter experience what a huge difference it makes in terms of maintenance and the end result, the produce. If you’re starting from scratch on a green site, you need to clear the ground of all weeds, then dig and manure it.

In Ashtown, Declan took a long-term practical approach, and after levelling and marking out the site, he sprayed emerging weeds several times over a couple of months with RoundUp, a non-residual weedkiller that breaks down on contact with the soil.

His reasoning is that it’s much easier to subsequently use organic-only methods if you start off with a completely weed-free site (others prefer to kill weeds by covering the ground with heavy-gauge black polythene, an approach that takes six to 12 months to be effective).

Once Declan was sure that the ground was clear, his team then edged the beds with pressure-treated timber and brought in tonnes of well-rotted manure, which was dug in well. If you have limited space or very poor soil, think about building a raised bed using railway sleepers as retaining edges.

Fill it with top soil and manure, making sure to gently tread down the soil as you go, to avoid subsidence.

In next week’s Property supplement Urban Farmer will cover planting your first asparagus

Fionnuala Fallon is a garden designer and writer



a book to whet the appetite
March 31, 2009, 7:15 pm
Filed under: books | Tags:

thriftygardener

The Thrify Gardener is a beautiful book.  Available from Amazon and other local book sellers (Hughes and Hughes in Dun Laoghaire have it).



March 30, 2009, 1:16 pm
Filed under: small beginnings | Tags: ,

The Resident’s Committee are seeking to ascertain the level of interest in establishing community gardens on the common areas of Olcovar.
Presently, there are great land banks behind the own door apartments which are underutilised and could be used to grow vegetables and herbs.
In order to establish the level of interest in the development, we would like you to register your interest, leave a comment, email the residents committee or drop a note in the residents committee letter box.  When a level of interest has been established, we will be able to move forward with this project and ask the management company directors for their permission to establish the beds, as they will have the final say over use of the common land.

Please be aware, that if you would like to participate in the scheme and would like to have some space to grow vegetables, you will be expected to contribute to the costs of building the raised beds, acquiring topsoil to fill them with and also with contributing a small stipend for use of the allotment annually. It is not envisaged that these beds will be paid for through management fees.

Raised beds are typically timber frames of approximately 60 centimeters high, filled with topsoil and manure/fertiliser. The raised beds will have to be constructed by interested residents and maintained by the registered raised bed users. It is envisaged that a Gardening subcommittee would be formed. That subcommittee will be chaired by a member of the residents committee. It will also have a secretary for keeping minute meetings and a treasurer for handling the cost of running the raised bed scheme.

This project offers the residents of Olcovar a great opportunity to come together to grow produce and share information and experience. It is also a good opportunity to get to know your neighbours and establish a better community spirit for everyone living in Olcovar.



Establishment
March 30, 2009, 1:11 pm
Filed under: small beginnings | Tags:

Hello,

This blog is a resource for the Olcovar Residents Community Gardens Project.

Please check back regularly for news and information regarding how the project is progressing.

Currently, we are at the stage where we are trying to establish interest and will be hoping to

~ get permission to build our beds,

~ establish a committee,

~ get busy building and

~ get busy planting!

If you are interested in the project and would like a raised bed of your own, please register your interest by leaving a comment.




Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.