At 1:00 PM, we will start the field trip at Garden/Garden 1718
and 1724 Pearl Street in Santa Monica, across the street from the Main
Campus on the backside. (Bring quarters to feed the meter!) Rain cancels.
The gardens are
easy to find. Do plan
on shielding yourself from the sun and have plenty of fluids on hand to
stay hydrated.
Approximately at
3:30, we will leave Garden/Garden driving east bound on Pearl to 23rd
Street, turning right and staying on it as makes a curve near the Santa
Monica Airport and changes its name to Walgrove Avenue.
View Larger Map
Further south a
number of blocks, just past Venice Blvd the first gate on your left is
the entrance to The Learning Garden (what I call 'work'). Please find
parking on Walgrove Avenue and walk into the garden. We will be on
campus till about 5:00.
Hope to see you all there - this is a very informative field trip and then see you on Monday again!
david
Friday, April 24, 2015
Thursday, April 23, 2015
Rainwater Talk Friday April 24, and Demonstration Saturday April 25, Sierra Madre
This will be essentially the same talk I gave on Monday, but with an emphasis on Sierra Madre's water issues. If you missed Monday's class, this is the best way to make it up. You are welcome to come to the demo on Saturday, but we will have to do a quick turnaround to get to Garden Garden in Santa Monica.
Details at Native Sanctuary
Details at Native Sanctuary
Monday, April 20, 2015
Link Goodness: Water etc.
Recent water links:
-
Almonds in California: They use up a lot of water, but they deserve a place in California’s future.
California's wealthy lagging in water conservation - LA Times
-
California Urban Water Use Restricted While Regulators Give Oil Industry Two More Years To Operate Injection Wells In Protected Groundwater Aquifers | naked capitalism
-
Climate change and the growing risk of “megadroughts” in California and the southwestern United States
-
Dew collecting greenhouse to fight water and food scarcity in Ethiopia : TreeHugger
-
Half of urban California’s water is used to water the grass - MarketWatch
How you might be contributing to California’s water woes - The Washington Post
-
In California, a Wet Era May Be Ending - NYTimes.com
-
Nestlé has been pumping water from a national forest with an expired permit for over 25 years
-
Nestlé’s despicable water-crisis profiteering: How it’s making a killing — while California is dying of thirst - Salon.com
-
This roadkill map says a lot about California’s drought | Grist
Compost and other links:
-
42 Flowers You Can Eat : TreeHugger
-
Beyond Compost: 5 Ways to Get Your Soil Ready This Spring by Peter D'Auria and Miles Schneiderman — YES! Magazine
-
Compost tea calculator includes recipes and guides for brewing your own fertilizers : TreeHugger
-
Compost Tea Recipe
-
From Watersheds to Mountains, What If We Based Our Borders on Nature? by Rachael Stoeve — YES! Magazine
-
How to Grow Oyster Mushrooms at Home (and Get Plenty of Flavor and Protein for Free) by YES! editors — YES! Magazine
-
Plant this with that: The science and folklore of companion planting — Homestead — Bangor Daily News — BDN Maine
Labels:
compost,
drought,
Greener Gardens,
sustainable water,
water
Friday, April 3, 2015
Greener Gardens Reading List Weeks One and Two
Overview of Sustainability and Gardening:
Small Is Beautiful: Economics As If People Mattered, Schumacher, E. F., ©1973 Blond & Briggs. This classic inspired much of the current thinking in sustainability. Although it does not relate directly to gardening, it explains the basis of the idea of natural capital. E.F Schumacher Society website: http://www.smallisbeautiful.org. Their resource page is comprehensive.
The Natural Step Story, Robert, Karl-Henrik, © 2002 New SocietyPublishers. Not a gardening book, this book details how Robert obtained general agreement on ecological change in Sweden, as well as a statement of the four conditions of sustainability discussed in our first meeting.
Lazy-Bed Gardening: The Quick and Dirty Guide,
Jeavons, John and Cox, Carol, ©1992 Ten Speed Press. A more accessible
book than Jeavons’ “How to Grow More Vegetables: etc.” Written by
pioneers in the U.S. of Biodynamic French-Intensive gardening, it tells
how to create fertility on a closed-system basis, that is without
inputs, by growing both calorie crops for humans and carbon crops for
compost.
The Contrary Farmer, Logsdon, Gene, ©1995 Chelsea Green, and The Contrary Farmer’s Invitation to Gardening,
ibid. How to garden (and farm) with the least effort and inputs
possible, by someone who has been farming all his life, and fighting big
ag at the same time. All of his books are excellent. Gene has a blog at http://thecontraryfarmer.wordpress.com/.
Coming Home to Eat: The Pleasures and Politics of Local Foods,
Nabhan, Gary Paul, © 2002, W.W. Norton. One of the original books on
eating local which inspired many others, including Barbara Kingsolver's Animal Vegetable Miracle.
All of his books are worth reading.
Eat More Dirt: Diverting and Instructive Tips for Growing and Tending an Organic Garden, Sandbeck,
Ellen, © 2003 Broadway Books. This small book tells how to actually
accomplish the act of gardening, including how to use tools, how to move
big rocks, and why herbicide doesn’t work on concrete.
Square Foot Gardening and All New Square Foot Gardening, Bartholomew, Mel, © 1981 Rodale and © 2013 Cool Springs. Not an overview book, but specific instructions for small-space gardening.
Square Foot Gardening and All New Square Foot Gardening, Bartholomew, Mel, © 1981 Rodale and © 2013 Cool Springs. Not an overview book, but specific instructions for small-space gardening.
Sustainable Landscaping for Dummies, Dell, Owen, © 2009 For Dummies. Dell has been telling the truth about the impacts and inputs of gardening for a long time.
A Nation of Farmers: Defeating the Food Crisis on American Soil,
Astyk, Sharon and Newton, Aaron, © 2009, New Society Publishers.
Explores the world food crisis and why
big conventional ag can't solve it.
Braiding Sweetgrass, Kimmerer, Robin Wall, 2014 Milkweed Editions. Kimmerer, a Native American biologist, weaves together two ways of knowing the earth. Also, Kimmerer's article on Yes! Magazine, Nature Needs a new Pronoun.
big conventional ag can't solve it.
Braiding Sweetgrass, Kimmerer, Robin Wall, 2014 Milkweed Editions. Kimmerer, a Native American biologist, weaves together two ways of knowing the earth. Also, Kimmerer's article on Yes! Magazine, Nature Needs a new Pronoun.
Mother Earth News: The Original Guide to Living Wisely, Periodical, Ogden Publications.
Grist.org, Environmental news website. Mostly policy.
Treehugger.com Lighter environmental news, fun gadgets.
Yes! Magazine Stories of positive change.
Orion Magazine Deep thinking about nature and environmental issues.
Treehugger.com Lighter environmental news, fun gadgets.
Yes! Magazine Stories of positive change.
Orion Magazine Deep thinking about nature and environmental issues.
David's Background Bibliography for Sustainability
Deep Economy, The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future,
McKibben, Bill, ©2007 Times Books Want a dose of hope? Here.
McKibben has delved into a variety of alternative choices to find
examples of human civilizations that actually approach creating a viable
economy and lifestyle that considerably reduce man’s impact on the
world. Like most of the books following, this is not strictly a book on
sustainability, in the main, - however, this is one of the MOST hopeful
books that brings some of these issues to light. One thing rings
through out this book: community is key to many of the answers of the future.
Easy Green Living, Loux, Renée ©2008, Rodale Inc. Breeziness belying a difficult resource book that will help you shop through the sustainable hype. A compendium of little helpful hints (the Heloise of our time?) and deciphering clues of labels and claims. She covers everything from the bathroom to light bulbs and beyond, helping delineate what the labels mean with all those fifteen syllable words on them. However, this book like all the other books in this vein are limited by what we know today - the solution we learn tomorrow may well contradict the solution we applaud to day. Still, we have to start where we are now - we really can't start anywhere else!
Easy Green Living, Loux, Renée ©2008, Rodale Inc. Breeziness belying a difficult resource book that will help you shop through the sustainable hype. A compendium of little helpful hints (the Heloise of our time?) and deciphering clues of labels and claims. She covers everything from the bathroom to light bulbs and beyond, helping delineate what the labels mean with all those fifteen syllable words on them. However, this book like all the other books in this vein are limited by what we know today - the solution we learn tomorrow may well contradict the solution we applaud to day. Still, we have to start where we are now - we really can't start anywhere else!
Kitchen Literacy, Vileisis, Ann, ©2008 Island Press, Along the lines of the Pollan books, Vileisis brings us back to the knowledge every cook had in days before we let the ‘experts’ and the government tell us what to eat and why. Turns out it was better for us and for the earth. This book is the history of eating dinner in America. It also reflects on woman's role in society and the evolution of that role by virtue of how our lives have changed as regards to eating and effort of putting food on the table.
Out of the Earth: Civilization and the Life of the Soil, Hillel, Daniel,
© 1992,
University of California Press, There has been a recent spate of books
on soil in the past ten years. Preceding this glut by almost ten years,
Hillel wrote the best of the lot - all the others are second rate. Not
to say they don't have a story to tell, but Hillel's book is not only
science, but reads at times like poetry and his love of the subject is
steeped in a deep knowledge that encourages affection and respect.
There is no other book on soil that teaches so much about soil with a
deep spirituality and yet is science-based and science driven. I truly
love this book and it has been an inspiration for many years.
The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture, Berry
Wendell, ©1997, Sierra Club Books, Anything by Wendell Berry is worth
reading. Everything from Wendell Berry can be life-changing. Wendell
Berry, quirky and profound, looks at the world with a lens many of us
only aspire to. His writing is eloquent, his thinking eclectic. Of the
authors that have been instrumental in bringing me to where I am today,
Berry is the one whose ability to see a much larger picture is the most
constant and his range of vision deeper than anyone I can name at this
moment.
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle,
Kingsolver, Barbara et al © 2007 Harper Collins, When less is really
more. Kingsolver and her family agree to eat only foods produced within
100 miles of their West Virginia home (everyone was allowed one
exception and her husband chose coffee marking him as a sensible man)
for one year. The story of how they did it and the results they
achieved makes delightful reading and food for thought. One of the
easiest books to read on this list, not only is it inspirational and a
harbinger of hope, there are some passages that I recall as being some
of the funniest stuff I've read in a while. I still can be doubled over
by someone with a thick Italian accent saying, "the seeds, senora, are in the squash!"
The Live Earth Global Warming Survival Handbook, De Rothschild, David, ©2007, Rodale Inc. A lot of statistics that just overwhelm a person, but a viable list of Things To Do Today and beyond. Probably one of the more easily digested books of this contemporary genre. The most sustainable thing to do, however, is to get it from the library. (That holds true for all these books.)
The Live Earth Global Warming Survival Handbook, De Rothschild, David, ©2007, Rodale Inc. A lot of statistics that just overwhelm a person, but a viable list of Things To Do Today and beyond. Probably one of the more easily digested books of this contemporary genre. The most sustainable thing to do, however, is to get it from the library. (That holds true for all these books.)
The Lost Language of Plants, Buhner, Stephen Harrod, ©2002 Chelsea Green Publishing, Humans getting well should not get the earth sick. This is the ecological ‘why’ of alternative medicine, but be warned, you will never look as a fashionable layer of mascara the same way again either! Buhner's message is critical and crucial. This work shows that how we think about the earth and our relationship to it absolutely needs a comprehensive overhaul in ways most of us have yet to imagine. I think Buhner's writing is a little obtuse, but he is the only one out there with THIS message and it must be heard.
Reading List Week Two: Books About Sustainable Design Principles
Principles of Ecological Design, Ludwig, Art, ©1989 Oasis Design, oasisdesign.net. This short manual gives rules for ecological design that are both simple and profound. An excellent companion to his other books which deal with greywater and water storage.
Gaia’s Garden, Hemenway, Tony, © 2000 Chelsea Green. This is the most accessible book about Permaculture for gardeners, especially for the West Coast. Directly applicable.
Permaculture: Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability, Holmgren, David, © 2002, Holmgren Design Services. A more theoretical approach to sustainable design concepts.
Permaculture: A Designers' Manual, Mollison, Bill, © 1988 Tagari Publications. This comprehensive book is the textbook for the Permaculture Design class. A reference for those who have already been introduced to the principles, as well as a dual duty doorstop and blunt instrument :-). It is on this list for the sake of comprehensiveness, not because we expect you to read it. Mollison's out of print Permaculture One is much more accessible.
Design with Nature, McHarg, Ian, © 1982 John Wiley and Sons, Inc. This book is more a lanscape-level and regional-planning book, but has beautiful graphics and exposition about where to site projects. This book addresses the too-rarely asked question, “where is this project?” when designing.
The Power of Limits: Proportional Harmonies in Nature, Art and Architecture, Gyorgy Doczi, © 1981 Shambhala Publications, Inc. How the Fibonacci sequence and other aspects of the golden mean underlie proportions in nature, and how this has been used historically in good design.
Fukuoka Farming Bibliography
One Straw Revolution, An Introduction to Natural Farming, Fukuoka, Masanobu ©2009, a reissue of his 1978 classic, Fukuoka's first book on his extensive work in Japan.
Decidedly with a Japanese bent (his main crop is rice and barley), he
still presents a lovely description of his farming efforts that began as
a reaction to the Western idea of agriculture and more that began to
infiltrate Japanese society in the 1930's. His work continued until his
death in 2008 (at 95). His grain raising techniques became THE grain
raising techniques in permaculture.
The Natural Way of Farming: The Theory and Practice of Green Philosophy, Fukuoka, Masanobu © 1985 Also out of print. And expensive. ($61, used on Amazon) Can be downloaded as a PDF, I had success at this site, but I do not warranty it to be 100% safe from commercial interests.
The Road Back to Nature,
Fukuoka, Masanobu © 1988 Out of print, but you can find copies
reasonably priced on eBay, used copies are almost $70 from Amazon. From
the back cover: Fukuoka's reflections on his trips to Europe and to
America, his sense of shock at seeing the destruction wreaked in the
name of agriculture. A collection of his lectures, articles and essays
which outline his thinking on nature, God and man and his underlying
optimism that good sense can still prevail and we can still turn it all
around. This is a collection of articles, lectures and essays recording
his impressions as he travels the world talking about his revolutionary
'do-nothing' agricultural methods. There is a spiritual side to a lot of
his thoughts and an optimism that a change in lifestyles and farming
methods could yet heal the Earth's wounds.
Fundamental Realities,
an article by Hazelip, Emilia was found at the Fukuoka Farming Website –
but as of this writing that website is no longer in existence.
However, You Tube has several videos with Hazelip describing how she has
adapted Fukuoka's principles to a Western market garden.
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