Wednesday, January 12, 2022

Water useage I

Tanks are now effectively empty.  By 'effectively' I mean that the three IBC's were run dry and I have disconnected them in order to undertake some gluing and refinement of plumbing connections as a result of experience over the past nine months.  One of them has collected about 50l in from the western catchment of rear shed which was collected while disconnected.  The 2Kl tank still has about 300l of water in the bottom.  I would have wasted about 600-800l.  It is 49 Days since all tanks were full.  10mm rain in that time (would have only caught 30l on eastern catchment of shed due the light rains mainly being diverted by my first flush diversion system on that (pine needled) side).

Doing the numbers, that means I have effectively used 3900-4100 litres in 49 days of 22.12C Avg Temp (23 days over 30C, 9 days over 35C, 1 day over 40C). 

I have therefore pulled slightly more than 80l per day from my rear shed tank system.  I have in addition used water from the two 1Kl side tanks off the house, and about 1Kl of tap water (in one event, charging the vine/lime tree planting before xmas).

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Projects

Water - collection, storage, syphon distribution, watering cans, ollas and groundcovers, wind, soil

Soil - compost, clay, pottery, amendments, roots and life, mulch, seedlings, soilblocks, hydration

Propogation - cuttings, seeds and seedlings, treelings, divisions, Growbags

Structures, shadehouses, greenhouse, paths,

Plantings - trees, vines, lawn

Projects - 

    Underway - soil blocks, seedling trays, green house, shade house(s), grow bags.

    Ongoing - syphon system, compost collection, garden beds, compost and mulch beds, ground covers.

    Projected - lucerne plantings, seed bombs,vine posts and rails, path renewal.

[Written 13 November 2021, (growbags added since)]

Make the most of it!

I'm a bit of a lazy gardener, though there's a lot going on upstairs at least some of the time.  So, it behooves me when I have the occasional active phase outside that I make the most of it.  Both the time I have active, and the thoughts I had when I wasn't.  Both are resources.

And when the seasons throw you a curve ball, be it a prolonged dry spell, harsh wind, torrential rain, deadly heat, cold snap or hard frost (and often several at once) it's important to make the most of it.  Observations of extremes sometimes clarifies things massively, leading to experiential applications rather than just theoretical imaginings.  And, of course, there are the opportunities that a crisis inevitably throws up.  Nature in extreme is nature in excess - the question is how to harness and harvest this.  Extremes define the limits (edges), reframing for a new perspective.

Edges. Stacking. Zones. Sectors. Design factors all.  Use them to make the most of it.

Iterative processes, nature's heuristic, integration of self with the landscape.  Insight. Make the most of it.

*

So what brings this philosophical excursion from the realms of silence (the number of 'draft' posts I have collected, however, is starting to mount up)?  You could probably guess - an 'extreme'.  In this case, the relatively benign one of possibly the wettest November since written records were kept here (1897, five years after our house was built).  It's gonna be a close run thing, but even if it turns out to fall (just) short of the arbitrary record set in 1952 it is certainly a highly unusual situation in the context of this place and time.  The farmers hate it (they're trying to get the harvest in during the dry moments), but I have come to the realisation that these 'unseasonal rains' are providing me a brilliant opportunity.

The (expanded) water tank and distribution system is fully charged (and with doable plans to increase the  utility of distribution - freeing up time in the summer ahead to get a start on next autumn and winter before they bring new surprises.

The ground is as hydrated as it's been, with prepared beds (composted and mulched) ready for plantings. New techniques and technologies in play, perennials increasingly in place.

[post originally written on 24 Nov, 2021)


Monday, January 4, 2021

What Was and What Will Be

 If you've been following my blog at all you'd be up to date on the weather in the Mid North.  It was a wet year, relative to the previous two.  Annual rainfall ALMOST got to 500mm (499.6, in fact), more than the the previous two put together.  Last summer was 'mild', once we got past xmas, and this summer is looking like going the same way.  Though, lest we get too excited, the Bureau of Meteorology says that last year was the fourth hottest on record and the present 'mild' conditions are a result of an El Nina climate event.  Bottom line, take advantage of the present conditions but keep preparing for the increasingly hot dry climate of the future.

Earth -  My previous compost and other soil amendments (gypsum, manure, straw and other mulches) have had some effect, but it's a slow process.  I've almost completed my Compost Heap the Third, and it is looking a lot more like it should than the previous two attempts.  I've brought in a load of 'healthy' soil to add to it when I scatter it around.  I've mulched around all my present beds with inches of pea straw in an effort to moderate the harsh effects of the sun.  I'm getting ready to plant out a few of my old beds once the compost is ready, a bit of like a doomsday clock for my procrastination / patience.

Air - Wind hasn't been such an issue over the past year, maximum wind speed was 'only' 75kph.  Still dessicating even in a wet year, but my previous wind break strategies appear to have worked okay.  I am factoring it into bed design and plant selection strategy and try to make all garden structures (of which there are a few) sturdy against it.

Fire - Sunlight has been my main issue again this summer.  I have tried to moderate its harsh impact by utilising partial shade of effect of existing trees, mulching heavily and using ground creepers to keep soil temperatures down (I measured soil temp at 70C on exposed soil last summer on a 40C day), laying out shade cloth over beds on the hotter days and, most recently, building an experimental shade tunnel - which appears to have worked quite well (and withstood 50km winds).  I have begun work towards using trellis structures to shelter north and southern faces of the house against the summer sun whilst still collecting heat in winter, as well as around some of the pathways near the house.  This combined with my planned network of shade tunnels for the garden beds should go a fair way towards preventing solar devastation over the next few years at least.

Water - Capture, retention and use of water has been my main focus this past year.  I think I now know what I'll be doing in the coming year to maximise the value I'll extract from every drop of water that falls on this property.  There's a lot of small and not so small projects underway so I'll give them a separate post, merely listing them here.  My main problem is what to do about controlling the excess during heavy rain events. (I've got some ideas but they need refinement).  My main projects include - use of Olla's and 'drip containers', expansion of siphon distribution, expansion and adaptiblility of rain water tanks, increasing water retention in the soil, eventual semi-automation of the system.

Wood - tree and vegetable propogation advances, planting out of perrenials, utilisation of existing and new structures to add vertical elements to the yard.

That's enough for this lengthy post.  Except to say that it's been an interesting year, the youtube revolution has accelerated in the garden sphere, and I'm looking forward to having another good year out here.

I hope you do too.

Monday, November 30, 2020

Spring Weather Report 2020

 145.4mm rain total.

September  45.8mm falling on ten days.
October      87.2mm over nine days.
November  12.4mm over seven days.

Wind: Nothing over 50kph, and only one day with that.
Minimum temperature: one day below at 0C (in September)

Maximum temperatures: 42.4C (Nov 27)
September: seven days over 25C.
October: five days over 30C.
November: sixteen days over 30C, of  which twelve over 35C and two over 40C.

Relative Humditity:
September average 68 (min 14.5).
October average 69 (min 14).
November average 50 (min 4.7, four below 10%).

First heatwave of summer came at the end of spring.

Sunday, November 29, 2020

Permaculture Design Series Videos!

You may recall that in the past I got rather upset at the legalistic commercialised behemoth some of the old Permaculture institutions seem to be turning into.  It was very disheartening.  So, I was very pleased to find another set of Mollison lectures on Youtube, this time hopefully safe from being copyright infringed.  I have added a link to the playlist in my blogroll.

 Credit should go to Networks Productions for releasing the videos into the infosphere.  Cheers!

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Winter Weather Report 2020

88 mm rain total (306.8 mm yearly total to end of August).

June    31mm falling on nine days.
July     12mm over ten days.
Augsut 51mm over fifteen days (max 6mm).

Heaviest rainfall in a day was 11.6 mm on 21 June.
Wind: no major wind, one day in June it gusted up to mid 50km/h.

Maximum Temperature 23.3C

Minimum temperature: -2.3C

June:     3 days below freezing
July:      4 day below.
August  1 day below.

Relative Humiditity: 81%, 85%, 84%.