Events, Life and my Garden

Converting Scraps to Compost Worms Milestone (Part 1)

Compost worms … 29 years on

BACKGROUND

Before I get to the real story here let me say one thing. It’s the little wins in gardening, that often give you the greatest kick, & inspire you to do more.

From my experience, you don’t always have to be super motivated at the start, or consistent through unavoidable changes to your time. Little wins come as you try. They will develop your patience and inspire consistent effort, to try out new and bigger things in your garden. In turn, You and your garden, will become more resilient to seasonal conditions, weather, pest problems, uncooperative humans & wildlife, to name a few.

THE  MILESTONE

Since 1992 I’ve separated 50 kilogram extra, of pure red wriggler compost worms from my worm farms, to start other worm farms breeding in my garden. That is from no special effort, except feeding them on kitchen and garden scraps (plant based only) in enclosed vermin resistant systems I designed. For more information see My Worm Farm Design links below.

I have dug separated worm castings into my soil, probably into many hundreds of kilos by now. I wish I knew the real figure. But in my haste to improve and condition new native soil garden beds in my younger years (I’m 52 now and started this garden from scratch at 23) I didn’t record these details. But like Manuel in Fawlty Towers…’I learn Mr Fawlty..I learn.’

CURRENT PRODUCTION

Currently I separate at least 20 kilos of worm castings from my worm farms, AND 3 kilos of extra worms, per year. Time required: Low…I have just 10 hours total on average per week to spend in/on my garden (I mow my lawns, sow, plant, prune, tidy, harvest, tend to all composts in that time, myself).

I will go into how I harvest, store and use worm castings in Part 2 of this post..TBA.

I will say all those kilos of worm castings I produced, though separated, contained compost worm eggs. The newly hatched compost worms have ‘lived rough’ on the sheet mulching I regularly apply on my native soil garden beds, breaking it down into …black gold. Tons of beautiful soil I could never have achieved for this large garden and didn’t have the funds to buy in. The worms and I have created this lovely topsoil together. But the garden has weathered several droughts and hot summers including last years ‘once in one hundred years ‘ drought. Many of those worms have died in the process and, my soils after all this time are definitely not perfect. So all soil continues as a work in progress.

Those that survive ‘living rough’ have spawned little descendant compost colonies dotted all over my garden – because I don’t use chemicals or manures. I have found red wrigglers and earthworms to be  perfect companions. They work on breaking down surface mulch like grass & leaf clippings. The earthworms plough the deeper clay soil below. Work I wouldn’t and shouldn’t do much of, myself.

But why did I say no manures? It’s my more recent measure, and it’s hard to sustain the kind of beautiful soil organic manures give. But sadly, many manures ‘organic’ or not, may contain traces of worming medications and antibiotics used to keep animals healthy while they live in ‘regulated’ conditions. Those worming medications may kill your garden earthworms, compost worms and soil microbes. I choose not to let manures into my garden now, so problem solved. So now you see how important my worm castings and random wildlife droppings (via ecosystems I design in) are to my soil. They are chemical and medication-free because I know what foods they’ve eaten. Part 2 will have more on this.

MY WORM FARM DESIGN

In 2014 I wrote an article about how to build your own worm farm using my fully enclosed worm farm design, for permaculturenews.com.org. You’ll find that article HERE.

I also wrote an update blog post in 2019, which you’ll find HERE

I use them now as ‘tractors’ of fertility all around my garden, not just tucked in out of the way spaces like my 2014 article photograph suggests.

I hope you can use some re-purposed materials around your home to build your own. If you buy new components, these will last you many years, so are worth the money.

Please like this article. Comment below on how you are going with your worm farms and any further ideas, comments or questions on the topic you’d like to add.

Good luck with your worm farm if you decide its for you 💚

Disclaimer: Please do your own research for your own needs and context. The author assumes no responsibility for any outcomes of anyone using this well researched and documented blog post. Enjoy your worm farms.

Uncategorized

Mid-Spring 2020 Update

It’s mid spring here at VintageTrishGarden in outer Sydney Australia.

I’ve been growing my suburban food forest garden here for 28 years.
It’s a highly productive garden and this little trailer is just a taste of what’s happening here right now.

I’ll be back to writing regular blogs soon, but for daily updates follow me on Instagram @vintagetrishgarden on this link, see you there!

Garden to Table, Kitchen, Kitchen Preserves

Dried Banana Saver

Dried banana costs nearly $30 per kilo where I live. No way.

Instead, I made 438g dried Organic banana for recipes, and banana skin fertiliser slurry for my fruit trees/roses.

IMG_3646

From 2.1kg of purchased bananas, pre-treated in my homegrown lime juice before drying, I’ve saved a conservative $25 on both superior products. I know what’s in them. For example, they are sulphur-free, because I dried them.

My calculations include electricity costs and ‘paying myself’ for my time. Never forget those two because they can escalate a cost easily when it comes to home preserving.

These dried bananas ‘could’ last a long time in glass jars in the fridge. Whether they will with us around remains to be seen!

One purchase, two products, no waste.

Permaculture Principles for today’s task: Obtain a yield, Catch and store energy.

Pure gold 💚

Disclaimer… Please do your own research for your own needs and context. The author assumes no responsibility for any outcomes of anyone using this well researched and documented blog post. Enjoy making your Dried Banana.

#driedfruit #banana #homemade#organic #growwhatyoueat#savemoney #limejuice #dehydrator#dehydratorrecipes #preserves#organicfood #permacultureprinciples#ediblelandscape #organicfertilizer#permaculture #productivelife

Garden to Table, Kitchen, Kitchen Preserves

Thai Curry Paste from my garden & a lentil curry

I harvested fresh ingredients for Thai curry paste from my garden this week. A beautiful, aromatic, satisfying experience in itself..let alone the meals that can be cooked from it.

I made slow cooker red lentil curry with some of it, using pre-harvested purple sweet potato, carrots & butternut pumpkin, served with rice.

Nine out of fifteen curry paste ingredients I picked fresh from my garden:

Fresh ginger, kaffir lime, turmeric, tahitian lime, thai bantum chilli, lemongrass, red legs spring onions & garlic chives.

Then I gathered two preserved crops out of the freezer and pantry:

Frozen garlic cloves, dried chillies.

Together with other store-bought supplies in this recipe, they made a delicious paste which I’m sure was the star ingredient of the slow cooker red lentil curry I cooked. My best curry yet.

 

     

The rest of the double batch paste is frozen into cubes for 5 to 6 other meals.

The curry paste recipe shown here (makes 3/4 cup).

Stick blend it all together for ease.

The slow cooker red lentil curry (which you can look up yourself) used 3T of the paste.

Sorted 💚

Disclaimer… Please do your own research for your own needs and context. The author assumes no responsibility for any outcomes of anyone using this well researched and documented blog post. Enjoy making your Thai Curry Paste.

#freshingredients #currypaste#homemade #homegrown #thaicurry#gourmetingredients #growwhatyoueat#veganfood #vegetarian #potager#organicfood #ediblelandscape#permaculture #zerofoodmiles

Garden to Table, Kitchen, Kitchen Preserves

Bread & Butter Cucumber Pickles..A Fridge Staple

I know Bread & Butter Cucumber pickles aren’t exciting when you’re in the middle of a cucumber glut in summer.

But imagine how exciting they’ll be for that sandwich or salad you’re making in winter. The satisfaction of having grown and preserved a fridge ingredient, yourself.

Today’s recipe is one I’ve been developing for years. I’ve been developing it for taste, ease and simplicity… not complexity. You’ll see it has very few ingredients, but it’s flavourful and reliable. That’s how I like it when I’m in a preserving glut in my kitchen.

This process is not hard after your first time. If you’re not a confident cook, this process can be a little challenging on the first go. So be willing to make mistakes or have someone who you can call or be there to help. Never leave this process unattended and keep all children safely out of the kitchen – it’s hot work!

Important Reminders:

Jar sterilisation, jar sealing and refrigeration of your pickles are all vital steps to avoid serious illness, (especially botulism) with any preserves.

When you’ve cooked these pickles, make sure you reduce only so far that there is still enough boiled pickle liquid to cover the contents in the jar. This is what submerges the pickle in the jar, hopefully locking out air and the vinegar preventing bacteria and/or mould forming.

The jar sealing pop is what you need to hear for the air lock. That’s why you seal and cap in the hot mixture, rather than leaving it to cool.

Only glass jars should be used to store these pickles, because of the vinegar content.

If you’re repurposing glass jars, ensure you have new lids which can reliably do the safety pop seal. If you don’t hear the pop you can’t be sure.

I leave these in the fridge for a week to let flavours develop, before opening the first jar.

Always refrigerate these pickles from the day they are bottled, till consumed, and finished.

If it looks and/or smells wrong when you open a preserve, or you know/ don’t know if it has been stored properly-don’t eat it!

Educate yourself on food safety.

I’m not sure how long these preserves will last in your home and in your fridge – so that, and your safety, are up to you.

This is a delicious pickle. But if it’s not for you, Google a recipe that suits.

If this recipe is for you, and you’d like to share it great…but an attribution to Trish McGill  @vintagetrishgarden on IG, or this website link for other platforms, would be kind, and good manners.

Hope you enjoy these as much as my family and I do. I’ve just heard the first jar lid pop. One down, two to go 💚 Trish

Recipe Ingredients:

Makes approximately 3 medium sized jars

  • 5-6 large cucumbers sliced
  • 2 large onions sliced
  • 1TB Salt (for salt rub/ overnight soak)
  • 1 Cup white vinegar
  • 1/2 Cup apple cider vinegar
  • 1 Cup raw sugar
  • 2 tsp mustard seeds
  • Large pinch ground turmeric

Method: Follow the method steps outlined below.

**

Stage 1 Salting the Cucumber and Onions Overnight (Allow 8-12 hours)

This is as important as any of the other stages in the recipe. Slice the cucumbers and onions as coarse or fine as you prefer. Rub the 1TB of salt from the recipe ingredients through the cucumbers and onions until all is thoroughly mixed. Store in a covered glass dish overnight in the fridge.

In the morning, drain the liquid that has formed from the salt cucumber and onion mix. You don’t need that liquid any more. Rinse the cucumber/onion mix quickly. Set the mix aside.

Stage 2:

Bring mustard seeds, vinegars, sugar and turmeric to the boil in a pot on the stovetop, stirring till combined well. Reduce heat to medium and add cucumber and onion mix. Stir thoroughly.

Stage 3:

Add the rinsed cucumber/onion mix and simmer on medium heat until the cucumber and onion goes completely soft and the pickle juice goes a little syrupy.

Stage 4:

Simmer till the pickle juice just covers the mixture

Stage 5:

Use tongs and kitchen gloves to transfer the still hot finished mixture, into the sterilised jars

                      

Stage 6:

Cap with sterilised jar lids (still using kitchen gloves) while still hot. Listen for ‘pop’ seal…that could take a while. Let cool, then refrigerate. Enjoy!

© Trish McGill 2020

Disclaimer… Please do your own research for your own needs and context. The author assumes no responsibility for any outcomes of anyone using this well researched and documented blog post. Enjoy making your Bread & Butter Cucumber Pickles.