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Permaculture / Forest Gardening

Heirloom Tomatoes and Tea

The first tomato seedlings have germinated, and are doing nicely. This is the time when wet weather would bring out the snails and slugs and wipe out all the baby tomatoes. Although we could really do with some rain right now, the dryness is happily keeping all the seedling munching monsters at bay.

tomatoes

These two trays are mainly old favourites such as Orange Banana tomatoes, that we’ve saved our own seed for, and the last few bought seeds in a few random packs from previous years. When I planted them, the weather was still a bit colder than now, so I planted ones that didnt matter too much. Since these 154 seeds went in, I have also planted 3 more trays – another 120, bigger compartments – of a wide range including Caro Rich that has more vitamin A than normal tomatoes, Cherokee Purple, huge purple fruit, and white cherry tomatoes which form 2 foot long trusses of fruit. Should be an interesting harvest this summer, plus we should have enough plants to give to a few friends who are just starting out here, or to swap with others.
I think we have close to 50 types of tomato seeds now, mainly heritage varieties, and we bought a few CoraƧao do Bio plants, traditional portuguese type with big pinky fruit, at sunday market in tabua.

We’ve been seriously thinking about buying a proper glass greenhouse, although I’m still looking for plastic bendy pipe (if anyone has some spare lying around) to knock up a polytunnel. Whatever, we will hopefully be able to grow tomatoes and peppers through this coming winter, and get our seeds started off really early next year.

My two tea plants (Camelia Sinensis) have started growing again, after a winter of not. Great, I wonder how long it will be before we can start harvesting growing tips to make our own cuppas.

tea

BACK GARDEN SEED SAVING
The best UK book on seed saving by top gardening writer Sue Stickland. She gives easy to follow crop-by-crop guidelines to help you save seed for yourself and varieties to look out for.

New Birds On the Block

A week before xmas a fox managed to get into our chicken pen, after I accidentally cut the fence while strimming and didn’t notice, and killed 5 chickens and our xmas turkey.

Then last week a fox found another tiny hole (again from strimming) and killed 3 of the replacement chickens which we had only recently bought at Tabua market, took one of our two geese, and our pair of ducks.

So, I have now reinforced the fence, repaired all the holes, put in new treated fence posts to make it sturdier and I have been shutting the four new ducklings and 4 almost point-of-lay hens into their shed each night.

new door

They all go in when it gets dark, so I have to get the goose back out (she terrorises the others and has been known to kill young birds in the night) and then put the ‘door’ in its slot, and push the brick up against it. The new young hens had to be taught how to roost, but only once, and they do it themselves now.

the ladies

I think it would be a good idea to buy a few more chickens and maybe quite a few more baby ducks this sunday at market. The hens are 5.50 euros each, which we thought was expensive, especially if they quickly become fox food, until we recently watched River Cottage on DVD, and Hugh Fearnley-Wittingstall paid loads of money for chickens. I guess it is all relative. But the ducklings are 1.25 each and we have always done well with ducks, both for eggs and they are the only anmals we have successfully bred for meat.

And the ducklings are so cute.

ducklings