Saturday, April 25, 2009

Double Digging with EARTH students

The Biointensive

The Double Dug Bed that will forever have a puddle of my sweat in it.

Here we are not double digging... just weeding
Ok even if I had a picture of me during the process of preparing the bed for the biointensive garden there is no way I would post it. Basically the biointensive garden is designed to produce as much food as possible in the least amount of space. To do this all the beds are dug out twice as deep as normal so the roots are able to go down instead of out. This makes it possible to plant crops closer together. I was really excited to get the opportunity to learn about the double digging because I think its something that can be applied at home pretty easily. However... wow it is REALLY hard work. I mean worth it BUT really tiring. I had three or four constant streams of sweat flowing down my face--of course the humidity wasn't working in my favor.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Hoeing Around

These beds got hooooed.
The Farm Cats: Camilla and Negra. They have a very love-hate relationship
Yay for meeechelle! Steps to prepare the beds for (you guessed it) MORE cilantro: 

1) Get rid of the Weed
2) Get the Hoes out and Loosen things up
3) Lather up in Compost
4) Flatten

Now the bed is ready to get laid!

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Harvesting Cilantro in the Rain

A very wet Finca

Cilantro, Green Beans, Lettuce, Ginger, Asian Cucumbers, and Peppers all ready for the market
Washing and Bundling the Cilantro
As I'm sure you've gathered today I harvested cilantro and green beans in the rain, and just to clarify I don't mean an Oregon mist. I mean a torrential downpour. My raincoat that had kept me perfectly dry the whole Oregon winter was soaked through in a matter of minutes. It was really fun--and wet. 

Monday, April 20, 2009

Compost? I think not.

What do YOU think are in these bags?
Dear Robert: I can teach you a few thinks about funk while building fences...

Today: Well to start with I was brought into the circle although here in Costa Rica it's a square. Now that I'm in the square I can not discuss what's in those bags.... I can however tell you it's NOT COMPOST. I did not spend the morning shoveling the big piles into sacs. Each pile does not take about 8 weeks to go from pig poo to clean, healthy soil that is full of nutrients. That is just what these "organic" "sustainable" "people" want you to think. If I say any more the square will feed me to the worms and I WILL be compost. 

ps I built a fence for the chickens as well... watch out Roberto you have met your match.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

The Purple Boots and Saturday with EARTH students

Me in my purple boots planting cilantro
The before shot
The after shot... those are some tired boots
ok ok ok here are the boots, but the truth is I accidently left them out in the rain which is why they don't look SO dirty. 

On saturdays the EARTH students go to the farms for practical experience, so today I  worked with a girl from Brazil and two students from Panama. We transplanted the cilantro from the greenhouse to beds and also did some serious weeding. 


Friday, April 17, 2009

La finca (the farm) and Los Animales

                                                They made me pay extra to get this shot
                                                             Mark the Water buffalo
                                                             "Oh yeah thats the spot..."
Cute huh... but these ridiculously photogenic pigs charged me three piles of mud for the photo shoot--nothing is for free in this world.

Mark the water buffalo is really sweet also.  

This morning I did some planting in the green house and and a few other other odd jobs on la finca. The farm is made up of about 10 different systems that come from all around the world including la mandalla from brazil and an Asian garden that treats the soil and plants with EM--a technology developed in Japan that is a careful balance of different microorganisms thats fights pests, but also provides nutrients to the plants and soil.

Thursday, April 16, 2009