Friday, May 8, 2009

Treasures Adopted from the Library & More Border Morris

Last night the Locavores had our monthly meeting at the local library, so I stopped by to check out the books before the meeting. The library always has a bin of books for sale, but I have never found so many ones I love at once! It turns out that these are all 'secondary copies'.

What's even more odd is that they are having a huge sale this weekend to sell off books they no longer use, so I would have expected these lovelies to be in that sale.

This is what about six dollars got me (excuse the photos!):

Abbey Lubbers, Banshees & Boggarts by Katharine Briggs

Katharine Mary Briggs has got to be one of my favourite authors when it comes to Faerylore.




The Enchanted World Fairies & Elves (Editors of Time-Life Books)

This is a neat little book with lots of great artwork.




A Medieval Book of Seasons by Marie Collins & Virginia Davis

This book is full well-researched information, beautiful artwork and plenty of songs and rhymes, such as the timely:

Sumer is icumen in-
Lhude sing! cuccu.
Groweth sed and bloweth med
And springeth the wude nu-
Sing cuccu.





Organic Farming: Everything You Need to Know by Peter V. Fossel

I have taken this book out from the library at least twice. It is a priceless resource for an aspiring organic farmer!





The Concise Guide to Self-Sufficiency by John Seymour

This is another book that I have taken out a number of times. It's a homesteader staple.





The Self-Sufficient Life and How to Live it: The Complete Back-to-Basics Guide by John Seymour

Another book that I frequently took out, and just like the one above it is the perfect book for a homesteader (this one is more detailed though).





And here is a few more Border Morris videos:

The Witchmen:







Bacchus Border Morris



Hunter's Moon





Hook Eagle





Grimspound







Exmoor Border Morris






Sláinte!

Laurel

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

No Man's Land: Keeping a Piece Wild


I had gotten my earliest plant and gardening wisdom from my Grandmother, and for that I am grateful to her. She is also what some would call very 'superstitious' (or as I like to think of it, smart enough to heed old lore!), and I am pretty sure that I got that trait from her as well. There were various practices in the garden that were taboo to stray from, and while I know many were very sensible (in the material sense), others were definitely carried out for more esoteric reasons.

One of these practices was to keep a piece of her property wild, and let the plants and other wild ones do with it as they willed. This was the place for the 'Dandy Wee Folk' to stay in as long as they wished, and to hopefully protect the land around them.

At the time when I was a child, her property was a modest suburban lot, so this space set aside for this purpose was quite small. In a yard enclosed in zealously manicured cedar hedges, you found a humble but flourishing garden, and in the far South corner this little wild space nestled between a couple of old trees.

Discreet, just like my Grandmother.

I admittedly found some of her practices odd, but this was one that I had respected to the letter, and I made sure not to disturb that space and its residents (or the bread and bowls of milk sometimes left there by my Grandmother).

In my research travels I have come across similar traditions where farmers and gardeners would set aside some land and leave it be in the hopes of appeasing 'evil' spirits and Genii Loci. In England these parcels of land are often called Jack's Land, in Scotland Guideman's Field and Cloutie's Croft, and in Wales The Devil's Offering (Gardener's Magic and Folklore by Margaret Baker).

I wholeheartedly believe that at the core of superstitions, there is a practical reason for them existing, and one does not have to believe in Faeries to see how this practice is a good thing!

This is a practice that has been adopted by Permaculture, which is reflected in design zone 5:

ZONE 5 — A wild area. There is no human intervention in zone 5 apart from the observation of natural eco-systems and cycles. Here is where the most important lessons of the first permaculture principle of working with, rather than against, nature are learned.

Click on this link to find out more about the design zones in Permaculture.

In a world full of human sprawl and the destruction of wild spaces, the least we can do is set aside pieces of land just for Nature.

Sláinte!

Laurel

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Guerilla Gardening Greatest Hits and Blog Makeover


I originally found this video over at Home Grown. It shows highlights from some of the workings of Guerrilla Gardeners in London from 2006 to 2009.


Also, we did another blog makeover. The banner was made on Scrapblog and the beautiful stag comes from a photograph by Massimo Catarinella.


And the background is from Simply Chic blog.


You may have noticed that our little Nightingale friend isn't around. He went into a Faery mound on Beltane, but he promises he will be back soon, and sent us a little photo with his regards. ;)


Sláinte!

Laurel