Aranya Gardens - Irish mountain permaculture garden

Mountain garden design

 

 This garden was designed during a year spent living halfway up a beautiful mountain in South West Eire & while I was there I was able carry out the initial planting stage for the design. Like the mobile home garden its main design criteria are environmental & based on Permaculture principles, though in contrast to the former it uses no recycled materials or modern materials at all. In fact we had decided to live without such things to see how we would fare. The reason that I have few photos of this garden is because they were all taken by visitors! The ground was basically south-facing, but reasonably steep, rising up behind the cottage. It was also very uneven, covered with large rocks, half covered with a wide stream & of course very peaty, so very acidic soil. It did give me an opportunity to grow all those acid loving plants that I'd never previously been able to do & experiment with water plants for slow running peaty water. The land was also crying out for trees to be planted. Much of Eire's mountainsides were previously covered with trees, mainly oak, which were mostly cut down during the time of mass wooden shipbuilding. Since then they have never been given the chance to grow back again because of the overgrazing of sheep, an animal which is not native to the UK, but to the Middle East (where they now have lots of desert, strangely enough). Sadly, this overgrazing continues to an even greater extreme today with the aid of crazy EEC subsidies.

 The only plants that the sheep won't eat are the rushes, which the farmers then spray in order to stop them encroaching too much on the grass. These toxic sprays get quickly washed into the streams in a land of heavy rains, where they get into the drinking water of those rural dwellers a bit further downstream who still live without mains water. We were some of those people living with no mains water, sewage, electricity, gas, telephone.... any of it basically, apart from the postman! We drank water from a wellspring, used composting toilets & did without the rest, using candles sparingly for light when we really needed to. We also socialised a lot more than I had been used to as three or more people sharing one candle or one fire used a lot less resources than all being in different places.

 So that's the background to the garden. Living that close to the land makes gardening decisions quite a bit more important too, which is why this garden has a preponderence of food plants, many of which are unfamiliar to most gardeners. However a lot of research has been done into such valuable plants in recent years by the likes of Plants for a Future & the Agroforestry Research Trust (also see links page). Although we shunned most modern items, we did have a few precious books, most of which were about gardening & permaculture & these included Ken Fern's book 'Plants for a Future', well worth any good gardener's money! This in particular made it a lot easier to select plants that would do well in the milder climate, but with more difficult growing conditions. There was also a need to protect trees from grazing, but once they were established they would provide much needed shelter for the lower storeys of plants (the south-westerly winds could be pretty fierce at times!). Thus, fast growing pioneer species were planted to serve this purpose & with the wet conditions, Alder & Willow seemed to fit the bill (how they have fared in the longer term I don't know, but they seemed to start off alright).

Tending Holly Hill garden

 I also planted a lot of deep taprooted plants to bring up deep nutrients to the surface (when the top growth dies down in winter it falls onto the surface, the same way that trees do when shedding their leaves, but more quickly). Fruit trees were planted on the higher, better drained areas & many varieties tried to increase diversity, spread the cropping over a longer season & reduce risk of crop failure on a big scale. An unusual experiment in hedging was tried on the wet side by planting New Zealand Flax close together. This would also have provided a good source of fibre in the longer term, but whether I could have stood the rustling when the wind got up I never got the chance to find out!

Willow dome at my current home - clearly not waterproof!

 The centrepiece of the garden was an experiment in creating a living home; in the days before willow sculpting was really popular! Hazel had been used to create a 'bender' structure & willow wands planted around its base & tied on in a diagonal trellis fashion. There was to be two potential entrances which both curved into the central space in a double spiral (like a twin-arm galaxy), either of which could be used depending on the prevailing wind at any time. A large rock was to provide the basis for a fireplace & a stone chimney built on top of it. While the structure would in time provide a good wind shelter, quite how it could be made waterproof was still to be tested. I had thought about slowly adding small amounts of turf, allowing the willow to grow up & out through it, until finally the structure of the building was provided by root material covered in turf, with the wands growing up out of it... but would it have worked?

 This particular area of the land wasn't really suited to growing annuals, but we still impressed the locals with our abundant vegetable & salad gardens grown on land that they thought was only of use for grazing animals on. Alongside the more recognisible fruits, vegetables, herbs & flowers we grew more of those unusual plants & they constituted a good proportion of our diet. White strawberries fooled the birds & while the resident rodent population devoured our brassica stems killing the plants, they left many of the 'exotics' for us. Chilecayote (Cucurbita ficifolia) was a particular success story, sending out 30' tendrils in every direction & depositing vast green & white striped squashes all over the landscape - this time we were as amazed as the locals were! We later discovered that they also tasted delicious & they kept well too - if we could resist them that is. Yes, really relying on the food you grow is a great way to learn about gardening!

For a more detailed look at this design, see my Diploma Portfolio Mountain Garden Design.

Chilecayote the Wonder Squash...
 
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