REPORTED in The Sydney Morning Herald on 12 Oct 2008 is an account of the research and benefits of greening our roofs and the future of urban farms in our cities. Patrick Blanc, the author of Vertical Gardens, was recently in Australia for the Green Roofs Organisation lecturing about roof top gardens and greening walls in cities around the world. He was responding to the existing interest in Australian universities and local councils about the suitable use of green walls and green roofs for our climatic conditions.
THE kumato story in The Australian [11-12 October 2008] suggested it was crossed with a bush tomato but on further reading in The Geelong Times [18 April 2007] it was originally developed from a wild tomato in the Galapagos Islands and crossed with another tomato variety. The Kakouros family in Victoria have been trialling this variety for a couple of years and it is now in grocers across Australia.
MENTION vegetable gardening and a few people will likely respond with the ‘problems’ of growing-your-own: ‘It all crops at once’; ‘It’s cheaper to buy it at the shops once you add up what you’ve spent.’
Yesterday – Saturday 13 September – we returned from Zanthorrea nursery in Maida Vale $74.90 poorer (according to the pundits) with a clutch of seedlings and a bag of organic cow and sheep manure for the spring refurbishment of our vegie patch. Today, in a telephone call with Slow Food Perth co-leader Pauline Tresise, she posed a challenge – almost Keynesian in dimension – of measuring the costs compared with the benefits of maintaining a kitchen garden.
Gawd. It is difficult to put a dollar value on pleasure derived. The water is free – it comes from the sky and we collect it from the roof – as are the ladybirds (‘voman-bugs’, as one German we know calls them), and the bird-life is constantly amazing. On the other hand, we run the pump to push the water about, so there’s an electricity cost, and the silver-eyes spoil some cherry tomatoes, so there’s occasionally a benefit foregone, as Treasury might term it.
This year, in our 4 x 14-metre patch, we have probably spent about $140 all-up, starting with winter salad plants, herbs, seeds, manure and blood-and-bone. The salad greens have been extraordinarily generous during the coldest weeks – a handful of oakleaf, cos, red mignonette and English spinach leaves plucked from plants just before lunch or dinner have fed us daily for about eight weeks (these also provided all the greens for 120-plus people at Slow Food Perth’s Mundaring truffle festival lunch on 02 August).
The seeds of scarlet globe radish have provided a similarly substantial return-on-investment that would rival the dividends of BHP Billiton. For 100-odd seeds we have had 100-odd plump radishes and fed some ground-bugs to boot. Yes, the maligned slater families here are fatter for them-there radishes, like those enjoying mining boom pay packets.
The creamy-yellow broccoli romanescu, in the beginning, was all-leaf-and-no-head, much like those marble neck-to-knees classical male torsos that the church in later centuries did so much to cover up. Romanescu, indeed, was one week doing nothing in the nether regions and the next week sticking up a great flower that almost immediately went to seed. We are now trying again with the broccoli and a very close eye will be kept on it (we hesitate to say ‘voyeuristically’).
The so-called all-year-round-carrots – ‘a splendid maincrop carrot, producing long, pointed roots’ (sounds like something out of a Christies’ catalogue) – made it into the ground but didn’t come out of it in quite the way we intended. A zealous weeder up-seeded them (rather than uprooted, as they’d barely had time to perform this function) and the wrens and pardelotes enjoyed lunch for days on end; given the minute size of these would-be 12-month rooters it would have been truly a ‘slow’ lunch. On the other hand, the dwarf blue bantam peas have been great croppers, and last evening we enjoyed them with a delicious chook roasted in our old wood-fired oven, together with our first cauliflower in a fabulous white sauce made all the more appetising with some Cambray sheep milk farmhouse cheese. Never mind the odd aphid in both the cauliflower and the red cabbage ranks. We have ‘voman-bugs’ already and, as we have just read in a weekend newspaper article, will be making a chilli and garlic spray forthwith so that the little beasts will think they’ve walked into a crowded Italian restaurant should they try nibbling again.
Fennel has leapt out of the ground, woolly and lemon thyme and oregano are travelling like fast food across the well-manured earth and a nigella crop shortly will flower – and seed (double benefit).
We look forward to the new black russian tomatoes roistering along like a Cossack dance troupe and joining their eight-week-old Italian cousins – the romas – to yield spring feasts. Oh, and a good ROI, or EBIT, or whatever that’s called.
A SIMPLY delicious article on how to enjoy the tastiest fruit by George Monbiot….. ‘become a guerrilla planter or guerrilla grafter, growing fruit on roadsides, on commons and in parks and wasteland. Apple twigs of any kind can be grafted onto crab trees. Medlars and one breed of pear (a delicious variety called Josephine des Malines) can be grafted onto hawthorn. Kiwi fruit, passion fruit and a vine called Schisandra grandiflora will climb into trees of any kind’. Read the full article.
AT Sydney’s Macquarie University a group of students have formed MACEnviro, funded by the university students with the support of other university students through the Australian Student Enviro Network. The university also has its community garden club which supports sustainability in growing fruit and vegetables.
MELBOURNE chef Matt Wilkinson tells The Age about his move to a kitchen garden for his restaurant, Circa The Prince. Full report.

