Seedballs: from Fukuoka to Green Guerillas
Written by Kirsten   
Tuesday, 22 December 2009
seedballs at milkwood
Seed balls in the making at Milkwood

 

The poetry of the Seedball concept is simple, yet immense. Encase a seed (or seeds) in a protective jacket of clay, creating a Seed ball. Distribute Seedballs across ground, not worrying if this day, or this month even, is the best time to 'sow'. Protected from insects, buirds, heat and sunlight until the time is right, the seedball activates with a rain event which is sufficient to soak through the clay coating to germinate the seed. Which incidentally is the sort of rain event that you want to have directly following the perfect seed sowing day. And that's it. But that's not all.

Let's talk ferment. Add compost to the clay. Now you have something to kickstart those seeds after germination. Add more growing medium to the Seedball. Even better, for some situations. Add more that one seed. Different seeds. Compatible seeds. Now you're companion planting in the palm of your hand. Seedbombs the size of mandarins, which contain the beginnings of a field of wildflowers, or a hardy herb patch, or a bunch of soil-conditioning legumes. Now you're talking revolution.

Seedballing was probably initiated by Masanobu Fukuoka as part of his experiments in gentle, non-invasive farming methods at his family farm in Japan. A gentle pioneer of the organic farming movement, Fukuoka practiced a system of farming he called 'Do Nothing Farming', which is code for setting up a passive system that is as self regulating as possibe (how very permaculture). Fukuoka used a combination of powdered clay, fine compost and seeds, with simple tools like a series of screens, to make hundreds of seedballs every year as a part of his farming regime.

Fukuoka called seedballs 'a small universe in themselves'. His seed ball theory and methods are well outlined in his small manifesto on farming, eating and the limits of human knowledge, the delightfully readable One Straw Revolution, which incidentally has just been re-issued as a new translation in paperback (yay).

The beauty of the seed ball principle is not only its simplicity and economy of production. Seedballing can be used like a sort of amplified natural selection... Nature, ultimately, still decides what to grow where, but if the conditions in a particular place are right, you now have a crop. Or a stand of fast-growing pioneer trees, or a meadow.

There is a patience needed for this method - call it stealth sowing. The seeds may germinate next week, or next Spring. Or not at all. Wait and see. And in the meantime, move on to another chore. Or make more seed balls and seed elsewhere!

vancouver seedballs
Guerilla seed ball action in Vancouver - before and after. Photos by Urbanwild


Seed selection is of course a fundamental factor in this method. You will be broadcasting these seedballs and probably leaving them to fend for themselves. The hardier and more appropriate to the environment the plant, the greater the chance of success. Here at Milkwood we are currently seedballing a wide mixture of acacia seeds and nitrogen-fixing tree seeds, with a sprinkling of woody ground covers and hardy native grasses. These are all being broadcast along our riparian zones, swales and future shelter belts.

We can now 'plant' thousands of trees in a day, in un-favourable conditions, and leave Nature to do her thing...

Since Fukuoka got the ball rolling, so to speak, many others have since been getting their hands dirty and producing seed balls, seed bombs, seed grenades and other heroic-sounding lumps of clay with seeds in. There is a heap of info out there on technique, but not much documentation on results that I have found, apart from anecdotes and Fukuoka's plainly successful examples.

Moving from the rural to the urban, seed balls and seed bombs are now firmly in the domain of the worldwide guerilla gardening movement. If your community doesn't have one, it's probably time to start a guerilla gardening group, which is both a funky way to spend your spare time (or all your time) and might just increase your food security. And a seed balling workshop would be a very fine, inspirational and easy inaugral event to hold.

anitya seed balls

Anitya by Anne Cooper - Land Art piece involving seed balls, unfired clay bowls, mulch, and time. Photo by Deanna Nichols

 

Milkwood is currently being sprinkled in seed balls, and we will be sure to document the results (and how to make a bicycle powered seed balling machine - stay tuned!). In the meantime, here's a smattering of where the seed ball craze has spread so far:

Masanobu Fukuoka: Firstly, Fukuoka's texts, including Seed Balling technique, are all bunked at the Soil Health Library, an amazing online resource which has thousands of seminal farming texts available for download. Make sure if you use this option to donate, to keep this resource breathing.

Jim Bones: Who used to have an extensive website on the subject called seedball.com which is now defunct. Happily, his how-to and why-to video, The Seed Ball Story, has found its way to Youtube.

Kathryn Miller's Seed Bombs: an early example of Seed Bombs as art from 1992. 'As a form of urban and suburban guerrilla activity, it was a small scale, non-sanctioned intervention in the landscape. The seed bombs were made available to museum visitors to take and throw somewhere they felt needed native plants, and in the process they assisted me with my project.'

The Vancouver Guerilla Gardening Group:
have done various seed balling workshops, with great success. Probably the best bunch of urban seed ballers i know.

Seed Bomb how-to: there are heaps of videos up now in this technique, but this is one of the most concise. The host, Richard Reynolds, also has the best hair.

Seed Ball land art by Anne Cooper: Anitya is a gorgeous piece from New Mexico set in a field involving seed balls, clay balls, the land, and time. 

It seems strange somehow that something so simple and small can hold so much power, but I'm beginning to think that's the way of things, these days. And of course it comes back to the power of the seeds themselves. Just the idea of it - portable, potential ecosystems, folded in on themselves many times over. Amazing. I think I'm in love. Thanks, Nature! Thanks, Masanobu!

Happy holidays, everyone. May your next seed experience, whether it be on your salad, in your garden or just out of the corner of your eye, fill you with wonder, joy, and a sense of renewal.

Tags:  
If you enjoyed this post, subscribe to our RSS feed!
 
Introducing our TinyHouse
Written by Kirsten   
Friday, 11 December 2009

house design 1
If only building it was as easy as making this mock-up, we'd be done by now...

It's happening, it's happening! After what seems like a thousand stops and starts, most notably a) hiccups with the local council regarding various things (don't even go there), b) the death of a certain piece of essential machinery (still yet to be resurrected - best not go there either), c) the birth of a certain small human, and not forgetting d) our unfortunate need to make a living, it appears that things are truly moving forward on our small dwelling at Milkwood...
Tags:  
If you enjoyed this post, subscribe to our RSS feed!
 
2010 Permaculture Diary + Calendar
Written by Kirsten   
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
2010 PCDC

Getting organised has been an ongoing process at Milkwood - from planning our planting cycles for our kitchen garden to trying to figure out how to build that cottage of ours (getting there!). To keep track of everything that's going on we use a combo of online organisational gizmos, whiteboards, luck, guesswork and of course, my ol' faithful, hardcopy diary. And if i had to pare everything back to one organisational tool, it would be my diary - it doesn't need plugging in and even better i can tuck it under my arm, throw it in a wheelbarrow or use as a flower press for strange unidentified clover-like plants, if needed.

I mention all this because our friends Michelle Margolis + David Arnold have once again compiled a most fabulous Permaculture Diary and also Calendar for 2010. Both publications are building on last years efforts and are chock full of lush images of Permaculture in practice from all over the world, plus planting charts, personal stories, community initiatives and even a wee entry on our Rocket Powered Shower, featuring Nick in the nick - ha. This years' diary is also printed on a textured, recycled paper stock which will be a pleasure to write on throughout the year. We think they're both so great that we're helping to sell them by getting the word out.

And best of all, you can get yerself a copy right here. See below for Diary, Calendar and Diary+Calendar combos, all delivered to your door quicksmart. And once your package arrives, all you need to do is throw it in your actual or conceptual wheelbarrow, and off you go to plan next year's everythings.

To purchase the 2010 Permaculture Diary click the button at right.

Where will this be posted?


To purchase the 2010 Permaculture Calendar click the button at right.

Where will this be posted?


To purchase the 2010 Permaculture Calendar & Diary click the button at right.

(PS. You get an %11 discount for getting both at once)
Where will this be posted?


 

Tags:  
If you enjoyed this post, subscribe to our RSS feed!
 
The Edible Urban: Part 1
Written by Kirsten   
Tuesday, 01 September 2009

 crack garden 1

Fissured foodstuffs - image by Tom Fox

One of the few things that makes me sometimes long for the city is to be part of the kerbside revolution that's happening here, there and everywhere. Every time i walk past an inner-city grass verge that's sprouting tomatoes or a roundabout which has seen a bit of guerrilla gardening action I breathe a little sigh of relief, because I feel like I can smell the beginnings of that sweetest of ferments in the air: it's the beginnings of food security in the hands of people, not supermarkets.

In the last several years, community gardening has taken on new significance throughout the western world. It seems nearly every city now has some sort of kerbside vegetable gardening initiative, victory garden schemes, community gardens, you name it. And hooray to that - we need any and all of these initiatives. We need them because we all need to get more deeply involved in our own food security. We also all need them to get more deeply involved in our community if we're going to build true resilience in our world over the next number of decades, and gardening is a great way to start. Bring on the edible landscapes......read more

Tags:  
If you enjoyed this post, subscribe to our RSS feed!
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>