* Grow Llangollen members hear from guest speaker Steve Jones.
Grow Llangollen held their eighth talk this last Thursday, welcoming permaculture specialist Steve Jones.
Grow Llangollen is a community organisation working towards sustainability and food security by inspiring and supporting local people to grow food through community gardening, produce sharing, and informative talks and workshops.
Steve owns Sector39 training and is a partner at Treflach Farm near Oswestry, where he delivers a lot of his training.
He led a fascinating
discussion across key aspects of permaculture and how it can be delivered at
garden or market scale, emphasising the principles of observing and interacting
to understand energy systems and storage opportunities.
Permaculture is a form
of land use modelled on natural ecosystems, following the cycles, diversity,
and resilience found in nature.
* Steve Jones.
Steve talked about the value
and impact of community gardens he's started in Newtown which has helped
transform engagement around food within the town.
He was a founder of Cultivate
Newtown, which started on an industrial estate when they were able to build a
roundhouse which attracted growers.
He explained how his work has required
significant persistence with three burglaries in three years causing set backs, and
some damage to trees planted - but that persistence has paid off: participation
has never been higher and the vast majority of trees have thrived. You can read
more about Cultivate Newtown here https://www.cultivate.uk.com
Alongside places in Wales that
he has worked, Steve gave fascinating examples of how devastated, unproductive
hillside areas in Zimbabwe have been transformed by permaculture.
In
Chimanimani district in Zimbabwe, groups of residents have volunteered their
time over the past 15 years to restore productivity and bring young people back
to the land. Before and after photos can be seen here https://www.permaculturenews.org/2013/08/15/the-chikukwa-permaculture-project-zimbabwe-the-full-story/
He
talked about how permaculture could be integrated into farming in Wales to
restore the productivity of land as the UK is now among the most nature-depleted
in the world.
The example from Zimbabwe
prompted a discussion on how that volunteer-led achievement contrasts with
expectations here that such projects need external funding and are often done
by outsiders, perhaps missing opportunities to shape the future for ourselves
by getting involved in practical initiatives.
This led to a further discussion
about how to get more people involved in community gardens at Bryntysilio,
Pengwern and Corwen, who are all welcoming new volunteers.
Steve also talked about the
value of biochar in his work. Biochar is any organic material or 'biomass' that
has been cooked at a high temperature with limited oxygen present.
The approach
creates a soil enhancer that stores carbon for hundreds of years, boosts food
security, and increases soil biodiversity. While this is available
commercially, it can be easily produced at a garden level too.
Grow Llangollen
will be organising a field visit to Treflach Farm to see the farm in action
(the subject of another recent talk) and to learn how to make biochar.
You can find more information
about permaculture here: https://www.permaculture.co.uk/what-is-permaculture/
The next gardening session at
Bryntysilio will be on Sunday May 26, from 10 am to
midday.
The next talk will be held on June 20,
topic to be confirmed.
* For more information, you can
message us on our Facebook page (7) Facebook or by
email: admin@growllangollen.org