Another Newby
Another Newby
Hi Everyone, After years of yearning for self suffiencyishness, am making a move (just me and soul-mate after eons of childrearing) into a cottage with to be claimed garden and backing onto sloping woodland. At last I shall seize my opportunity, hopefully leave my day job and devote myself to the pursuit of all things wild and woolly. Found this site through doing a google search on self sufficiency and felt this was really close enough!! Looking forward to exchanging news and views - has anyone else used meadow land to establish garden? Am very into herbal medicine, nutrition etc. also, as well as cooking and eating and drinking lots of home made wine, beer, cider etc. Great looking site, so glad I've found it. Sue
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Hi Woolcraft
Welcome to the site! You sound like my kind of person - the woolly things I persue are two cashmere goats - and I work with sheep, too. Have you got any livestock yet, or are you still at the planning stage? Any experience in processing wool? That's on MY to-do-list for this year! (Apart from 100s other things...
- always more on that list than on the one that says "done"!) I do a lot of knitting, but am hoping to get to the stage where I can say that a piece is not only hand-knitted, but really made from scratch.
Yes, meadow land should be fine for transforming into a garden. Depends a bit on the soil, but there's not many places where you couldn't do anything with a bit of compost (and manure from the woollies). You might want to start by covering a piece of land with black plastic (to make the subsequent digging easier). Or borrow a few pigs to do the digging for you... They do the manuring at the same time! And potatoes are good for the first year crop; by the time you've dug them up, the soil has been well and truly broken in (plant action as well as spade action).
Have fun
Ina
Welcome to the site! You sound like my kind of person - the woolly things I persue are two cashmere goats - and I work with sheep, too. Have you got any livestock yet, or are you still at the planning stage? Any experience in processing wool? That's on MY to-do-list for this year! (Apart from 100s other things...

Yes, meadow land should be fine for transforming into a garden. Depends a bit on the soil, but there's not many places where you couldn't do anything with a bit of compost (and manure from the woollies). You might want to start by covering a piece of land with black plastic (to make the subsequent digging easier). Or borrow a few pigs to do the digging for you... They do the manuring at the same time! And potatoes are good for the first year crop; by the time you've dug them up, the soil has been well and truly broken in (plant action as well as spade action).
Have fun
Ina
- Chickenlady
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- Steve Hanson
- Jerry - Bit higher than newbie
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Hello sue
I am just cheating like the rest of this self-sufficient-ish lot if I say hello I get to be a Jerry quicker!!!!!!!!!!!!
Best of luck anyway.
What’s the Woolly bit about?
I am just cheating like the rest of this self-sufficient-ish lot if I say hello I get to be a Jerry quicker!!!!!!!!!!!!
Best of luck anyway.
What’s the Woolly bit about?
Simple, Economical and Purposeful Living
http://www.permacultureeden.com/
Faith is an oasis in the heart which will never be reached by the caravan of thinking.
Kahlil Gibran
steve@permacultureeden.com
http://www.permacultureeden.com/
Faith is an oasis in the heart which will never be reached by the caravan of thinking.
Kahlil Gibran
steve@permacultureeden.com
G'Day Sue,
I'm a spinner but I mainly spin my own cotton, having learned how on wool!
Your set up sounds wonderful, we are still waiting for our younger (plus husband) to move out so I can try and work a bit less myself.
Good luck and welcome to the site!
Nev
I'm a spinner but I mainly spin my own cotton, having learned how on wool!
Your set up sounds wonderful, we are still waiting for our younger (plus husband) to move out so I can try and work a bit less myself.
Good luck and welcome to the site!
Nev
Garden shed technology rules! - Muddypause
Our website on living more sustainably in the suburbs! - http://www.underthechokotree.com/
Our website on living more sustainably in the suburbs! - http://www.underthechokotree.com/
- hedgewitch
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Hello and welcome to the forum.
I have found my forte in Herbal medicine, I've been making my own teas, tinctures and lotions for years. I grow all my own and I'm extremely proud of every Plant I have

I'm looking forward to chatting with you some more.
- glenniedragon
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Hello from fellow newbie
Hello there Woolcraft! Your plans sound wonderful!! I'm very new here too and I have to say everyone has been so warm and welcoming- I'm sure you'll be right at home. I'm into my homebrewing, so when you're up at your cottage don't just think about conventional things to make wine from (blackberries, elderberries etc) look at the weeds. I am quite well known for my seldom mown lawn but knockout dandelion wine, so look around you can count even the weeds as a useable crop! I can give you the recipe for dandelion and nettle wine if you like then you can get some of 'your own' on the way before any intended seed touches the newly dug earth. You can't make wine from everything so you have to be careful not to ferment anything potentially poisionous (like bluebells, for example) as you may find there's no known antidote!
Good luck to you up there, sounds like great times ahead
kind thoughts
Deb
Good luck to you up there, sounds like great times ahead
kind thoughts
Deb
Hey! If the cap fits....................... 

Garden shed technology rules! - Muddypause
Our website on living more sustainably in the suburbs! - http://www.underthechokotree.com/
Our website on living more sustainably in the suburbs! - http://www.underthechokotree.com/
- Steve Hanson
- Jerry - Bit higher than newbie
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Hi Sue
Our present vegetable garden was pasture for 13 cows for the last 5 years that we know of, we enclosed 4 pigs in the area we wanted to cultivate for about 4 month through last winter. We are still eating the produce and have even sold some of it, which will pay for all the seeds we plan to buy for this year.
Good luck with your endevours.
Our present vegetable garden was pasture for 13 cows for the last 5 years that we know of, we enclosed 4 pigs in the area we wanted to cultivate for about 4 month through last winter. We are still eating the produce and have even sold some of it, which will pay for all the seeds we plan to buy for this year.
Good luck with your endevours.
Last edited by Steve Hanson on Sun Jan 29, 2006 10:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Simple, Economical and Purposeful Living
http://www.permacultureeden.com/
Faith is an oasis in the heart which will never be reached by the caravan of thinking.
Kahlil Gibran
steve@permacultureeden.com
http://www.permacultureeden.com/
Faith is an oasis in the heart which will never be reached by the caravan of thinking.
Kahlil Gibran
steve@permacultureeden.com
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- A selfsufficientish Regular
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Hi Sue!!
Nice to meet you - we are currently reclaiming our garden too - got a LOT of work to do but it will all be worth it in the end.
Shirlz xx
Nice to meet you - we are currently reclaiming our garden too - got a LOT of work to do but it will all be worth it in the end.
Shirlz xx
Shirley
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NEEPS! North East Eco People's Site
My photos on Flickr
Don't forget to check out the Ish gallery on Flickr - and add your own photos there too. http://www.flickr.com/groups/selfsufficientish/
- Andy Hamilton
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Hello Woolcraft and welcome.
Might have to have a few chats with you about herbal medicine it is a topic that I am very keen to learn more about.
Might have to have a few chats with you about herbal medicine it is a topic that I am very keen to learn more about.
First we sow the seeds, nature grows the seeds then we eat the seeds. Neil Pye
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
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The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
and...... Twitter
The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging