Showing posts with label cherry plums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cherry plums. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 January 2016

Beginning our slow descent south (Blackheath to Gerroa)

We loved visiting the Blue Mountains again, giving book events,


taking foraging workshops in Blackheath,


visiting next-gen food producers Erika and Hayden,


bumping into and then staying with an old school friend, Zoe and her family,


visiting dear poet friends Pete and Kate and their kids Ruby and Felix,


housesitting for 10 days, taking many a bush walk, contemplating life,


and having time to consider what being human means.


Restored by the mountains we zoomed back down to Sydney to house sit again, finding a very rare strip of safe bicycling bitumen in Centennial Park.


We skipped on Christmas, but Boxing Day'd it with fam at Bronte.


Took a roll or two at Bondi,


and jumped a train to Moss Vale, again smuggling onboard the only family member disallowed by the transport authority.


We gathered up cherry plums on leaving Moss Vale,


flew down the escarpment with steaming breaks and faced down a bull in Kangaroo Valley,


where we were invited to stay at this wonderful permaculture farm,


with Peter and Vasuda.


After taking an edible weed workshop on the farm and after a fun, shooting-star kind of New Year's Eve with Peter, Vasuda, Zoe and her friends Andy and Paddy, we climbed up Bellawongarah,


where we spotted great swathes of Ginger lily (Hedychium gardnerianum), a non-edible garden escapee from the Himalayas that is apparently part of the lung cancer solution.


We rocketed down the mount to Berry and spoke at the local bookshop,


before setting up camp a few kms out of town on Broughton Creek.


We've been on the road for over two months now and most days have been fairly sweet, but on leaving Berry for the coast...



At the end of the day we came and stayed with Claire Wilson and her bike polo friends in Gerroa. Claire is a Warm Showers host, writer and gardener who lives without a car, and she offered the perfect antidote to our first day on South Coast roads.


We're off to Nowra today to speak at DeanSwift Books at 3pm. If you're in the neighbourhood, please come and say hello.

Thanks for joining us here again, Dear Reader. We hope that wherever you are, your soils are moist, your food is freshly-picked and your legs are feeling strong up the hills.

Friday, 2 January 2015

From the Snowy to the Yarra (Orbost to Warburton)

We set out from Orbost with the prospect of travelling almost 100 kms along the East Gippsland Rail Trail, passing over the Snowy River,


and past an incredible hedge of wild lettuce (Lactuca virosa), an early relative of cos that is also called opium lettuce. Yes, it is mildly psychoactive taken in large quantities and is supposed to have a chill pill effect; good for people suffering from high blood pressure.


After about 10 kms on the trail we decided that the rough surface was better suited to mountain bikes and that our heavy bikes on touring frames and tyres were not really suited. We got back on the bitumen and rode with the noisy ones to a wonderful little caravan park in Nowa Nowa that sported this awesome open communal kitchen, and whose owners greeted us with just-picked strawberries and fresh eggs. Thanks Helen and Neil!


With more rain about we stayed a few wet nights, swimming during the sunny days in the creek.


While at Nowa Nowa we received an invitation to join some friends in Traralgon for Christmas. We had just a day to ride 170 kms, not quite manageable for us, so we took off early in the morning passing these roadside walnut trees,


noting the central problem of our culture: paid for food, or as Daniel Quinn puts it:
Making food a commodity to be owned was one of the great innovations of our culture. No other culture in history has ever put food under lock and key – and putting it there is the cornerstone of our economy, for if the food wasn't under lock and key, who would work?

After 50 kms of riding we arrived at Bairnsdale station with a bright blue box to help smuggle Zero onto the train to make up the remaining 120 kms.


We hadn't been separated from Zero the other times we smuggled him on public transport. He always kept quiet because he knew we were there, beside him. This time he whined for us from the cargo carriage and we were paid a visit from the conductor, who thankfully was delightful and explained that next time we travel we have to have a proper regulation travel box for our dog-kin. Even though this is absurd, we weren't about to argue with this nice fella. He didn't kick us off the train and we got to Traralgon, where our friend Ben Grubb met us and led us through the town and out into the outlaying fields to his parents' home.


We all got to work preparing for the feast. Patrick and Ben killed and dressed a chicken,


Jaala and Shannon Freeman (friends of ours from Daylesford, and who are also Grubb family members) joined the festivities and helped Jim and Jeni (Ben's parents) and Meg in the food preparation. It was a joyous collective effort using herbs, vegetables and fruits from the garden,


to deliver a delicious lunch. Thanks earth! Thanks chicken. Thanks Grubbs and Freemans.


The following day more food prep continued, turning cherry plums,


into fruit leathers,


until it was time to thank Jim and Jeni for so generously hosting us, and say goodbye, Zeph feeling pretty poorly with a cold. Ben rode with us for several kms showing us the back roads and short cuts, and


he also helped Zero catch a rabbit by blocking one end of a drain with sticks and his feet. It is a technique worth finessing...


Patrick butchered the rabbit, apportioned a share to Zero and we kept the rest for later in the day. Not far on from the rabbit catch we came across Aaron, a solo cycle tourer on his maiden voyage. Go Aaaron!


We farewelled Aaron, and a little later on Ben, and rode into the altered country of dirty coal.


About 70% of water in Australia is used by industry, a remaining 20% is used by government and a tiny percentage, less than 10%, is used in domestic use. As we rode past the old relic of old thinking that is Yalourn power station we listened to the millions of litres of water running through the cooling towers, reflecting on these figures.


We ate our free lunch a little further on, poaching the rabbit for 4 minutes in the billy and separating the soft and tender meat from the bone.


On another invitation, from an old Hepburn Relocalisation Network friend Liz, we visited Entropia eco-village near Moe. Liz is one of a number of residents who are about to live rent free on the 20 acre site for one year and be filmed for a documentary, which sounds a bit like Hippy Big Brother. Watch that space!


There are a number of small or tiny houses being built at Entropia, which came about after Samuel Alexander's book of the same name.


Part of the land is bush and we found a few geebungs (Persoonia linearis) growing there. When the fruit is ripe it will yellow and fall to the ground. The skin and the seed was traditionally discarded when eaten.


Certainly Woody found utopia at Entropia.


But the dystopian road called us back, and the prospect of home.


Play fighting has been a fun part of our day to day. It gives the boys an opportunity to push back from we ever steering adults. It builds strength and body control and develops emotions that can cope under physical pressure.


Research is another thing we've all been learning: how to find out stuff that interests us and grow our knowledges.


By the time we reached Yarragon, Zeph was on the mend from his cold but Meg and Patrick were starting to fall apart. We've all been fit and strong the whole way and now in the final weeks our defences are crumbling. We nestled into this little wetland forest setting up our version of a MASH rehab camp,


but after another short leg we figured some hot water and a place to get out of the strong winds was needed in Warragul.


We were all sporting hacking coughs and rode up to Neerim South in blustery, wet conditions and again took refuge in a motel room. The next day the winds abated and the sun shone and we rode through the prettiest country, passing wild displays of the sweet flower of the coffee substitute chicory (Cichorium intybus),


and later moist valleys filled with giant tree ferns,


along quiet C roads with little traffic.


We rode 66 kms to Warburton in time for New Years eve,


to stay with our friend Maya Ward in her tiny house that she designed and helped build,


and to see in the New Year a festive picnic followed by fireside music and intimate chats.


The first day of 2015 saw Zeph gearing up for high school. Go Zeph!


Maya and her lovely man James treated us to delicious meals and restorative places. Thank you both so much, it has been a gentle few days in beautiful Warburton and now we are ready to begin our final leg towards home.


We wish you, Dear Reader, a peaceful and productive International Year of Soils, filled with great adventure, slow travel, encouraging friends and free, walked-for food.