24.7.24

Seeds

A sunflower with seeds on a blue surface

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A hand holding a flower

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You are supposed to pick seed from the strongest plant. None of my “Giant Yellow” sunflowers were very spectacular – but that’s not going to dissuade me from replanting it next year. Maybe its progeny will have a better handle on Old Street?

A sunflowers in a blue container

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Once the Velvet Queen sunflower has dried out, I will do the same with these seeds.

A green container with dried plants

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Buckwheat.

A tray with dried flowers

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Yarrow.

A green tray with dirt and a red bug in it

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Limanthes.

A tray with white dust on it

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Borage.

A tray of dried flowers

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Calendula.

A green container with green leaves

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Phacelia.

In the past, I’ve grown more buckwheat. Mainly because as a household we eat a lot of the stuff which we buy, and it’s interesting to see how it grows. The takeaway is that you’d need an awful lot of acres to grow enough to be able to use it as food.

The Yarrow, I’m uncertain if the seed of this will work. I picked it up as a pot from Kirsten Hartvig, so I don’t know about its germination etc.

The Limanthes, Borage, and Calendula are now in their third generation from home-saved seed. The Phacelia? Lord knows whether this will work but it was lovely this year, smells fabulous and the bees adore it.

A bunch of plants from a metal pole

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Nigella.

A shelf with books and a plant

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Poppies.

Nigella (second gen) and Poppies are drying from shelves. And the Nasturtium from Findhorn will give me plenty of plants. I might even sow some of these now. Note to self, sow thinly.

A jar and a bowl of beans

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18.7.24

Compost in 2024

A large black container with a blue cap

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Unlike with last year’s batch, temperatures in my HotBin have been solidly in the green on its dial. It’s been steaming away. I’ve been filling it up with uncooked vegetable kitchen waste since February, when I set it up after the scaffolding had come down. I’ve been mixing these GREENS with BROWNS, these fine wood chips, and paper waste. If anything, I would say I need a higher proportion of BROWNS in future, but it still smells good and aerobically composted.

A large brown dirt in a container

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A group of cats in a garden

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A green bucket with dirt in it

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A close up of a hole in a concrete wall

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The cats were pretty fascinated as I prized off the lid and scooped out the very bottom later from the HotBin. It looks pretty disgusting, I’d agree.

A buckets of dirt and plants

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The first thing was to sieve the composted material. Because it’s a HotBin, and by its very nature moist, the result is not a fine tilth, but more like a cakey sludge. That’s a problem I was determined to solve.

A bag of trash inside of a cardboard box

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A green bucket filled with dirt

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A hand pouring dirt into a green bucket

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Because I’ve found that my own compost is too much like a Black Forest gâteau, I’ve given a lot of thought as to what to add to it to give it some lightness and also the ability to drain better. In the past, I’ve used Perlite, but it’s not really doing anything in the soil.

So, after I’ve come across it repeatedly in my research for “The Garden”, and I’m a huge fan of the Carbon Gold range of compost mixes, I thought I would try amending it with biochar. In the past, I have used Carbon Gold’s own biochar amendment, but I need larger quantities than the small punnets I can get from them.

A bucket of dirt and other plants

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Then for good measure, and because I’m a little concerned about the possible acidity of my mix, I added a handful or two of Moorland Gold which I’ve been trialling. Really, I’d like to be making all my own compost. I bought too much this year. It seems crazy to be buying compost and throwing away organic matter from the household.

A group of pots with dirt in them

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A group of small plants in pots

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Because I only scooped out the bottom layer, this process only resulted in four small pots-worth. I moved four Lemon Tree seedlings into these pots, which I have grown from pips. There’s a lot of light on the roof garden, so I’m hoping these thrive.

15.7.24

Steiner House

A building with many windows and trees

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It feels like yesterday, but it was two years ago in June 2022 that I first went to Steiner House in London. It is situated just west of Regent’s Park.

The visit reminded me of my drop-in to Cecil Sharp House way back in 2007. That, on the north side of Regent’s Park, is another building-as-ideological-portal. However, in that case the agenda was English Folk Arts, and in this it is the Anthroposophical ideas of Rudolf Steiner.

A person standing outside a store

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A table with food on it

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I chose that Saturday because there was going to be a market stall open selling biodynamic produce from a variety of growers. This is where I bought this delicious apple juice.

A bottle of apple juice

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On the ground floor there is a bookshop. It stocks many of Steiner’s own titles, largely lectures he gave which were dutifully transcribed and published, but also books by a wide range of authors on subjects, many not directly relating to Steiner thought. It’s a very interesting shop and has a more diverse offering than for instance than that at Swedenborg House.

A person standing in a library

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The exterior of the building, as you can see from the opening photo, has this wonderfully eccentric art-deco styling. And this is carried on into the building’s interior.

A staircase in a building

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A small plant in a corner of a bathtub

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In the stairwell cavity, there is what looks like a glass flowform. These are Steiner’s ritualistic sculptures, which are designed to energise water. It would be great one day to visit the Goetheanum in Switzerland and see more of this quirky architecture.

A room with a table and chairs in front of a bookshelf

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On the ground floor, the café and bookshop are open to the public. On the first floor, one is able to access the library. Here you can discover the full complement of Steiner’s hundreds of publications.

A shelf with books on it

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This shelf of art books caught my eye. I do like it that Anthroposophy covers the full range of human experience in the cosmos; from the most “spiritual” and etheric to the most “grounded” and integrated.

A shelf with boxes on it

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These boxes contain back issues of The Golden Blade, the Anthroposophical journal.

A group of books on a table

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Steiner 101.

 A book next to each other

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Steiner 102.

As I was making my way out, I asked the librarian which of Steiner’s own books that he would recommend for a neophyte. He selected the following for me How To Know Higher Worlds, Theosophy, and Occult Sceince. I’ve subsequently read these three, and they are certainly interesting, the first being the most indispensable.

In fact, my own recommendation to a beginner would be Steiner’s Autobiography The Story of my Life, which I think gives one a better idea of where he was coming from. The librarian also recommended the two books on the right as good supplementary reading. I haven’t read them…yet. If you get the opportunity, it’s definitely worth visiting Steiner House.

 [Update: I had the great fortune to present a talk with Charles Dowding in the Steiner building theatre in 2025.]

12.7.24

The Koliskos

In the course of my research for my book “The Garden” time and again, I came across the work of the husband and wife Eugen Kolisko (21 March 1893 – 29 November 1939) and Lili Kolisko (September 1, 1889 – November 20, 1976).

They shared with Ehrenfried Pfeiffer the role of putting the flesh on Rudolf Steiner’s biological theories. It is my understanding that, while Pfeiffer was tied up on other Anthroposophical business during Steiner’s “Agriculture Course” lectures, the Koliskos were present at Breslau for them. This was the birth of the Biodynamic movement, which this year is celebrating its centenary.

A hand holding a book

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Eugen Kolisko had a perhaps broader range of interest than his wife. This above is my copy of “Zoology for Everybody” (1944) that I discovered in the bargain bin in the bookshop at Emerson College. But his other works include writings on nutrition, natural history, geology, chemistry, medicine, even fiction.

Lili Kolisko, on the other hand, was dedicated to the scientific method. Early on, pursuant to Steiner’s esoteric ideas about the function of the spleen, through her microscope she discovered a new type of speckled platelet, which she and Steiner termed “regulator cells”. This reminds me somewhat of Wilhelm Reich’s microscopic investigations.

As much as Steiner himself celebrated her work, she was met with a cold shoulder by the medics and scientists of the Anthroposophical Society. These internal disagreements between the couple and other senior figures in the movement effectively drove them from Germany to resettle in England in the thirties. Eugen Kolisko died relatively shortly afterwards in 1939 leaving Lili in penury and eking out a living sewing purses.

A hand holding a book

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10 Euros on eBay.

A page of a book with pictures of cabbages

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with flowers and text

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a picture of plants in pots

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a variety of round objects

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with seeds and text

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a picture of a plant

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a picture of radishes

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AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a picture of beets

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AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a bunch of beets

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a picture of carrots

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with several pictures of plants

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a page of a book with a variety of vegetables

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a variety of potted plants

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a picture of plants

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A page of a book with a picture of plants

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In 1936 Lili Kolisko published “Moon and Plant Growth” in which she showed, by means of statistics and these beautiful photographs, how the influence of the waxing and waning moon could be used to optimise sowing. The Biodynamic idea is, in short, that you should plant root vegetables on a full moon, and leafy ones on the waxing moon.

A hand holding a book

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Agriculture of Tomorrow in the library at Steiner House.

The couple’s book, Agriculture of Tomorrow (1939) is probably their masterpiece. Although Eugen had compiled the research with his wife, just as they were about to start writing it, he died, leaving the task to her. In it, they set out a series of experiments exploring the influence of the moon and planets and the role of chemical elements on plant growth, and upon the subject of nutrition. They also perform a scientific breakdown of Steiner’s suggestions for the renewal of agriculture.

In a sentence that could be penned today, in the book’s introduction Lili writes, “I want to write therefore about the regeneration of agriculture, which is the basis of the physical existence of men. Without proper food mediating life-forces to the human organism, human beings cannot grow strong and healthy, nor become able to develop the clear minds and moral strength we so urgently need.”

A book with a drawing of a tree

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A group of carrots with stems

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AI-generated content may be incorrect.A hand holding a paper with a diagram

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A diagram of the seasons

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AI-generated content may be incorrect.A close-up of a fire

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AI-generated content may be incorrect.A close-up of a stag

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with a picture of a garden

AI-generated content may be incorrect.An open book with images of teeth

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A book with pictures of different shapes

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AI-generated content may be incorrect.A page of a book with images of plants

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Among the photographs in the book (see below) you can glimpse the Kolisko’s house, Rudge Cottage, Edge, Stroud in Gloucestershire. Lili Kolisko died there in 1976, and it’s interesting for me to reflect that at that very moment I was living only 3 miles away in Lypiatt, Stroud.

A building with a fence and plants

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Because I am in Gloucestershire often, with two uncles and aunts living just outside Stroud, and on this occasion travelling back from Wales, I thought I would drive past their old house and have a look.

A brick house with a driveway

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[Big shout out to Jason Warland]