reasonablygoodlife.com
Living the Reasonably Good Life: Recommended
http://www.reasonablygoodlife.com/p/recommended.html
Living the Reasonably Good Life. Take back your freedom. Reconnect with life. Live the RGL. Spinning a Spanish yarn. Wonderful and occasionally weird herbs (& fruit trees/bushes). Plants with purpose and Appletreeman. Heathers, blueberries, fruit trees and hedge plants. The Really Garlicky Company. DG Hessayon. The new vegetable and herb expert. And The new fruit expert. Martin Crawford. Creating a forest garden. David Tresemer. The scythe book. John Seymour. The new complete book of self-sufficiency.
evesappleshack.wordpress.com
Eco-useful PoW Orchardeering! | evesappleshack
https://evesappleshack.wordpress.com/2015/08/05/eco-useful-pow-orchardeering
Steps to retailing Scotland’s Orchard Apples from a Tardis. Mission UK Apple gets the Royal Stamp! This entry was posted in Uncategorized. August 5, 2015. Anything but Hard Graft! PL Traverse Moment – Yesterday @ EAS! Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. 50 Miles. org (Dunbar).
appletreeman.wordpress.com
Vines in Scotland | Appletreeman's Blog
https://appletreeman.wordpress.com/2014/06/05/vines-in-scotland
Tags: Vines; Scotland; Kippen; Black Hamburg; Grapes. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Google account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email. Visit our full website at:.
appletreeman.wordpress.com
About me | Appletreeman's Blog
https://appletreeman.wordpress.com/about
I have a passion for old walled gardens, orchards and wild foods, and I am currently searching the highways and byeways of Perthshire and beyond for trees and orchards…. I was trained in amenity horticulture at Writtle College and in Arboriculture at Merrist Wood College. The cider came in big barrels with a little tap , tasted rough and was very strong. In fact I used to scrump apples from local orchards for fun, and I always wondered why they tasted so awful… they were of course cider apples. Get every...
evesappleshack.wordpress.com
evesappleshack | Steps to retailing Scotland’s Orchard Apples from a Tardis | Page 2
https://evesappleshack.wordpress.com/page/2
Steps to retailing Scotland’s Orchard Apples from a Tardis. Back on “The Bridge”. Diversifying into GYO Desk Detox Plant Sales, local Baker McGill’s Supersize Scones erbs from the micro- orchard alongside 2015’s juices……Fruit’s Back Next Month! This entry was posted in Uncategorized. May 27, 2016. This entry was posted in Uncategorized. May 17, 2016. WEEK 2 Week 3 of Winter Basics Trial saw a 100% increase in Paper Sales and 900% in Mark McGill’s Morning Rolls! This entry was posted in Uncategorized.
foodeducationatstirlinguniversity.wordpress.com
Prelude to Spring | FEAST (Food Education At STirling university)
https://foodeducationatstirlinguniversity.wordpress.com/2015/03/20/prelude-to-spring
FEAST (Food Education At STirling university). Growing food, Food Co-operative and Food Education at Stirling University! The magic and science behind mulching. Springy Spring →. March 20, 2015. Winter is ending, days are getting longer, birds are enlarging their repertoire, the honey bees are making their first excursions, still half asleep and very clumsy. But most importantly, the council workers are starting to mow the grass again, liberating the real scent of Spring! Despite very unstable and variab...
treenurseryscotland.wordpress.com
Fruit Tree Nurseries | treenurseryscotland
https://treenurseryscotland.wordpress.com/list-of-fruit-tree-nurseries
Local native tree nurseries in Scotland. These are Scottish fruit tree nurseries growing or sourcing their stock locally and specialising in heritage and Scottish varieties. The information here is as accurate as it has been possible to get, but no guarantee is given or implied regarding accuracy. Please email. Any corrections or details of new nurseries. For local native woodland tree nurseries, see here. For Horticultural Tree Nurseries. In Scotland, see here. 75 Clouston St, Glasgow, G20 8W. Create a ...
treenurseryscotland.wordpress.com
Fruit Tree Nurseries | treenurseryscotland
https://treenurseryscotland.wordpress.com/list-of-nurseries/list-of-fruit-tree-nurseries
Local native tree nurseries in Scotland. These are Scottish fruit tree nurseries growing or sourcing their stock locally and specialising in heritage and Scottish varieties. The information here is as accurate as it has been possible to get, but no guarantee is given or implied regarding accuracy. Please email. Any corrections or details of new nurseries. For local native woodland tree nurseries, see here. For Horticultural Tree Nurseries. In Scotland, see here. 75 Clouston St, Glasgow, G20 8W. Create a ...
landfettler.blogspot.com
Fettlers on the Land: October 2016
http://landfettler.blogspot.com/2016_10_01_archive.html
Fettlers on the Land. Monday, 3 October 2016. Marina di Chioggia, Olympus and Pink Fairy. Sdobnaya and Christmas cactus. Other than eating lots of squash, we've also been eating lots of berries. Mainly raspberries, but we've also got our first cranberries this year. And the first flower has appeared on the Goji berries so maybe next year we'll have some of them, too. Both cranberries and Gojis should be wonderful dried, as a raisin alternative. The first Goji berry flower. The new strawberry bed.
landfettler.blogspot.com
Fettlers on the Land: January 2016
http://landfettler.blogspot.com/2016_01_01_archive.html
Fettlers on the Land. Sunday, 10 January 2016. Winter has finally arrived, although thanks to our microclimate we haven't had any snow, unlike the rest of southern Scotland and the Central Belt. The weather has been pretty atrocious but at least no flooding. We managed to see the New Year in with aurora borealis. That just has to be a good omen. We're just about to run out of onions, despite planting about 400 last year, but the rest of the alliums are still plentiful. Other veg are beginning to appear:.
SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT