Saturday, July 01, 2006

Mamey Sapote Dessert Sauce is Yummy

Experimenting with Mamey Sapotes, I have made up a sauce to go with banana pancakes. The guests can't choose between the black sapote sauce and the mamey sapote sauce - they think both are wonderful.

I have started selling it to the fruit tasters, but they are not sure how to use it, so I have taken a photo of the pancakes - just looking at it makes my mouth water - and will post the photo above the sauces, just like in a japanese restaurant where you get to see what it looks like before you choose.

Thursday, June 29, 2006

Party time in the Black Sapotes

We are currently harvesting Black Sapote - and so are the Pied Currawongs, Pale Headed Friarbirds, Spotted Catbirds, and several species of honey eaters, and Spectacled Flying Foxes (no they dont actually wear specs - it's a ring of pale fur around each eye. This afternoon we picked about 6 cartons - and left some of the fruit at the top of the trees too high for us to reach for the bird gang. It's a small crop compared to previous years - caused by the tree being stressed last year.

It's great to have Black Sapote on the fruit tasting. The name 'chocolate pudding fruit' captures everyone's imagination - people are amazed at the texture (yes it really is puddeny) and the colour (yes it really LOOKs the colour of chocolate) - and we cannot keep up with the demand for our fruit leather of Black Sapote mixed with coconut. Which is why we have picked as much of the fruit as wevcan today, before the birds and bats finish the crop for us.

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

The sad story of the vegetable garden

This year, the vege garden has been replanted THREE times so far - first in March, as an optimist before we left for the UK I thought it might be possible to get the veges going early - you never know what the weather is going to be - of course they were washed away with the heavy april rains. So Diane our house sitter tried a second time - she did not realise what she was up against and once again little survived. Now dad has been up here for a week and has put in a complete replant. This morning I woke up to a heavy downpour and thought - oh damn - the tomato seeds will never survive this. We are now talking about how to roof the vege garden beds with plastic to protect them. Time will tell.

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Two weeks On

Pigs are having a nice time
There is major pig damage throughout the orchard - digging up areas under the breadfruit and on the edges of orchard with the neighbours who have long grass. Rod - a neighbour - was driving past and saw the pig - a very large boar - in our orchard and completely unconcerned by the traffic. He rang us when he got home - Digby was just getting breakfast for the guests, so he got the gun and went off to see if he could shoot it. Alas, long gone.

Fertilising after the mangosteen crop
The mangosteens have now finished - there were the odd small ones still to be found scrabbling around under some trees. So now we are concentrating on feeding the trees to replace the nutrients from the fruit which has been picked and removed from the system. Last year, DPI researchers were able to give the exact nutrient breakdown for a mangosteen, so we could actually calculate the weight of fruit, and then the exact fertiliser load. Our main problem is we need large amount of potassium, which does not come easily in organic form. However we have managed to find a premixed blend which is organic certified which will fill the gap.

New mangosteen seedlings refound
Before we left to go overseas in April, we planted out 20 small new mangosteen seedlings in the back corner of the farm. We had tried to grow Salaks there, but they were not happy in the red clay soil, so we pulled them out to replace them with the mangosteens. All these seedlings were now hidden in 2 metre grass, and it was difficult to find them. One tree was accidentally slashed in the search and will have to be replaced. I guess I should be happy it is only one. I have been spending time down at the local grocery store digging around in their rubbish to extract the cardboard to use as mulch. This should keep the grass at bay for 12 months.

Pruning the breadfruit
Digby is madly pruning the breadfruit. I can't bear to look - high up the tree, hanging on with one arm, and using a chainsaw in the other. The pruning needs to be done now to give the trees time to recover before the next harvest in 2007. The idea is that by cutting the tree from a 20 metree tree to a 3 metre tree, the fruit will be easy to pick. The worry is that there will be no fruit at all.

Monday, June 12, 2006

Wanderers Return to the Cape

It is great to be back - 8 weeks is a long time to be away and the work to bring the orchard under control is huge. The grass is about 2 metres tall and apparently it hasn't stopped raining since we left with the annual total now up to 6 metres for so far for 2006.

We have launched into the farmwork with great enthusiasm, and we managed to get the first fruit tasting running last Monday, searching for fruit amongst the jungle to discover what there was to put on the menu. so now we are all systems go with both the B&B and the tasting operating again.

Digby climbed the Yellow Mangosteen tree to pick Mangosteens and the Cassowary and two chicks appeared while he was up the tree to browse underneath for the fallen fruit. They must be hungry. An interesting viewpoint looking down on them - one not many people have!

The beehive looks like it has had problems - only a few bees left and they appear very sluggish, though it is cold at the moment.

We are still picking Mangosteens and able to put them on the tasting - this must be one of the latest crops - normally they are around in March/April.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Cycling the Great Glen Way

We decided to cross Scotland from west to east on bicycle via the Great Glen Way which goes from Fort William on the west to Inverness on the east - about 80 miles, a lot of it along a very old canal built in the 1830s which is still used for boats today. Bicycles seemed a better option than walking along the canal for miles. We took three days to do it, and had some great moments flying down hills - the cycle track detoured off into the nearby mountains and used forestry tracks whenever the opportunity arose. Some of the memorable moments:

The deer in the ditch - still alive and alert. We assume it had been hit by a car and we rang national parks who were going out to check it - I still wonder what the outcome was
The traffic on the main roads - no shoulder on scottish roads so absolutely scary to cycle
The steep hills to push the bike up - sometimes a 60 degree slope
The exhilaration of the downhill runs which went for kilometers - and getting scared at the speed - jamming the brakes on and hoping they hold
The ness islands on the outskirts of Inverness -

However it was really hard work - not sure that I see myself as a cyclist with a future. I prefer a bit more luxury

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Scotland - the west highlands

Digby and I have just walked from Glasgow to Fort William along the West Highland Way - 153 kilometres over 8 days. We averaged 15 - 20 kilometres a day - a slow pace compared to other walkers. I like to think that we were savouring the experience! What things stand out?

The sheep/lamb/dog thing
All the sheep are lambing in May and the newborn lambs were endlessly entertaining. We watched a farmer use two sheep dogs to shift new lambs and mothers into an adjacent paddock. He used separate whistle commands for each dog. As all the lambs panicked and lost their mothers it seemed like pandemonium. They were very small only a week old - but each had a number on their back - which matched to their mother. We spoke to the farmer after the shift as all the lambs were bleating to relocate their mothers. "I'll give them half an hour to 'mother-up' and then I'll go and sort them out"- which meant matching numbers

Digby is famous
We found the warden at the YHA hostel at Rowardennan had been to Cape Trib two years before and done the fruit tasting - he recognised digby - small world isnt it.

Rannoch Moor
The walking on day 5 was superb - surrounded by mountains covered in snow, wide open spaces and no vehicle noise - we walked across the moor and into Glen Coe to stay at the Kingshouse, a hotel which has been there since the 1500s. It still looks the same landscape - large glacial U shaped valleys - high rounded mountain tops on all sides and no other houses.

Companionship of other walkers
We walked over several days with Bill and Stacey, on their honeymoon from Colorado, and Roger and Wendy from Cornwall - we all travelled at basically the same pace and kept meeting up each night. The comaraderie was great. At the end of the walk in the middle of downtown Fort William, Wendy and Roger had arrived first and were waiting for us to stagger in and appeared with whisky and glasses to toast the end of the walk, at the 'end' sign. This seemed surreal, surrounded by traffic, pedestrians, and all the other bits of civilisation.