Saturday, February 1, 2014

A Year in the Garden

Since I moved back to Leuven a couple of years ago, I've been trying to get our garden in shape and grow some veggies and herbs for the kitchen. I'm still learning, but things are improving. Here's some photos from the garden throughout the year.

I have three large trees at the bottom of the garden that had gotten out of control. After cutting and seasoning the wood last year, we had enough fuel for a patio fire-pit on several chilly nights.

A Fire Pit on Chilly Spring Nights

Herbs grow pretty well in our garden, we have parsley, rosemary and thyme all year round as well as chives, mint and coriander in the warmer months.

 Parsley, Mint Coriander and Chives

I planted a little red cabbage and broccoli in late summer, which has provided a few meals through the winter. Unfortunately, I didn't plant enough, trying to squeeze in an extra crop of potatoes that were eventually killed by blight.

Young Cabbage and Broccoli in the Summer

Winter Veggies in December


I tried a bunch of new veggies this year, some of which were very successful and some of which were disappointing. My chilli peppers did very well in boxes on the back of the shed and we had plenty of very hot peppers from August all the way to December. This year, I'm trying some earlier and more exotic varieties.

Chilli Peppers on the Back of the Shed

My cherry tomatoes did well, producing from July until mid-October when they were killed by blight along with two crops of potatoes. This year I am trying a very early variety that should bear fruit long before blight is a problem. Unfortunately only one courgette plant survived long enough to bear fruit but when it did it was prolific, providing all of the courgettes we needed for at least a couple of months.

Summer Vegies: Sweet Peppers, Chilli Peppers, Courgette and Tomatoes

My bell peppers (above) and watermelons (below) were both disappointing. The peppers were edible, but small and bitter.  The watermelons on the other hand were delicious, but never grew larger than a tennis ball. I think that both really needed the warmth of a greenhouse. This year I will try "Minnesota Midget", which produce many small fruit in a short growing season.

 A Tiny Watermelon

 Perhaps the strangest thing I started growing this year was mushrooms, which I think will be a good way of making the most of the darker parts of the garden. I tried grey oyster, yellow oyster and beech mushrooms, all of which grew OK at small scale on sterilized straw. This spring, I will try a giant batch of oysters and see what happens.

Yellow Oyster Mushrooms (top left)

It will be interesting to see how the new veggies do this year. I'm adding everything from Peruvian Oca to Root Parsley.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Big Island, Hawaii

Caren and I attended the HICSS 2014 conference on Big Island, Hawaii. Before the conference, we took five days of holiday to explore the island.

We started in the beach city of Kona. We had a bad case of jet-lag, which we treated with lots of good Hawaiian-grown coffee.

Kona coffee on the sea front at ' Lava Java'

We stayed at the Royal Kona Resort, right on the sea-front in Kona. It was lovely to wake-up to the sound of the pounding surf every morning. I really recommend this hotel if you are looking for a good value place to stay with a bit more soul than some of Big Island's mega-resorts. Its also an easy walk to the Kona shops, restaurants and bars.

View from our room in the Royal Kona Hotel

One of the best memories of our visit was a dawn whale watching cruise with Captain Dan McSweeney, a whale researcher who also does pleasure cruises from Honokohau harbour. We saw a pair of humpback whales breaching and jumping, as well as large schools of acrobatic spinner dolphins. Captain Dan was was an excellent tour-guide and I'd highly recommend him.

A pair of whales swimming together

A paddle-boarder with a humpback

After a few relaxing days in sunny Kona, we hopped in our hire-car and drove across the 'saddle road' to Volcanoes National Park. Big Island is made up of five volcanoes, the magma from which has built up the island over time. The most ancient flows are now verdant coffee plantations, pasture and forest, while the more recent flows are still bare black rock. Crossing the island over the saddle road means climbing 2000M (6400ft) through green foothills onto the scorched plateau of Mauna Loa and then back down towards the rainy capital of Hilo, before climbing another 1000M (3200ft) into the rainforest surrounding Volcanoes National Park. We rented a beautiful cabin in the Hale Ohia holiday village about two miles from the entrance to the park.

Our Cabin at Hale Ohia

The next day, we drove to the lookout at 6:30AM and saw dawn break over the glowing crater.

Volcanic Crater at Dawn

We spent the morning hiking through the park past steam vents, sulphur banks and through beautiful forests.

Steam Venting over the Cliffs

Caren and I on the Crater Hike

Magma Covered Road 

A Black Sand Beach

After a couple of restful nights in Volcanoes National Park, we packed up the hire car and headed to Hilton Waikoloa resort for the conference. To be honest, the 60-acre purpose-built resort, with its trains and mad-made lagoons was a little soulless for my taste, but fortunately it was an easy 3KM walk to the gorgeous public Waikoloa beach and the great Lava Lava beach bar.

 The Hilton Resort

Waikoloa Beach

A White Sand Beach 

 The ocean was teeming with life. I swam with lots of different kinds of fish and also sea turtles. My digital camera is waterproof but crappy, so excuse the quality.

An Inquisitive Little Fish

Swimming with Sea Turtles

Our visit to Hawaii was amazing. I would never have imagined that one island could have so many different faces. I hope I can return one day.


Our Last Sunset at Waikoloa Beach