Property
GIY Monaghan
Interested in growing your own food?
Next Meeting of GIY (Grow It Yourself) Monaghan on Wednesday 1st February @ 7.30pm sharp at The Market House, Monaghan.
The meeting will commence with a discussion on
Beetroot  starting promptly at 7.30pm followed by announcements.
This month's talk will be on all aspects of growing potatoes by renowned expert Dermot Carey ( Irish Times)   This will be followed by a Q & A session and the February vegetable calendar.
There will be a free raffle of a brand new garden implement for all attendees at the meeting.
In order to cover our running costs we would like to ask for a voluntary contribution of €2 per person. This money will only be used for the running of GIY and is governed by Revenue charity rules.
GIY networks aim to take the ''self'' out of ''self-sufficiency'' by getting back-garden growers together on a regular basis to talk, learn from each other and exchange tips, produce and war-stories!  The meetings are open to people interested in food growing at all levels, i.e. from growing a few herbs on the balcony to complete self-sufficiency, from beginners to old hands.
Hundreds of people are involved in existing GIY groups around Ireland and activities include talks on specific food-growing topics, garden visits, seed swaps, produce bartering, mentor panels and the return of the meitheal (where growers get together in one another’s gardens to carry out some growing related task).  For more information please email giymonaghan@gmail.com or see http://www.giyireland.com/events
GIYMonaghalogo
Interested in growing your own food?
Next Meeting of GIY (Grow It Yourself) Monaghan on Wednesday 1st February @ 7.30pm sharp at The Market House, Monaghan.
The meeting will commence with a discussion on
Beetroot  starting promptly at 7.30pm followed by announcements.
This month's talk will be on all aspects of growing potatoes by renowned expert Dermot Carey ( Irish Times)   This will be followed by a Q & A session and the February vegetable calendar.
There will be a free raffle of a brand new garden implement for all attendees at the meeting.
 
GIY (Grow it Yourself) Monthly Column – February 2012
GIY (Grow it Yourself) Monthly Column – February 2012
The other evening I was going through some notes from a course on soil fertility I attended a few years back with Jim Cronin on his smallholding in Bridgetown, Co Clare.  Jim is a rare breed – a wise sage who wears his considerable wisdom lightly.   The two greatest materials for returning fertility to soil, he says, are seaweed and homemade compost.  Both rank a "10" on his scale of fertility. Farmyard manure composted for one year ranks an "8" while fresh manure (oddly) only ranks a "7". On the other hand a very old farmyard manure heap with nettles growing on it only ranks about a "1", because all the nutrients have leached away.
So how do you make compost properly? 
Treat your heap not as place where you can happily dump all manner of stuff from the kitchen and garden, but with love and respect! It’s like making a loaf of bread - make sure you have the right mix of ingredients. With compost you have to have a 50/50 mix of green and brown material and you have to build up the layers carefully.
The brown layer can consist of straw, hay, wood ash, cardboard, twigs, leaf mould, soil or garden "sweepings"

The green layer should contain seaweed, farmyard manure (hens, pigs, ducks, cows etc), grass, hedge clippings and kitchen waste (veg only).

Jim is a fan of completely open heaps - that is, you basically pick a corner of your garden and start a heap on bare soil which you dig roughly before you start (which encourages earth worms to come up through the heap). There are no "walls" but the basic measurements of it should be about 4ft wide and deep. Start with a brown layer such as straw or twigs of at least 10 inches.
Turn the heap with a fork monthly to aerate it - cover it with cardboard or old carpet to keep the worst of the weather off it. Carry on adding alternate layers of 10 inches or so of brown and green. When you get to about 6ft high its time to move on to a new heap and let that one to rot down. How long this takes depends on what’s in it - could be 4-6 months but you will know when its ready by the fact that you have a nice crumbly compost with few or no traces of straw in it - in other words that everything has rotted down. 
The overall goal is that you be self-sufficient in the material that you need to fertilise your soil - or as Jim puts it - you "close the gate on fertility". He estimates that you will get approx 20-30 wheelbarrows of compost from each heap you make. That sounds a lot, but each spring you will need a wheelbarrow of compost for each square yard of veggie bed.
Things to Do This Month
To Do
Turn over the soil only if the weather is dry – if the soil sticks to your boots it’s too early for digging!  Keep off the soil to prevent soil compaction - use timber planks to stand on for access.  If you have not already done so order/buy your seeds, spuds and onion sets.  “Chit” or sprout seed potatoes – put them in a container (e.g. used egg carton or empty seed tray) and leave them in a bright warm place.  Check the pH of your soil – you can buy a soil pH testing kit in any garden centre.  Lime your soil now if required (to reduce acidity in very acid soils), particularly important in your brassica bed.
Sow
Finally, we can sow some seeds.  On a sunny windowsill indoors, in a heated greenhouse or on a heating mat: sow celery, globe artichokes, celeriac, leeks, onions, lettuce, tomatoes, peas, aubergines, peppers/chilli-peppers.  In polytunnel or greenhouse: beetroot, Brussels sprouts, summer and autumn cabbage, carrots, leeks, lettuce, radish. Outside: Weather permitting you can try planting out broadbeans, spinach, kohlrabi, onion and shallot sets, Jerusalem artichokes, parsnip and early pea varieties.
Harvest
Winter cabbage and cauliflowers, Brussels sprouts, spinach, kale and leeks.
Recipe of the Month – Spinach and Cheddar Souffle
This recipe is from Donna Hay’s Modern Classics cookbook.  The word souffle needn’t fill you with terror – it’s quite straightforward, if a little fiddly.  If you are growing spinach and have your own hens, then this is really a ‘store-cupboard’ recipe that won’t require a trip to the supermarket.
Ingredients:
1 bunch spinach leaves (about 400g)
60g butter
4 tablespoons plain flour
3 cups milk
4 eggs, separated
½ cup grated cheddar
a handful of breadcrumbs
Place the spinach in boiling water and remove after one minute and drain.  Squeeze all the excess liquid from the spinach and then chop.  Melt the butter in a saucepan over a medium heat.  Add the flour and stir until smooth.  Whisk in the milk and stir briskly until the sauce thickens.  Remove from the heat and stir through the spinach, egg yolks, cheese.  Season well with salt and pepper. Allow to cool to room temperature.  Preheat the oven to 210 degrees celsius.  Grease 4 x 1-cup capacity ramekins with butter and sprinkle with dry breadcrumbs to coat.  Beat the egg whites in an electric mixer until soft peaks form.  Gently fold one-third of the egg whites through the spinach mixture and then the remaining two-thirds.  Spoon in to the ramekins and place them on a baking tray.  Bake for 15 minutes until puffed and golden.  Do not open the oven door while cooking.
Tip of the Month – Rejuvenate perpetual spinach
Perpetual spinach plants may be looking a little tired at this time of the year but with the milder weather should also be showing signs of new growth, particularly at the centre of the plant. Cut the larger outer leaves with a sharp knife at the bottom of the stem so that the plant can concentrate on this new growth.
Michael Kelly is a freelance journalist, author and founder of GIY Ireland.
GIY aims to create a healthier and more sustainable world by inspiring and empowering people to grow their own food. There are 100 GIY groups around Ireland and 12,000 GIYers involved.  For more tips, information and support visit www.giyireland.com.
GIYMonaghalogo
The other evening I was going through some notes from a course on soil fertility I attended a few years back with Jim Cronin on his smallholding in Bridgetown, Co Clare.  Jim is a rare breed – a wise sage who wears his considerable wisdom lightly.   The two greatest materials for returning fertility to soil, he says, are seaweed and homemade compost.  Both rank a "10" on his scale of fertility. Farmyard manure composted for one year ranks an "8" while fresh manure (oddly) only ranks a "7". On the other hand a very old farmyard manure heap with nettles growing on it only ranks about a "1", because all the nutrients have leached away.
So how do you make compost properly? 
Treat your heap not as place where you can happily dump all manner of stuff from the kitchen and garden, but with love and respect! It’s like making a loaf of bread - make sure you have the right mix of ingredients. With compost you have to have a 50/50 mix of green and brown material and you have to build up the layers carefully.
The brown layer can consist of straw, hay, wood ash, cardboard, twigs, leaf mould, soil or garden "sweepings"

The green layer should contain seaweed, farmyard manure (hens, pigs, ducks, cows etc), grass, hedge clippings and kitchen waste (veg only).

Jim is a fan of completely open heaps - that is, you basically pick a corner of your garden and start a heap on bare soil which you dig roughly before you start (which encourages earth worms to come up through the heap). There are no "walls" but the basic measurements of it should be about 4ft wide and deep. Start with a brown layer such as straw or twigs of at least 10 inches.
 
2012 Household Charge for Residential Properties
2012 Household Charge for Residential Properties
The 2012 Household Charge came into effect on 1st January 2012.The charge is  €100 per annum. All Owners  of residential property in Ireland are liable for the charge on each residential  property they own as at 1st January 2012. Owners who live outside Ireland are expected to register for and pay the charge.
There are no income related or age related waivers apart from a waiver for people getting mortgage interest supplement. However there are certain estates where the households are exempt from this new tax. Click here for full details on the Charge and exemptions.
houses
The 2012 Household Charge came into effect on 1st January 2012.The charge is  €100 per annum. All Owners  of residential property in Ireland are liable for the charge on each residential  property they own as at 1st January 2012. Owners who live outside Ireland are expected to register for and pay the charge.
There are no income related or age related waivers apart from a waiver for people getting mortgage interest supplement. However there are certain estates where the households are exempt from this new tax. Click here for full details on the Charge and exemptions.
amatinio
 
Over 6,000 Households Register For New Charge
The Household Charge Project Board says the charge has been paid for over 6,000 properties and direct debits have been set up for over 1,200 homes.
People have until 31 March to register, but must register by 1 March if paying by instalments.
The board says an online system - householdcharge.ie - has been set up allowing homeowners to register their households and to make payment with a credit or debit card.
Payment can also be made by cheque, postal order or at local authority offices.
A spokesperson for the website said it experienced some technical problems today causing people to make duplicate entries.
The spokesperson said that those who registered will not be charged twice.
Opponents of the charge are stepping up their campaign against it.
The national steering group of the Campaign Against the Household Charge is meeting next week ahead of a national protest scheduled for ten days' time.
The group says it is confident that as many as 50% of households will not register for the charge.
The Government says the household charge is an interim measure and that a comprehensive and equitable valuation-based property tax will be introduced in about a year's time.
houses
The Household Charge Project Board says the charge has been paid for over 6,000 properties and direct debits have been set up for over 1,200 homes.
People have until 31 March to register, but must register by 1 March if paying by instalments.
The board says an online system   householdcharge.ie has been set up allowing homeowners to register their households and to make payment with a credit or debit card.
Payment can also be made by cheque, postal order or at local authority offices.
 
GIY (Grow it Yourself) Monthly Column – January/February 2012 by Michael Kelly
GIY (Grow it Yourself) Monthly Column – January/February 2012
by Michael Kelly
Every year I worry a little about whether I will find enthusiasm for growing my own food again – what if the year turns and I just don’t have any interest any more?  I always take a decent break from the veg patch in December – it’s the one month when there’s very little work to do and the garden will forgive you if you don’t show up.  The “to-do” list is always full of things that no sensible person really bothers with – like cleaning your spade and mending fences and the like.  So it’s a lazy month.  But then BOOM, the clock moves over New Year’s Eve and in to New Year’s Day, and you wake up bleary eyed in to 2012 and according to all popular wisdom it’s now January and there’s loads of work to do again.  How did that happen?
It doesn’t help of course that January can bring with it worse weather than December – it just doesn’t feel like spring, and of course officially it’s not spring – it’s still winter.  The days are still short and cold and the garden is generally uninviting.  Little wonder then that my enthusiasm for GIYing generally doesn’t show up until later in the year (usually March), when you can practically smell growth in the air.
In the meantime, a trick I’ve discovered is to get stuck in to some seed sowing.  The cold weather and short days make it tricky to grow seedlings well at this time of the year (they get “leggy” as they literally reach for the sunlight) but you can get around that by putting them on a bright windowsill and investing in a warming mat or cable which gives seeds ‘heat from beneath’.  At this time of the year stick to vegetables that need a long growing season like tomatoes and peppers (they will benefit ultimately from the head start) or very quick growing veg like salad crops (mizuna, salad rocket, mustards etc).  Approach seed sowing at this time of the year with a devil may care attitude – they may grow or they may not but sod it, it’s still worth it – there’s simply nothing like seed sowing to get the GIY juices flowing again.  Happy New Year from GIY!
Things to do
To Do
Plan. This is the time to decide where and what you are going to grow this year.  If you are just starting out join your local GIY group for advice and check out our website for handy “getting started” guides and videos.  Consider building or buying raised vegetable beds.  Order your seeds, onions sets and seed potatoes. Turn over the soil in February only if the weather is dry – if the soil sticks to your boots it’s too early for digging!  “Chit” seed potatoes – put them in a container (e.g. used egg carton or empty seed tray) and leave them in a bright warm place to sprout.
Sow
In mid Feb, in seed trays and pots on a sunny windowsill indoors sow celery, globe artichokes, celeriac, leeks, onions, lettuce, tomatoes, peas, aubergines, peppers/chilli-peppers.  Weather permitting outside you can try sowing broadbeans, spinach, kohlrabi, onion and shallot sets, Jerusalem artichokes, parsnip and early pea varieties.
Harvest
You may still have winter cabbage, perpetual spinach, chard, leeks, kale, cauliflowers and Brussels sprouts in your veggie patch and depending on how successful your growing/storage regime last year was, you may well still be tucking in to stores of potatoes, celeriac, carrots, parsnips, onions, cauliflower, jerusalem artichokes, winter squash, pumpkins, leeks and red cabbage.
Recipe of the Month - Colcannon
Serves 4
I love the warming earthiness of colcannon – it’s my favourite way to eat cabbage.  You can also use kale for this recipe.
Ingredients:
500g of cabbage – stalks removed and shredded
500g potatoes, scrubbed
2 sticks butter
150ml hot milk
4 spring onions, finely chopped
Steam the potatoes in their skins for a half hour, then peel and mash them.  Add a lump of butter. Season well.  Meanwhile steam the cabbage or kale in a small amount of boiling water until tender.  Don’t overcook.  Put the milk in a pan and throw in the spring onions, simmering for about 5 minutes.  Add this and the cabbage/kale to the spuds and beat well.  Serve with a knob of butter on top and sprinkle with some parsley.  Some chopped ham or crispy bacon added in before serving also works a treat.
Tip of the Month – Don’t Tread on Me
Be careful not to get too enthusiastic about preparing soil at this time of the year.  If you work on soil when it’s wet, it will damage the soil structure.  If the soil sticks to your boots when you walk on it, then you shouldn’t be walking on it.  If you have to walk on the soil to get at your veggies, put a plank of timber down and walk on that instead.  The timber distributes your weight more evenly.  If you haven’t already done so, it’s worth covering down an area of your soil to warm it up – use a cloche or black polythene.  This will make the soil warm up far quicker than it would otherwise and will mean you can start sowing in it far earlier.  In very wet weather it will also help to dry the soil out.
GIYMonaghalogo
Every year I worry a little about whether I will find enthusiasm for growing my own food again – what if the year turns and I just don’t have any interest any more?  I always take a decent break from the veg patch in December – it’s the one month when there’s very little work to do and the garden will forgive you if you don’t show up.  The “to-do” list is always full of things that no sensible person really bothers with – like cleaning your spade and mending fences and the like.  So it’s a lazy month.  But then BOOM, the clock moves over New Year’s Eve and in to New Year’s Day, and you wake up bleary eyed in to 2012 and according to all popular wisdom it’s now January and there’s loads of work to do again.  How did that happen?
It doesn’t help of course that January can bring with it worse weather than December – it just doesn’t feel like spring, and of course officially it’s not spring – it’s still winter.  The days are still short and cold and the garden is generally uninviting.  Little wonder then that my enthusiasm for GIYing generally doesn’t show up until later in the year (usually March), when you can practically smell growth in the air.
 
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