Water cubes!

You might think that the depths of winter is a time when no-one does anything on site, but we have been busy during January, particularly with water cubes / IBCs.

Today marks the arrival of the first seed potatoes and onion sets. Some are in the Association shed for collection and others will arrive as the weather gets a little less frosty at night. As you collect your harvest-in-preparation, remember the basics. Make sure everything is stored in a light, frost-free area. In addition, separate out the potatoes (some find it best to put them on cardboard trays).

We have also been taking delivery of more IBCs (water cubes). As they arrive they will be left near the plot of those who ordered them. There are also some spare pallets by the Association shed which you are welcome to take if you need to raise the IBCs off the ground.

You will recall that we exchanged emails on the subject of water harvesting: the Mark 1 harvester is now up and collecting (along the central path to the end opposite the main gate, then look left). This is what you should see.

The cost of this was minimal – just fittings – so we can collect even more free water for nothing! Neither did it take very long to plan or construct.

A year on, the violent winds in February have brought forward the construction of the water harvester Mark 2!

The posts holding the front section in place were clearly not up to the task and when they broke off, the rest of the structure toppled over. Impressively, the perspex sheets remained intact and the larger posts suffered only minor damage. For the Mark 2, the ‘sail effect’ of the back section was reduced by a third by removing one of the perspex panels and setting them up horizontally. This obviously reduces water collecting ability, but is a worthwhile trade-off if the structure gains in stability.

Supplementary posts were added at the sides and extra coach bolts fix the tops of these posts to the wooden frame beneath the perspex sheets. The difficulty has been finding moments when it has not been pouring or blowing a gale to be able to fix the roof onto the structure; there are also some extra chains holding it place … which seemed to have worked, since the night after the Mark 2 was installed was particularly windy. In the morning, nothing had moved: long may it last!

There is an even more extravagant idea along the path that leads past the geese. The impressive thing here is that it took just a couple of days to transform this area and to use the massive surface area to start to collect water. Have a look at the ‘stable’ with the zinc roof …

About the Author

Simon Barefoot has been the President of the Association for quite some years. His hands-on approach includes trimming the hedges, cutting the grass and encouraging the cultivation of flowers, vegetables and fruit on our special site. He runs the seed order scheme and is involved with the poultry ‘co-operative’. Promoting rainwater collection and low-tech crop management are important interests.