Native-born Irish find the weather here annoying; it takes
an immigrant to be truly maddened. March was a blessed reprieve from our Gothic
winters, bringing enough sunlight and warmth that The Girl and I wore shorts
one day. Then April brought us back to single-digit temperatures and near-constant
rain. County Clare, thankfully, remained mostly dry for our camping trip, and
we shielded ourselves from the sharp winds shooting over the waters of Lough
Derg.
It remains chilly here, plausibly January rather than May,
and it might remain so all summer for all I know. We got a good start to the
year, adding a farmer friend’s ripening manure to our garden beds when it was
still winter, digging it in and letting it mix with the soil. Our garden beds
are almost full now, seeded in cabbages and broccoli, radishes and lettuce,
spinaches and kohlrabi, and our tomatoes and aubergines have a good start in
our greenhouse. As I jogged along the canal this morning, The Girl riding her
bicycle beside me, we passed neighbours turning the earth in their potato
fields and farmers clearing the fields of brushwood.
So little, though, has poked through the soil – they all
seem to be waiting for a better opportunity, and despite our early start most
plants have stalled. What few plants we have so far – spinaches and cabbages
--have adoring fans in the slugs. Only slugs, for the acid soil of our bogland
seems to prohibit snails, or I would be out every morning eagerly gathering
snails for lunch. Our hedgehog, however, seems to help with the slugs, and when
we get chickens we will get additional help. Our amourous pigeons have multiplied around
our beds and are thoroughly enjoying our cabbages – we don’t have a gun, so I’m
beginning to wonder whether any of the Victorian manuals I collect have
instructions for building pigeon traps.
If the weather is discouraging our garden crops, though,
they have not deterred the wild plants and grasses – I mowed our acre of land
here today, and got so much compost that our massive bin overflowed. I have been enjoying nettles, dandelions and cowslips – the
last two in salads, the first two sautéed or as tea, and all of them as wine.
As I have drawn my parsnip wines – one with ginger, one with elderberries and
one with beetroots – from the carboys and bottled them, the empty carboys have
quickly been used for whatever weed is appearing around us.
Nettles are at the perfect size this month – before this
they are too small, and after this they get stringy – and fat hen,
jack-by-the-hedge and Good King Henry should be appearing soon. Hawthorn leaves
remain somewhat edible, although they are getting tougher and less tasty every
day as they get ready to bloom. Lime trees, also called lindens, are just
beginning to leaf, and as their leaves come in they can be eaten like lettuce.
May’s sun and warmth offers a good opportunity for green
manure crops like comfrey – its deep roots bring nutrients from deep in the
soil, and its soft tissues decompose quickly in the compost. We like to take
the comfrey that grow wild down the road and cut them, and bring them in
wheelbarrows to our compost bin; in six months or so they will give us several
wheelbarrows full of rich compost that we can add to our soil for free.
It’s raining again now, as it does for days at a time here.
Yet that’s the price we pay for such lush country, and once in a while, when
the sun comes out, it looks like the postcards.
Photo: The forest in Tuamgraney, County Clare.
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