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Growing Green

All that rain from last month seems such a long time ago now.  It’s been a stonking hot June & necessitated the mental watering regime again already.  But the results are fab (mostly).  This month we’ve been picking:

  • Mixed lettuce (Cut & Come Again, Iceberg & Cos).  They’ve cropped so well compared to last year but I fear we are running out of time now – seems its already too hot for the seeds to germinate…

  • Rocket (Salad, local Rocket & wild)
  • Silverbeet
  • Sorrel
  • Fresh herbs: coriander, chives (garlic & ordinary), parsley (curled & flat-leaved), tarragon, sage, dill, fennel & basil (purple & Genovese)
  • Marrows (the one below is ready for stuffing & seeds are scooped out & saved…)

  • Courgettes – some beauties already, this one’s nearly a kilo in weight

  • Broad beans – against all odds…  Take that you nay-sayers!  Please note the adorable new shoes in the shot below courtesy of dear friend Ditsch.

  • Peas – probably the best crop we’ve ever had ironically, because this year I just shoved the last of the seeds in the soil to get them gone, irritated that they usually crop poorly…  Note the beautiful shiny new aluminium worktop surface!

  • Peppers – well just the one so far actually.  The plants are laden with fruit already and it looks set to be a good year for them although no sign of them reaching epic, Fiona-like proportions so I shall no doubt still have pepper envy at the end of the season.  Still, since we didn’t pick these green crisp beauties until much later last year & had a mere handful of them,  I am very happy with progress so far.

  • Chillies – loads of them!  And a perfect temperature.

  • Tomatoes!  Yes, finally are tomatoes are ripening.  We’ve only picked a small handful so far but we look forward to July being full of them.
  • And talking of sweet red things… Yes it’s strawberry time again.  Sadly the crop has been very poor & although the plants look happier in their new position, it doesn’t look like they are getting quite enough sun now!  Time for a soft fruit re-think.

The pumpkins are growing away well and tiny squashes are forming on the Butternut plant. This was shot a couple of weeks ago now – the fruit is already turning a gorgeous yellow…

And the aubergine plants are well ahead this season, with Stripey Eggplants forming already:

Disappointments so far: carrots & spinach.  Carrots should have gone in the ground in February like last year but me being in the UK in Feb set things back.  I had carefully sowed thinly so I could succession sow in all the rows but first the rain washed the seeds away and then the sun was suddenly too hot already.  I’m gutted because I had sown some Atomic Red and Purple Haze carrots this year & frankly it’s not looking good for them.  We’re going to try experimenting with shading one half of the carrot bed to see if it makes an appreciable difference.

Not sure why the spinach failed again – I think it just got too hot too fast & the plants bolted.  Poor germination may be due to old seeds.  I’m going to purchase some fresh seeds from here and try to get a crop going in September.

With regards to flowers – well, what a difference a month makes!

The streamside beds and the tyre wall are awash with colour – blues of the cornflowers, borage & lobelia; pinks of the petunias, snapdragons & cosmos; oranges of the marigolds & zinnia and red geraniums…

The Bo-Flo-Grove remains a massive disappointment – and more importantly a waste of water.  I am refusing to give up on the few remaining tobacco plants and the odd zinnia & marigold but it will not be a stunning display by any means.  Next year the area will be given over to shrubs & comfrey plants & will only be watered twice a week.  We’ll give some thought as to how to retain moisture up there – the ground is ridiculously well-drained & impossibly stony.

Baking & Making

The loquat tree at our house in Topla was laden with fruit this month.  Once picked I needed to process them fast so I found a chutney recipe that used most of the fruit and made a salsa with the rest.

The chutney has fast become a favourite – deliciously sweet & gingery with a spicy kick.

I finally started sprouting seeds this month too.  I’ve successfully sprouted alfafa & mung beans  – in a jar, nothing fancy, rinse them out twice a day – and today I started chick peas off too.

And I’ve been making ‘comfrey stew’!  I need to feed my peppers & tomatoes & squashes but only 100% organic will do, so I’ve harvested a load of comfrey leaves and shoved them in a bucket with some water:

No, it doesn’t smell as bad as it looks – it’s MUCH worse than that!  But in a couple of weeks it will be organic yumminess for our plants.

Reading

Douglas Kennedy’s ‘The Big Picture’ was an enjoyable read, if far-fetched & mostly unbelieveable.  It’s hard to talk about the book without giving too much away but suffice to say that the reader is asked to accept too many contradictions…  The man who purportedly loved his family so much he put up with outrageous behaviour from his wife to keep the peace, does stuff which estranged him from his family forever; the guy who was so meticulous about stuff makes a sloppy error that means everything comes undone…

It wasn’t the world’s best written book it didn’t have a gripping plot or characters that make a lasting impression but it kept me entertained for a few nights…

I am now reading Haruki Murakami’s ‘The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle’ which was given to me by Marie & Jan the  German cyclists we befriended.  It’s for me to keep safe until they come to pick up their stuff again in the autumn but they insisted I read it in the meantime.

It’s a strange book & I’m not sure I’ve got into the rhythm of it yet.  More of that next month…

Work

June has been a game of two halves…

The month started with some busyness &, remarkably, some guests returning from last year!  It was great to see Roy again and we welcomed Jim back too, this time with his girlfriend Annie – our first Swedish guest.  Jon & Kirstie were a super couple from the UK who arrived at the beginning of June – and Steve was delighted to learn they had found us through Flickr (so all the effort he puts into updating his photo stream is finally vindicated – just got to get a guest or 2 via this blog now & all my efforts here will be worthwhile too!).  Then there was the wonderfully quirky German guy, Jorg, who fell for Daisy in a big way.

Kirsten was hiking in the nearby mountains & stayed for a few nights.  Shane (Australian) & Dave (Canadian) turned up around the same time and inspired by Kirsten did some hiking too – 1 night turned into 3 or 4.

Erick & Steve cracked on with getting stuff done whilst my time was pretty much taken up with watering the gardens (the compost tea tanks sure fills up quick with 10+ people on site!), cooking & cleaning.

I promised pics of the caravan – so here they are.  You can see the steps that Erick sawed up & dug in.  It actually looks a little different now.  The weather has been unsufferably hot the past few weeks so we have erected a sail over the front of the van, to create some shade for the early morning, and have velcroed mozzie nets over a few windows so we can keep the windows open all day & night.

And inside our cosy home…

The new fridge cupboard got finished:

And the kitchen got a re-vamp.  The shelf for the cups & glasses was moved into the new tea/ coffee making space – a dedicated ring is available for the kettle at all times without disturbing my cooking and all the drink making stuff is in one place.  A new shelf has been erected in its place and now all my herbs & spices are up out of the way, leaving the worksurface free from stuff & with maximum space available for food prep.  Erick & Steve beat aluminium sheeting into submission and covered the top of the kitchen cupboards to give me a shiny new surface that is easy to clean & durable.  Gone are the tiles that used to go manky when water got underneath them – goodbye potentially germ-harbouring material, hello hygiene!

Erick mowed the main campsite & did some strimming up on the top plot too, which was restored somewhat with the lads re-erecting the toilet & the shower.

Steve turned electrician again and completed our most exciting, money-saving project of the season yet – the 12v lighting system!  Having picked Sebastian’s brains whilst he was with us last month, Steve decided to put into play the solar panel & LED strip lights he’d purchsed from our mate John when back in the UK getting the caravan.  We’ve now got the solar panel charging a battery all day and then we use this battery at night to illuminate the building.  It’s fabulous and has considerably reduced our use of the  generator, which is saving us precious pennies.  We don’t even have to start the genny to charge laptops or mobile phones any more because these can be charged via the invertor connected to the battery for our solar powered fans.  We are generating way more power than we need to run the fans so the excess is being stored in a battery and being used via an inverter.  Genius!

Then there was nothing else for it but to make a start on the dreaded stone wall project.  Rocks were collected and assembled but it startd to really heat up and working with huge rocks became problematic other than for a few hours in the morning & at the end of the day, so the project stalled for a while.

Erick left and so did all the guests, just in time for us to host our big Family Camp Out for all our friends with kids.   25 adults, 18 kids, 12 tents, 1 camper van & some dogs made it a day to remember!  Despite all our (well, Steve’s) reservations it was a storming success – the kids had an absolute ball, the parents all got to chill with good food & alcohol with the kids asleep nearby and, importantly for us, folk got to experience camping Full Monte-style.  People were bowled over with their tents and comfy beds and frankly it was good for business!

It took us a day to dismantle all the tents and get the site back to normal but it was worth it – possibly even to be repeated at the end of the season!

Our next wwoofer, Tom, turned up just after the family madness (good timing dude!).  He was a laid back character from Oz but but by the time he got to us he’d pretty much had enough of travelling.  He was pretty jaded and also he didn’t get the experience that he wanted from us because it was only us 3 there – no other guests or volunteers – so he only stayed a few days but long enough to do a fantastic strimming job & to help Steve move the stone wall project on a bit further.

And so the second half of June has been dead quiet.  No guests, no volunteers, few enquiries & fewer bookings.  Instead of stressing (really, what can we do that we’re not already doing except chill & keep the faith?) we embraced the time & have had ourselves a lovely little holiday…

Oh, but we did manage to put up the second gazebo & finish sanding the table that Tom had all but done and restore it with some oil:

Yesterday we had a lovely Slovenian couple turn up unexpectedly.  They had been in Dubrovnik the day before & randomly met a Dutch guy who had stayed with us for a couple of nights 2 years ago.  He recommended that they visit us, so they did! What an incredible coincidence!

So, it seems our luck is turning again.  The enquiries are starting to come in thick & fast again and we have a few already converted to bookings.  Jim & Annie return tomorrow for their 3rd visit of the year and things are looking up on the volunteer front with a stack of people wanting to join us in July, August & September.  Maybe those stone walls will get re-built after all…?

Play

We took advantage of having someone around & left Erick in charge of the campsite a couple of times.  We escaped to party on Zanjice beach with Fi & Dave & some classic car enthusiasts who’d been travelling across Europe in their various gorgeous old cars (one of which was their mate Colin – a lovely guy we’d met when he visted the campsite a couple of years ago with Dave).  They’d ‘hired’ a bunch of beautiful young things (most of them loonies too!) to help them kick up a storm at the end of their epic trip and a proper DJ.  The theme was Underwater Kingdom & it was a riot!

Before all the guests buggered off, it was great to sit around the dinner table in the evenings with a bunch of folk from all around the world all swapping stories of travels & life & enjoying good food together.  And despite this being ‘our job’ we really did have a lot of fun.

There was lots of game playing going on too.  Roy had got hooked on Tac Tic when he visited last summer so was keen to play again.  Jon & Roy teamed up against me & Kirstie and then there was another couple hooked!  I introduced Dave & Shane to Quattro which they loved and played for hours and a few nights with a bunch of us round the table, we played Dice.

The best thing about the quiet period we’ve just had is that it coincided with our local friends being around.  Blazo came back from his latest stint on the ships and came to visit with the Denovici crew.  We shared the night of the Summer Solstice with them and gorged ourselves on fish, beautifully cooked by Nikola.

Then they came back a few days later to celebrate Blazo’s birthday.  We had amazing food – stacks of meat & yet again Nikola on the BBQ – great Rakija, lots of laughs & even some music-making… Nikola & Sasa took turns on Steve’s battered guitar & out came bongos & shakers & lots of singing with gusto into the early hours.  A fabulous, fabulous night.

And Daisy had fun too:

As luck would have it, our mates Katie & Tim were also having a quiet week in their yacht chartering business so they invited us to come & sail the Monty B from Bijela to Sveti Marko and overnight with them.  We locked everything up, left Daisy in charge and escaped to the water for 24 wonderful hours.  We had our first swim in the Bay this year, off the back of their beautiful sailing ketch on 28th June – shockingly late in the season to get in the water but hey ho…

We ate delicious food together, drank chilled wine in the sunshine & made merry.  It was the perfect day – not too hot that it was uncomfortable to lay out in & the evening was cool enough for us to get a decent night’s sleep.  All in all a wonderful treat…

And here’s us proving that 13 years of marriage is a good thing… (Happy Anniversary to us a few days before this!)

Nature Watch

June couldn’t have been more different than May weather-wise.  Not a drop of rain and stonking hot temperatures that take some adjusting to even for us.  We are filling the water tank to the brim whilst we can but in a week or so the pool we take from will be dried up and we will be monitoring our water use obsessively again.

The air has been filled with butterflies – Swallowtails, Scarce Sawllowtails, Mourning Cloaks, various fritillaries and a few we’ve yet to identify, notably this little monster:

It may be pretty but these critters were EVERYWHERE a week or so ago – bordering on plague proportions, flying out of the compost toilets every time we lifted the lid, generally a nusiance.  Does anyone have any idea what this is and how we would control invasions from them??

Here’s another butterfly yet to be named, much more benign…

And now its the crickets that are driving us mad.  There are tons of them in the building and I wouldn’t mind them being around except for the fact that they poo everywhere!  Sinks & surfaces have to be cleaned everyday and it’s getting really tedious.  Plus we’ve found them inside the bread bag having a chew, so the gloves are off and we’re letting Daisy do her worst!  Chasing these weird creatures as they jump about insanely keeps her entertianed for hours although they do end up with rather less legs than they started with by the time she’s done with them…

The edible doormice are back & taunting us with their scampering about in the roof space.  But at least we don’t hear them squeaking at nights anymore – YET!

This has been Mulberry Month, with the many trees in the neighbourhood laden with fruit.  Daisy and I trample over them every day as we go for our evening walk, through the clouds of buzzing bees that feed on the nectar and resolve to figure out how to get into these trees to pick the fruit, some sunny day.

And this is a rather cool glow worm that we’re seeing a lot around the campsite…

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The first weeks in September brought us a flurry of friends and activity.  Fresh blood on the scene is always welcome  – extra hands, fresh ideas – and an excuse to have a break and some fun…

We had been eagerly awaiting the arrival of Ray, our electrician friend ( sometimes also called Frank  – don’t ask!) who was going to help Steve purchase and install all the right kit to make our power supply safe.

Ray/ Frank

Ray did a brilliant job in a short space of time – he only had 2 days with us and was on a mission to achieve as much as he could.  Bless him, I think he was quite frustrated by Steve’s very Montenegrin approach: chill out, drink another cup of coffee, smoke another cigarette…  With just a few loose ends for Steve to finish, by the time Ray left there was a proper distribution box, everything was fused and safe, there was single cable in place that could be plugged into the genny to operate all the lights and sockets in the shower block and we had power in the workshop for the first time too!

He's electric!

The added bonus was Ray’s friend Shona.  We had never met Shona before & certainly weren’t expecting her to sing for her supper but she mucked in with everything and we warmed to her immediately.

Shona

We wanted to start our wine bottle window.  We’d been collecting bottles and finally had enough to complete one window but the tedious bit was taking all the labels off, cleaning and drying them.  Thankfully Shona was happy to help.  Here she is de-labelling bottles in the garden:

Shona & many green bottles

Once in the garden, we couldn’t get her out of it!  She was so happy pottering around doing all the little things I just didn’t have time for: staking the tomato plants which were laden with fruit and toppling over and also getting a bashing from the wind becuase they weren’t properly supported; dead-heading all the marigolds to keep them flowering; digging over the beds and weeding; transplanting herbs…

Shona in the garden

Jess & Dunc turned up to stay for a week around the same time.  Dunc did his usual trick of saying he was coming to help – “N0, honestly, I’m going  to work this time” blah, blah – and then taking a wee afternoon kip the first day, skiving off on a lads day out and getting us drunk & making us stay up late every night so that we wasted most of the day waking up and drinking coffee!  No, to be fair he did do stuff: he helped Nik dig out, sieve and barrow gravel and soil for the last 2 baths in the greywater system; he helped Jess & Nik move 2 tents down from the top land; he helped shift a load of railways sleepers into a pile and he did a brilliant job of encouraging us, giving us ideas and telling us what to do!  Look, there’s even a picture of Dunc working:

Duncan working

Us girls cracked on with the wine bottle window.  We figured out how to cap the bottles to prevent them filling with dust/ water – we reused the little metal cases left over from burning tea lights, held in place with a little splodge of silicon and when we ran out of those we used metal tops from the beer bottles and 1 litre wine bottles.  Here’s Jess & Shona with a production line going:

Capping the bottles

I laid some tile adhesive on the ledge to provide a smoother base for the first line of bottles to sink into.  It took us a while to learn where to apply the silicon to effectively stick the bottles to each other and keep them straight and level but once we got into the swing of it we got a couple of rows placed quite quickly:

Placing the first bottle in the wine bottle window

Siliconing bottles

Levelling the bottles

All that working made us hungry… we cobbled together some great meals.  Here’s a great picture Jess took of one of our lunches.  There’s grated beetroot & carrot (from our garden), dressed with a little balsamic vinegar & oil; tomato & basil salad (from our garden); rocket salad with fresh chives, coriander & parsley (from our garden – there’s a theme here!) and Shona’s divine cucumber & dill salad (special ingredient is the dressing of organic cider vinegar & sugar) – now immortalised in our Guest Book.

Full-monte meal

It wasn’t all work though… Ray & Shona took us out for a meal on their last night to say thank you for working them every day; making them camp again after 25 years; risking life & limb on ladders wielding drills on a windy night; and putting up with Duncan!  We literally couldn’t remember the last time we had got scrubbed up and gone out for a meal and we had a fabulous evening: melt in your mouth steak & a bottle of wine; a leisurely stroll in the balmy evening air; lemon & chocolate ice cream and great coffee people-watching on the promenade.  It was lovely – we were sad to see them leave…

I have been looking at ways to reuse plastic bags for ages.  They use so many of them in Montenegro, it’s ridiculous.  I’ve also been looking for a way to make a bead curtain out of recycled materials to cover the entrance from the kitchen area into the main shower block – as an additional fly deterrant and to obscure the view directly into the compost loos!  One evening as Jess, Steve and I were discussing these things and coming up with ideas, Jess started to plait strips of plastic bags.  We realised that plaited and weighed down with washers, these plastic bag strips could form a colourful curtain to serve our purposes!  Watch this space for news on whether it actually works!!!

Crafty creatures...

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Last day of the month & time for the usual round-up.   I looked it up & ‘august’ also means: “inspiring awe & admiration; majestic; dignified & imposing”…

Inspiring awe

  • the realisation of a dream: this month we opened a real campsite with real guests and earned real money.  Even the unwanted guests were impressive.  There’s a big bat that flies in and around the building most nights, occasionally stopping to hang in the rafters and poop on the floor!  And we found this little guy on the wall:

Scorpion

  • the beauty and tranquility of our little piece of land – even in the darkest moments, we never cease to wonder at the stunning space we find ourselves in and the peace it offers us
  • the sky at night – this month the stars have been so bright and so plentiful, it really takes your breath away.  Sitting under the roof of the outside kitchen we have a great view out but not up.  Many a times when we’ve walked to our tents at the end of the evening and remembered to look up, we just stand there, gawping.

Inspiring admiration

  • I am so full of admiration for Nik I don’t know where to begin!  He works so hard – turning his hand to anything & everything: carpentry, compost loos, greywater systems, tiling… doing everything with care, thought, patience.  And for what???  Some nice grub, a bit of grog every night and the satisfaction of being part of a project?  He seems to nurture himself through helping others – amazing guy that he is.  And alongside all this, somehow he finds the mental discipline and the energy to pursue work, do proof-reading, support other friends – all within the context of a very stressful time for him, trying to secure work & sort out finances.  Well, the least we can do is get him legless…

Nik-legless

  • It’s hard not to admire my old man, Stevo.  He has a level of patience I will never know – spending hours researching sites and spreading the word about Club Full Monte in countless online communities.  This month he has turned his hand to many complex tasks he has never done before and achieved great results:  plumbing that doesn’t leak, electrics that work, a functioning solar PV system and has managed to do 80% of the tiling of the second shower in a fraction of the time it took us to do the first!  Of course, he most deserves my admiration for putting up with me in my many moments when I am tired, grumpy and letting it all get to me – his love never fails.  And if one more person tells me how amazing he looks for his age…

Solar tekkie stuff

Shower number 2

Majestic

  • The garden at Topla produced an impressive pumpkin and provided a great excuse for a day of soup making.  It’s amazing how different the soup tasted substituting spuds for carrots, including more or less onions etc. Nik’s recipe was more peppery, something about the combo of pumpkin and potato.  But, in my opinion, my pumpkin soup was fit for a king and my pumpkin pie was divine…

    Recipe
    - Jamaican Pumpkin Soup
    2lb pumpkin
    1 onion
    1 carrot
    2 cloves garlic
    butter
    0.5 – 1 litres of chicken stock, depending how thick you like your soup
    remove skin & pips from pumpkin & cube (the smaller the cubes, the quicker it cooks)
    slice onion & saute in butter until soft
    add sliced carrot, crushed garlic & cubed pumpkin & soften in butter for a few minutes
    add stock & cook for 20 minutes & blend
    you can add cream at the end if you like it extra creamy, add nutmeg to garnish & season to taste

Pumpkin

Dignified

  • The garden is worthy of respect.  It has been trampled and munched and yet still the flowers hold their heads up brightly – a continuous blaze of colour for 2 months now – and the tomatoes will NOT be defeated, still bravely fruiting and even the capsicums are managing to turn some of their flowers into peppers and chillies.

Imposing

  • The list of things still to do!  August has been a great trial for us but we have loads of challenges to overcome if we are to be ready for big numbers next year…  Oh well, I’ll try to keep breathing deep

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Nik being around is a HUGE help and we are making good progress but the harsh reality of how much there is still to do does knock our confidence at times.  However, a good sinking feeling is shown below:

That sinking feeling!

Yes, the wash basins are up!  Well 2 of them at least, just to prove they can be done (although not without lots of cursing and general disbelief about the quality of the sink fittings – maybe that’s why they were only 20 euros!?) and to get levels for the lighted mirrors, switches etc that are around them.

All the areas that must be painted before the tiling begins are finished now.  Here’s a view of the outside kitchen, ready for tiling…

Kitchen wall painted

And we have assembled all the assorted tiles we have into rug designs and the great tiling project is nearly ready to commence…

Tiled rug design

And Nik is not the only one down a hole!

Den in her hole

Toad in the hole

This massive toad (really, this picture hardly does justice to it’s size – Steve bravely picked the poor fellow up and released it whilst the rest of us looked on, squirming) accidentally found it’s way into a hole by the water tank.  I, on the other hand, was sent into my hole!  I had the glamorous job of bailing the water out of the basement and then shovelling out the mud that had been washed in.

Den shovelling mud

Mmm, there’s a theme here.  Steve sends all his workers into holes!  And what’s he doing all this time?  Oh, yes!  The electrics – still…  No, I’m being unfair – he’s done a great job.  All the switches line up, all the lights are centred, all the junction boxes are tidy with no wires showing. Just look at the shower lights!  Things of beauty!

Shower lights

I hate to tell him that now we have the excellent solar spotlights and festoon lights to light the entrances to the shower block and some of the paths and have a cheap, neat solution for lights at night (battery powered lights that can be stuck to the walls in key places and pushed on and off) we’ll try to use the genny as little as poss!

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