• New projects

    Two new and exciting projects are in the offing. Firstly our loft conversion is finally going ahead, the flat is covered in scaffolding and there are builders’ knees just, everywhere. They are brilliant and it’s all happening mighty quickly. More news on that soon.

    Secondly I have been helping to write a comedy podcast called 4amcab. It features sketches set in the small hours of the morning, which have become frighteningly familiar over the last few years what with getting up at 4am to go to work, tend to the baby, the other baby etc… it’s a strange time of night and the podcast reflects the weirdness of nocturnal activities. Anyone with small children, insomnia or shift work to contend with will know what I mean.

    The 6 shows we’ve made for the first series are up on our website at www.4amcab.com, and then rather wonderfully Mike Kelley has made one of my sketches into a cartoon.

    4amcab has been nominated for a European Podcast Award, so please click through and vote for us if you have a second. Thank you!

    All the boys are doing well and we’re doing our best to keep all the plates spinning whilst our roof is taken off and everything descends into complete chaos. I hope the gap between this and the next won’t be quite so wide.

    Hope you’re all well.

    17 November 2012, 5:38 am
  • City bumpkin podcast 7 – Transition Town Tooting

    On July 4th, the bizarre and fabulous Trashcatchers’ Carnival will hit Tooting high street!

    Some months ago, I spoke to David and Malsara Thorne of Transition Town Tooting to find out about the Transition Town movement and how the plans for the carnival were coming along.  It is going to be a fantastic event, so do follow their blog to find out more, and block out your diary for the 4th of July!

    There will also be the Transition Town Tooting Big Launch on Monday 12th July, and the Tooting Foodival on September 19th.  More information on both events will be on the Transition Town Tooting main blog.

    https://citybumpkin.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/citybumpkinpodcast7final.mp3

    Or click here to listen in a new window

    There’s some very interesting stuff in the podcast about recycled cooking oil.  The oil company is called Uptown Oil.

    The City Bumpkin podcast map!

    21 June 2010, 10:22 pm
  • City bumpkin podcast 6 – Theo Pike
    Theo Pike, Chairman of theTheo Pike, Chairman of the Wandle trust Junk removed from the Wandle river

    This month I spoke to Theo Pike, Chairman of the Wandle trust.

    I met up with Theo during one of the trust’s monthly Wandle cleansing sessions.  Over fifty local volunteers were working hard to haul all sorts of rubbish including shopping trolleys and scooters out of the river.  Here’s a selection of some of the junk they removed.

    https://citybumpkin.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/bsgl6.mp3

    Or click here to listen in a new window

    The City Bumpkin podcast map!

    My Podcast Alley feed! {pca-b08d8ecd933252a86865ea40c66bf4c9}

    12 November 2008, 11:04 am
  • City bumpkin podcast 5 – Seb Mayfield
    Seb tending some young seedlings (Thanks to Lucy Wallace for the photo)Seb tending some young seedlings (with thanks to Lucy Wallace for the photo)

    Here is the latest installment of the City Bumpkin podcast.  This month, I spoke to Seb Mayfield, of Food Up Front.

    Have a listen:

    https://citybumpkin.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/bsgl5.mp3

    Or click here to listen in a new window

    And while you’re doing that, vote in the BSGL poll!

    Take Our Poll

    The City Bumpkin podcast map!

    5 November 2008, 5:57 pm
  • City bumpkin podcast 4 – Project Dirt
    Nick and Mark of Project DirtNick and Mark of Project Dirt

    In previous City Bumpkin podcasts, I’ve spoken to container gardener Penelope Bennett, guerrilla gardener Richard Reynolds, and the project manager of Deen City Farm, Ben Cheetham.  Each podcast features an interview with someone pioneering a green initiative in London.  It will be considerably easier for me to find such people from now on, as Nick and Mark’s Project Dirt provides a hub for such activities, bringing environmental projects and people together.

    https://citybumpkin.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/bsgl4.mp3

    Or click here to listen in a new window

    The City Bumpkin podcast map!

    10 October 2008, 5:20 pm
  • City bumpkin podcast 3 – Ben Cheetham

    I was amazed to discover Deen City Farm just down the road from my house last year, and have been keen to find out more about it ever since.

    It’s a riding school as well as a farm, with some lovely ‘growing gardens’.  The site used to be used as a dumping ground, so the existing soil is contaminated.  However they have cleverly got round this by using raised beds, and other planters such as shopping trolleys and old baths.

    In addition to the growing gardens, the farm also has a fair amount of livestock, including an aviary, small animals enclosure, and more traditional breeds.

    Ben Cheetham is the project manager for Deen City Farm.  He was kind enough to invite me to the farm for an interview for another Big Smoke, Green Living podcast.  (Flighty – this one is one cup of tea and two biscuits long I think).

    https://citybumpkin.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/bsgl3-ben-cheetham.mp3

    Or click here to listen in a new window

    The City Bumpkin podcast map!

    4 September 2008, 8:24 pm
  • City bumpkin podcast 2 – Richard Reynolds

    This is Richard Reynold’s original guerrilla garden.  It’s not actually his, it belongs to the tower block he lives in.  Richard cleared it of dead plants, litter and rubbish in 2004, replanted it, and has been looking after it ever since.

    It is just 2×2 metres –  even smaller than the Penelope Bennett’s window-box allotment (the subject of the first BSGL podcast), yet for Richard it was the first step on a journey which would see him developing neglected land all over London, cultivating a forum for other guerrilla gardeners around the world, now several thousand strong, and being invited to create a garden for this year’s Hampton Court Flower Show.

    I met up with Richard for a pot of tea in his flat above this little patch to find out more.  He started off by telling me how he became a guerrilla gardener.

    https://citybumpkin.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/bsgl2-richard-reynolds-80.mp3

    Or click here to listen in a new window

    Richard’s book, On Guerrilla Gardening: A Handbook For Gardening Without Boundaries is excellent – I highly recommend it if you would like to know more about the movement.

    Richard’s website has a forum where guerrilla gardening events are plotted and co-ordinated.

    And check out the blog of his Recycled Garden, built for the 2008 Hampton Court Flower Show.

    The City Bumpkin podcast map!

    Finally, there is an article I wrote about guerrilla gardening in issue 57 (current issue at time of writing) of Permaculture Magazine.

    1 August 2008, 5:41 pm
  • City bumpkin podcast 1 – Penelope Bennett

    Despite my frequent rants on the subject of getting out of The Big Smoke and away to the countryside where I can keep chickens in the garden and expand on my allotmenteering adventures, I still love life in the city.

    What is particularly fascinating is the frequent stories about Londoners bringing a bit of ‘green’ to the place.  Some of them have built eco-houses with ingenious climate-control systems based on the anatomy of trees.  Some of them are running entire farms in the midst of the urban sprawl.   Some of them set out to covertly improve the area they live in just for the hell of it.

    I’m going to make an attempt to collar a few of of them for a bit of a chat, (preferably to be accompanied by a cup of tea and a sit down) in a thinly veiled attempt to extract trade secrets and accumulated wisdom on how life in The Big Smoke doesn’t have to be all concrete jungle.

    So here we are, the first of a series of podcasts with people leading green initiatives in London:

    City Bumpkin podcast 1 – Penelope Bennett

    Penelope Bennett is the proud owner of a 4.9 x 2.4m (16 x 8 ft in old money) garden on the roof-terrace of her home in the heart of London.  Over the years she has grown hundreds of different varieties of fruit and vegetables in this small space, including figs, saffron, Oriental salads and over 30 different types of potato.

    Having read and reviewed her brilliant book Window-box Allotment, I was very keen to see her little garden in the flesh and collect some of her wisdom about container gardening in small urban spaces.  Penelope was kind enough to give me a tour.  She began by telling me how it all started.

    https://citybumpkin.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/bsgl1-penelope-bennett.mp3

    Or click here to listen in a new window

    Penelope’s book, Window-box Allotment is published by Ebury Press.

    Her work has also appeared in The Weekend FT, The Times, The Observer, The Guardian, The New Statesman, BBC Green, BBC Worldwide Website, The Daily Telegraph, Harpers and Queen, Al-Ahram Weekly, The Oldie, Food and Travel, Encounter, Contemporary Review, Modern Painters, SAGA website magazine, Macmillan’s Winter’s Tales, The Atlantic Monthly, Mademoiselle, and on Morning Story.

    The City Bumpkin podcast map!

    9 July 2008, 4:34 am
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