The Gardening Brigade I'm happy to report
was a huge success. Though our journey began with a
gruelling flight - one hour after taking off from Madrid
the pilot announced that we would have to return to
Madrid as two of the flight-deck's radios were not working,
which meant they had to dump most of our fuel and we
watched with trepidation as our fuel poured out in a
steady black stream alongside the plane, wondering at
the likely waste and pollution this was causing, and
we then had an excruciating 5-hour wait in Madrid airport
which resulted in one of our members having to be sent
to the Medical centre as he became literally sick with
exhaustion. We arrived at our hotel in Havana at 6am
the following morning as opposed to the expected 10pm
the night before. I then had to stay awake in order
to meet a tour rep at 8am about our transport arrangements.
But thankfully that was the only real
hiccough we experienced during our two weeks. Everyone
in the group was incredibly supportive, adaptable, hard-working
and great fun! They soon happily adopted the role of
being pioneers on a new initiative and helped to make
my job as group leader that much easier.
We worked on 4 different projects. The
first one was a family garden belonging to Fernandini
(who fought with Castro in the Sierra Maestra!). It
is one of 3 projects that our hosts the Fundación has
received some funding from Oxfam (England) to run as
educational projects for farmers and schools incorporating
Permaculture principles. It is a wonderful jumble of
trees, plants and vegetables and includes a pond filled
with tilapia fish.
The second garden is a small patch at
the Fundación's headquarters which will function as
a show garden of permaculture design for visitors and
schools.
The third was an organipanico near the
Plaza de la Revolución which has the benefit of input
from a woman called Myriam who is one of three government
supported workers trained in permaculture to introduce
permaculture principles into organipanicos. And a good
thing too! A number of us had the experience of planting
hundreds of those boring, almost tasteless lettuces
that Jenny Bussey mentioned in her report earlier. We
gave Myriam packets of varieties of salad vegetables
and are sending more.
And the fourth project we worked on
was the best one of all - best in terms of our feeling
that we had really accomplished something. When Fausto
from the Fundación first showed us the site we were
appalled to find a wasteground on top of an old bunker
covered with hard, dry, tired soil with some tough couch-type
grass, strewn with rubbish. It very quickly became referred
to as "The Challenge". But in the second week the group
managed to transform a large section of the site into
a beautiful garden in the shape of a mandala in all
of 2 1/2 days much to the amazement of the Fundación
and the local community (and to ourselves!). And what
was most important about this site was that it was part
of a primary school.
When I returned unannounced to the site
with Vilda and Pepe after the Brigade had returned to
England I was overjoyed to find children in the garden
and two members of the community working there. It also
provided the opportunity for Vilda and Pepe to explain
their 3-heap, above-ground composting technique to the
young Cubans who were continuing our work.
Brigade Reports
January 2000 by Stephanie Greenwood
January 2001 by Wynne Kelly
January 2002 by Wynne Kelly
Jan/Feb 2003 by Catherine Miller
Jan/Feb 2005 Brigade by Chris Day
Other Reports from Cuba
January 2000 - by Jenny Bussey
Febrary/March 2000 by Mike Weaver
May 2000 by Nicola Duffield
|