Watering the Garden – Vorgarten

As mentioned in the first blog on this topic, there was a problem watering the Vorgarten, where vines, kiwis and an acacia grow. Quite apart from the time involved, it also meant a very long hose and going outside onto the road, or else spraying the water from the terrace above. Either way, not convenient.

Fortunately we had a water tap installed on the wall at the time we had the old building (the structure (which was in situ when we bought the site in 2007) renovated in 2016. I bought another Cellfast timer and sprinklers, and installed a simple ring system. Worked very effectively. I extended it to the lower part of the Vorgarten after we had the front wall and the area below it vastly improved in early 2019 – up to then the area had been a bit of a wilderness.

Watering the Garden – Getting parts

After buying the hose in Kips, I managed to find small diameter tubing and droppers in Zozeta, in Igalo (the north side of Herceg Novi, on the road to the border crossing with Croatia). I also found a timer valve unit at Okov in Radanovici, on the main road from Tivat to Budva. The Cellfast timer (from Poland) allows one or two sessions of watering a day, of between 1 and 99 minutes at times one can set, so highly variable. It also allows a choice of which days of the week one wants the system to operate. That allowed me to install the first part of the system, on our top terrace, where all the plants are in pots.

Okov also stocks another brand of timer, made by Cleber of Italy. At about the same price, it is far less flexible in the selection of times. unlike the Cellfast model, one is restricted to 12 choices, from

I completed this in October 2018, shortly before we went to UK for a fairly lengthy period. Previously we would have had to get one of our team of ladies to come in regularly to water the plants. This installation saved all that. To our great relief, on our return some 10 weeks later, we found all the plants still alive! System worked.

Watering the Garden – First Thoughts

The weather has been unusual this year (2018), with the summer heat arriving over a month early, May rather than July. The plants have had a difficult time, especially the main vine which suffered heat stress along its main branch where the leaves have withered. I have been trying to find a drop-by-drop watering system for some long time, and eventually bought, at a heavily discounted price, a length of hose at Kips, one of the main hardware stores/ builders merchants. Unfortunately Kips had run out of the little sprinklers and nozzles to fit into the hose to allow the water to be directed where it is needed (if they ever actually had them – perhaps that was the reason for the heavy discount on the hose!. Will take a month to arrive, assuming they actually do order the parts, by which time we will have consumed an awful lot of water in more traditional ways of distribution (hose and watering cans).

 

 

July 2016

Updating at long last!

Life has moved on considerably. The court cases with Vasko Prorocic are rumbling on; but we are talking about a negotiated out-of-court settlement. We will see.

Anke has made enormous strides in both preparing what was Le Beton (the original concrete structure on the site) into a highly habitable apartment (Le Studio!), and in marketing it. We are now listed on booking.com; airbnb and Owners Direct. Still to get bookings, and then guest comments; difficult to get the first without the second, so somewhat of a Catch 22 situation.

Garden-building has taken a backseat as it is too hot (over 30) to work outside. I need to re-model the Westgarten, which involves building a stone terrace wall and levelling earth. Weeding the existing garden areas is a priority as the tomatoes in particular are getting overgrown with grass and other weeds.

2015 July; Home again

We returned from UK to find that the team had done a great job in keeping the plants alive. There were some which succumbed but in general Anke’s garden survived pretty well. First task was water, water and more water.

The weather has reverted to the traditional heat, a stark contrast to last year when the rain and general cold affected everything, including our grapes. This year’s crop looks like being a bumper one, exceeding the harvest we saw in 2010, always providing there are no storms to smash the grapes or some other devastating event.

Now free of the Green Building Council (yippee!) James is able to spend time helping sort the Dachgarten. Dragisa did an excellent job in tiling it, and the lower terrace, as well as building a retaining wall and path along the north side of the house. The latter has transformed not only the look of that area of the house but allows us far easier access to the Ostgarten – previously a major expedition over loose sloping stones.