Go Gardening

Real gardener

Gardening for health

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Meryn Wakelin is mad about food. Friends and family rave about her cooking and when there’s a family get together, it often ends up at Meryn’s place. Her famously creative cuisine draws on the traditiona­l knowledge she absorbed while growing up on a Hawke’s Bay farm, and also the Mediterran­ean style cuisine she learned while living overseas.

Healthy food has always been a priority for this mother of three, but these days Meryn’s food is more than ever about health and wellbeing. An experience­d naturopath, she is certain that most of our health issues can be traced to what we eat. She and her partner Rob have adapted their eating habits to exclude commercial­ly processed food. “Of course, there are always those times when you need to break the rules and enjoy a glass of wine or special dessert,” confesses Meryn, “but when we’re at home we only eat protein, healthy fats, fruits and vegetables. They also eat nuts, grains and seeds, but bread, flour, sugar and all other refined carbohydra­tes are absent from their shopping list. Rob, who has been through heart surgery in recent years, has lost considerab­le weight since following Meryn’s lead and changing his diet. However, she admits with a grin, “we’re both inclined to overindulg­e on those healthy fats sometimes.” Coffee with cream is a favourite treat but sugar is only for visitors - if they can find any.

The only carbohydra­tes Meryn and Rob consume are fresh fruit and vegetables. For that reason, their garden is a godsend. “Because we eat so many vegetables, it’s like having a grocery store on the doorstep - fresh organic vegetables at a moment’s notice. It’s so convenient!” says Meryn.

Living in the semi rural Bombay hills (south of Auckland), they try to avoid making special car trips for ingredient­s, besides which they find it’s not always easy to buy locally-grown fresh produce, despite the market garden locality. Hence their vegetable garden is increasing­ly important. “I love it that I can wander down the path and choose what’s for dinner.” Built from recycled bricks by Meryn’s son Jack, the path has made the garden all the more inviting. It is accessed via spacious decks, built by Rob, that step down from the kitchen.

Meryn has a panoramic view of her vege garden from the kitchen window. It flourishes on its north-facing slope, which Rob terraced with retaining walls to make flat areas for planting. With a keen artist’s eye, Meryn has created formal ‘potagers’ in previous gardens, but on this rural hillside with its native backdrop, an informal layout worked best.

Most days she loves the view of her ‘random wilderness’, where the weeds are so easily disguised. However “the fact that I have to look at it does make me get out there when it gets too unruly!”

Her garden looks very different from the ones she remembers from her childhood. “My father’s garden is my inspiratio­n and I have lived my whole life presuming a vegetable garden was a given in every household. Everyone we knew had vegetable gardens. All were very organised, productive gardens that were deliberate and important. It was a matter of necessity.”

In contrast to those traditiona­l gardens with their straight orderly rows, Meryn has planted a rambling garden with many edibles that grow semi-wild. “I’m so grateful for the plants that come up of their own accord. When I’ve been busy and not paying attention to my planting I can still come out here and find something.” Maori potatoes, NZ spinach, or red kale, to name a few, can almost be found. “The calendula is a great self-seeder too, lovely for colour and easy to pull out when you need the space.”

Citrus, figs, dwarf apples, pomegranat­es, grapes and other fruits grow on the slopes above and below the veges. Huge healthy rhubarb plants make striking accents, allowed to stay for their beauty alone, because they can’t be eaten without sugar.

The decks are home to an abundance of herbs. Containers are crammed with basil, parsley, oregano and mint. Spilling over the decks with their roots in the soil are fragrant rosemary, thyme, bay and other perennial herbs, indispensi­ble in Meryn’s winter cuisine. It’s the herbs she’d most hate to be without. “Herbs are vital in cuisine and vital for our health. Its essential to me to always have a choice of fresh herbs in my garden.”

Nor would she want to be without fresh greens. Kale, silverbeet, NZ spinach, and cavolo nero are ever present. “They make a quick and easy side dish stir-fried together with butter, garlic and lashings of pepper.” Meryn’s favourite lettuce is Cos. “It’s the most nutrient rich lettuce and really juicy - great in smoothies.” She also grows red lettuces. “They look pretty, and I’ve also noticed that lettuces with some red pigment seem to get less insect damage than the green ones.”

Meryn plants with compost and organic sheep pellets. She uses as much straw mulch as she can get her hands on, to keep the weeds down and retain moisture. “This summer I’ve barely had to get the hose out. We seem to have just the right amount of rain.” Rainwater tanks serve both the house and the garden.

It’s an idyllic semi self-sufficient lifestyle that suits this industriou­s pair. As well as delivering healthy food, it keeps them fit. ‘We’re lucky to have all this space” says Meryn, “but even if we downsize one day we’ll always want a garden.”

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 ??  ?? Left from top: Lemon balm makes a calming tea; the bulbs of Florence fennel are delicious finely sliced in salads; bumble bees love leek flowers. Opposite: Rob finds cucumbers for lunch.
Left from top: Lemon balm makes a calming tea; the bulbs of Florence fennel are delicious finely sliced in salads; bumble bees love leek flowers. Opposite: Rob finds cucumbers for lunch.
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 ??  ?? Opposite page: The garden in late summer with the bold blue leaves of cavolo nero in the foreground. Below: High yielding and disease resistant ‘Red Rascal’ is a great potato to grow organicall­y.
Opposite page: The garden in late summer with the bold blue leaves of cavolo nero in the foreground. Below: High yielding and disease resistant ‘Red Rascal’ is a great potato to grow organicall­y.
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 ??  ?? Spring onions
Potatoes
NZ spinach
Spring onions Potatoes NZ spinach

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