THE MODERN MINT BLOG

Aug21

Suryalila, Near Seville In Spain

Modern Mint recently spent a week at Suryalila, in the south of Spain.

They are a yoga retreat centre who own a piece of the Andalusian countryside, where they are trying to create a garden that can provide 70% of the food they will use in the centres kitchen.

A difficult task when they are battling the difficulties of rocky soil, steep slopes, winter downpours and 44 degree celsius heat during the summer months. Oh, and there is no protection from the wind either.

In 6 years they already have thriving fig trees, they make their own olive oil, the garden produces basil (the most amazing pesto comes out of the kitchen) and tomatoes, grapes, raisins, amaranth crops up in places nothing else grows – just like a weed – and enough squashes to make delicious soups and vegetarian paellas. (Yep, that’s right. A vegetarian paella. Paella, after all, is just a dish that grew out of needing to ‘make delicious’ what the landscape provided. So it may be far from a traditional paella in one sense, but it grows from the conditions of the landscape, making it exactly what a paella should be….

… but we can’t imagine a single Spaniard would agree!)

The way they are trying to make themselves 70% food proficient is interesting – they have terraced the slopes, to stop water running straight off and down the hill, away from the crops. The terraces are on curves, so the water runs along rather than down.

They mulch like mad – one of our favourite techniques here at Modern Mint – to trap in moisture and also improve the soil, to grow better crops. Mulching material is made by the donkeys, horses and alpacas that live on-site.

You can see them here, in this video…

Our favourite idea that has been implemented is the building of compost toilets and eco-showers on the Suryalila site.

The compost toilets are normal toilets, but use no water. After you have done what you need to do, you just throw some sawdust on top. The sawdust, being mostly carbon, offsets the nitrogen in the urine and faeces and prevents any smell. This waste, this ‘humanure’ is then used around the trees that are being planted as windbreaks.

The eco-showers are outdoor showers, that drain off into flower beds on the site. This means the persimmon trees are thriving and growing at quite a pace, as are the cannas that sit below and between the trees. The canna flowers are harvested and used in the food served up from the kitchen.

What they are doing at Suryalila is not rocket science – like the origins of paella, they are really just using what they have got to provide themselves with the means to live. The farmers around the site have EU subsidies but we know they may end at some point, as may the water from the aquifer, or the rights to the water from the aquifer, so by thinking about what your land has and contouring it and working on it in a way that it will cope, you are building resilience.

Resilience, and a better soil that will provide better food.

Many people have donated to make this project happen quicker and improve the landscape and food security of one of the driest places in Europe. If you would like to help, check out their crowdfunder here – Suryalila Food Forest.

Remember too, you can improve your garden with some thought. Mulching is the first way to go. The second – disconnect your downpipes and collect your water, especially here in Essex!

Oct29

The Amelia Project – Episode 88: Didius Julianus

Friends of mine write a sitcom podcast called The Amelia Project (I wrote about this years ago, when they started it….!) December 2024 I had some fun playing the tiny part of Fornio in episode 88 – Didius Julianus. I have not listened to the episode yet, as I am clearly not an actor… and the thought of listening to my dulcet tones for the few minutes I’m in it just… makes me feel ill. But the recording and being in the studio was great fun, the real actors were hilarious and the script is brilliant – not just funny, …

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Oct29

Waltham Place Topiary Workshop 2026

With the European Boxwood and Topiary Society, I run two workshops each year at Waltham Place, one of my favourite gardens. The next topiary workshop there will be on Friday September 4th 2026. Details and how to book yet to be announced, but get in touch with them now to get on the waiting list, as last year we had double the amount of people wanting a place than we had space for. The Waltham Place website is here – topiary workshop 2026. See the teaching page for how else I can help you with the topiary in your garden …

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Aug04

Box Hill – Novella by Adam Mars-Jones

I picked this book up back in 2020 because of the title – Box Hill – fabulous, I thought, a book about boxwood. I’ll peruse this for its respective thoughts on the plant I clip most when I make topiary. I didn’t read the blurb on the back. Didn’t know the author (although I knew the publisher, Fitzcarraldo Editions, as I love many of the essays they have published… so trusted the author would be worth spending time with.) By page 2 I realised this novel wasn’t quite what I had expected. I started the book at 10pm, after getting …

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