Video
PermaDynamics by Happen Films
Author. Stone Soup — 09/ 08/ 2021
Our friends at Happen Films have made a beautiful little documentary about PermaDynamics, who we wrote about and had a contribution from in Volume 10.

Author. Stone Soup — 09/ 08/ 2021
Our friends at Happen Films have made a beautiful little documentary about PermaDynamics, who we wrote about and had a contribution from in Volume 10.
Author. Aaron McLean — 05/ 08/ 2021
There is no need to conquer the world. It is enough that we make it again. We. Today. Zapatismo.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
I grew up on the North Shore of Auckland. My two brothers and I are kids of the 80’s. We roamed the streets with the neighbour’s kids, we tramped in the Waitakere Ranges and spent many a dreamy summer under our big canvas tent beside the sea.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
I am going to share something with you that changed my life and led me to create an artwork with a whole city. It’s a simple story about how plants and microbes work together to create a world where we all can thrive.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
Starting A Veggie Patch, Managing Fertility, Observing and Caring for Your Garden.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
In a localised, circular economy, we need to make better use of the materials readily available to us. How can we do this in gardening? Could we save money by making our own soil from scratch?
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
Why are our heritage seeds so important? Why should we make the effort to ensure that these are the seeds we grow?
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
For me, planning seeding is the first step towards a successful harvest. During our downtime, we enjoy spending many hours creating a clear, simple and flexible garden plan. At the change of each season, we review this plan and dive into our seedbox, take some notes, design a planting calendar and order anything we don’t have.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
The maramataka reflects the sophisticated and comprehensive scientific knowledge bases and technological traditional practices of Māori timekeeping.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
Whau Solar, Jenny Tomlin. Exposure 3 weeks, June 15 – July 7, 2019.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
“Disruption creates gaps, nooks, and sometimes chasms in which hope and a new way of being can be explored.”
Michael Reynolds, Stone Soup Volume Seven.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
Did you know you can harvest one lettuce or celery plant for months? By knowing and using best practice harvesting methods, you are able to increase the amount of food (yield) that you harvest from the same plant.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
A Market Gardener’s guide on what to plant, where and when.
Author. Charles Buenconsejo — 05/ 08/ 2021
Months before the government announcement of Level 4 lockdown to fight COVID-19, New Zealand society started to resemble my experiences of America’s ‘Black Friday’ shopping hysteria. Grocery stores and garden centres had bare shelves, but I was fortunate enough to have my own mini DIY polytunnel.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
Photography and styling: Charlie McKay & Jess Murphy.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
Growing up in New Zealand, Aaron Bertelsen’s first taste of gardening was with his grandfather on the West Coast beaches of Auckland.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
Hannah Spyksma reflects on her relationship with growing and cooking food, and the complexities of a failed gardening project.
Author. The Next Meal — 05/ 08/ 2021
As we write this, it’s early April and the country is in level four lockdown to fight the COVID-19 pandemic. The leaves have turned golden and everything feels a bit weird, but hopeful.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
What is a pollinator?
Pollinators are the many species that pollinate and fertilise flowering plants, including bees, flies, butterflies, moths, beetles, bats and birds. Without them, more than 70% of the world’s flowering plants would not fruit, seed or reproduce.
Author. Aaron McLean — 05/ 08/ 2021
“If you’re holding a sapling in your hand when the Messiah arrives, first plant the sapling and then go out and greet the Messiah.”
The Overstory. Richard Powers
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
A guild is a community of plants working together in harmony over space and time. By placing plants together in a specific configuration we create an interdependent ecosystem where the needs of one plant are provided for by the existence of others.
Author. Stone Soup — 05/ 08/ 2021
Planting a cover crop is a wonderful way to bring a new garden bed to life, or to keep living plants feeding your soil over the winter period, allowing you the time and space to plan your next season.
Author. Dan Kelly — 05/ 08/ 2021
“Control is what civilizations do… If we can control the world, we can protect ourselves from the darkness it contains. We can protect ourselves from what lies under the ground, in the tombs. Who doesn’t want to be protected? But who, in the end, can ever be?”
Paul Kingsnorth
Author. Angela Clifford — 05/ 08/ 2021
Garden farms or farming gardens. I like this description. It’s an apt way of thinking about The Food Farm. Over the last 15 years, it has inhaled and exhaled to suit our lives: from selling at markets to feeding ourselves to feeding a larger community and back to extended whānau.
Author. Stone Soup — 03/ 08/ 2021
Author. Stone Soup — 03/ 08/ 2021
Whanaungatanga is about whakapapa, relationships, and connection to mana tangata, the strength of our whānau and our people; to mana whenua, the strength of the natural world; and to mana atua, the strength of the spiritual realm. It is about koha (giving), and it is always guided by aroha (love).
Author. Stone Soup — 03/ 08/ 2021
Wai, kai, whenua, whare— in that order. These are the four things— according to renowned Tohunga Rereata Makiha— that sit at the centre, not only of our physical needs as humans, but at the centre of our spiritual, cultural and social needs to exist within community. Food in particular has been at the heart of ceremony and celebration in Aotearoa and across the world, for millennia. Sharing food, whether we have little or much, can be an expression of love and care— as we call it within te ao Māori, manaakitanga.
Author. Stone Soup — 03/ 08/ 2021
Nicole Masters was 10 years old when she and her family left their small farm near Whenuapai north of Auckland — including goats, pigs, cats and a horse — to move to Hong Kong where her father had landed a job with Cathay Pacific. Accustomed to clean green grass underfoot, she liked to walk around in bare feet, which locals advised her against because of the dangers of “stuff on the ground”.
Author. Aaron McLean — 03/ 08/ 2021
He kai he rongoā, he rongoā he kai
Food is medicine, medicine is food
Author. Angela Clifford — 03/ 08/ 2021
Filed alphabetically, the lack of uniformity in packet type and size has me undone. As I rifle through them, the misshapen envelopes slip out of line revealing handwritten words as little post-it notes from friends.
Author. Stone Soup — 03/ 08/ 2021
Bridget McCarthy introduces us to three organisations that are sharing the work of closing the loop using the life cycle of food.
Author. Stone Soup — 03/ 08/ 2021
I have been thinking a lot lately about my physical encounter with recipes. Can words and pictures adequately express something that is otherwise so sensorial and emotive? Can a perfectly composed photograph of a dish in a glossy hardback generate the same excitement as one found on the smudged cover of a book that has been passed down through generations?