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Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 13,858
Carpal Tunnel
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OP
Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 13,858 |
In searching for of troy's word for Channel Island sweater 'garcy" I encountered the word "vraicing" referring to important collection and spreading of seaweed on the poor soils of the islands. It turned out that "vraic" is root of "wrack" which is often used to refer to seaweed cast up on shore. The article also mentiond "focus" which is properly "fucus" which is the name of the seaweed that has small round air containing structues to enable the seaweed to be buoyant and reach up to the light. All of the islands in the channel and between UK and Ireland used seaweed as combination mulch and fertizer. A couple years when I was living on Cape Cod I raised potatoes by just tilling soil, burying some fertilizer below hills, putting seed potato pieces on top of hill, and covering them with a foot of a long thin filament type seaweed. I had no weeds, and at harvest time, no digging to do, and the potatoes were large and blemish free. The seaweed prevented any weeds from growing before next planting.
No picture of Jersey life would be complete which omitted an account of the “vraic” harvest. Vraic is sea-weed; it is a corruption of the French word “varech,” which means literally sea-weed, though it is not always applied to the common “focus” that large, coarse, common sea-weed with bladders, known to all who have ever paid even a day’s visit to the sea-side. A young lady who was going to pick up delicate feathery sea-weeds for an album would not say she was going “vraicking,” or to gather “vraic.” "
;url]www.societe-jersiaise.org/wwwboard/messages/521.html[/url]
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 5,400
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 5,400 |
RE:I had no weeds, and at harvest time, no digging to do, and the potatoes were large and blemish free. The seaweed prevented any weeds from growing before next planting.
it was common to use sea weeds as fertilizer, and salt hay (hay from grasses grown in salt marshes) as mulch in times past. many of them have seeds that will only germinate in brackish water, so they do not create weed problems they way letting a field go fallow, and be planted with rye grass or or grass the was plowed back into the earth would.
but vraic is a new word... is vraic {wrack} related to wrack and ruin? --(is this a YART? i dimmly recall some discussion of this--something about wrack and wreck some time ago...)
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