Monday, May 23, 2011

This week

So much loveliness to look at this week!  In bloom are allium, irises, shooting stars, columbine, blue-eyed grass, and of course the omnipresent dandelions.

Added some soil acidifier to the potato & blueberry containers, planted windowboxes, replaced frostkilled basil and seeded a container for micogreens.  Enclosed the area underneath the "treehouse" with burlap to use as a second composting bin for yard waste. 

Homemade bokashi bucket isn't working so well; I think because it doesn't seal air out well enough.  Stuff in the "real" (storebought) bucket is ready to be put outside, so I can empty that and re-use, giving me a week or so to redesign bucket #2.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Soil and Health Library

The lovely Rodale gardening book I received for Mothers' Day contained numerous references to "Indore composting," sans explanation. So since I'm apparently the only person on the planet who didn't know what that was* I turned to the interweb for explanation. In that search, I found an awesome resource. The Soil and Health Library appears to contain electronic copies of a bunch of out of print books on organic agriculture, frugality, homesteading, and so forth. I'm excited to start digging around there on the next rainy day.

*The term "Indore composting" appears to be commonly used to describe cool temperature composting, but originally applied to a specific method developed by Sir Albert Howard in the 20s and 30s (in Indore, India). Details here.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Garden Notebook

Since last update:

Planted potatoes, blueberries, EarthBox herbs, lettuce, tomatoes
2 nights in a row with temps in the 30s-- put jars/soda bottles over plants as cloches
Tomato plants look a bit scalded; should have removed cloches during day
Not sure if morning glories/moonflowers survived the frosty weather
Mulched blueberries with yew & juniper needles
Brief thunderstorm tonight

Solar cooking

Started building these solar cookers with my co-op science class today. I can't wait to try mine out on the next sunny day.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

My handy-dandy compost bin topper

I'm a fairly lazy composter. Constantly turning the pile, monitoring moisture levels, ensuring the precisely right C/N ratio... this has always seemed like too much effort to put forth for such a simple thing. I mean, come on, you stick stuff in a pile, and you wait for it to rot. We're lucky if I remember to take a stick and poke some air holes into it periodically.

But since we're in a fairly urban environment, with the neighbor's house within 10 feet of ours, I do need to make sure that nothing's getting overly aromatic. There's no back 40 to hide the piles in. So I got irrationally excited when I saw the giant bag of sawdust picked up by the vacuum system in my father's workshop. A couple of handfuls of high carbon sawdust would be the pefect thing to add on top of anything wet and sloppy with the potential for ickyness.

I'm pretty sure dad thought I was nuts when I asked if he could save it for me. But they humor me, so a couple of weeks ago my parents came over with a big bag of sawdust for me (along with the newspapers I'd been asking mom to save).

It worked pretty well, and also made a nice addition to the potting mixes I'd been messing around with. The dry sawdust was always blowing around and getting in my face when I scooped some out, though. Seemed it needed some moisture, and maybe a couple of additions to make it just perfect.

Which is how I justified spending the better part of a day hand mixing the perfect compost topper, shifting things from bucket to bucket every time I added something new. It's the closest I get to playing in the sandbox these days.

I do think the end result is pretty great, though, and wanted to make sure I remembered what was in it for the next time around. No clue about proportions, since I just kept adding a handful of this and a bucketful of that. But here are the contents:

Sawdust (carbon, absorbent)
Leaf mold (from cleaning gutter-- nitrogen, organic matter)
Composted cow manure (a small amount- nitrogen, organic matter, beneficial microorganisms)
Blood & bone meals (small amounts)
Backyard soil (a couple of shovels full-- microorganisms & other critters)
Bokashi (what was left in the bag after a critter got into it-- beneficial microorganisms galore)
Water
Liquid nitrogen source

Good thing my dad is always making things in his workshop-- now I need more sawdust.

Garden notebook

Yesterday:

Lots of wind coming from the east
Hardening off everything
Planted Swiss chard
Cut seed potatoes for planting
Set up trash can potato planters

Today:

Chillier outside but still sunny
Hardening off continues
Planted moonflowers and morning glories along fence
Sheet mulched* along fence
Spread excess hay in backyard

*Sheet Mulch
(from bottom)

Tiny bit of bone meal
Thin layer composted cow manure
Wet old cardboard
~3 inches of dried leaves/leaf mold scrounged from alley
Thin layer "compost bin topper" (see next post)
~4 inches straw
LOTS of water