Every gardener needs some help sometimes with digging
Watering
Composting
Weeding
Testing the hardiness of perennials
Getting rid of unwanted garden decor
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Friday, June 25, 2010
Slug Wars Episode I, The Menace
The war is on, the enemy has been engaged in mortal combat.
The foe is the mighty Northwest slug, or gastropod mollusc.
The weapons of mass destruction are Hamms, Michelob, and Widmer beers.
The battlefield is my vegetable garden.
The reason to make war, the fallen civilians.
And don't forget the bean counter, who keeps it all going with his stats.
Before the war is through one beer shall emerge the champion slug killer.
The foe is the mighty Northwest slug, or gastropod mollusc.
The weapons of mass destruction are Hamms, Michelob, and Widmer beers.
The battlefield is my vegetable garden.
The reason to make war, the fallen civilians.
And don't forget the bean counter, who keeps it all going with his stats.
Before the war is through one beer shall emerge the champion slug killer.
Labels:
beer,
garden pests,
Northwest gardening,
slug control,
slugs
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Permaculture
Over the years I've been inching away at my lawn. I dig up a half foot off the perimeter of my veggie or flower gardens and in less than a season it's back. I first heard about permaculture in my local newspaper, then a friend told me about Gaia's Garden by Toby Hemenway.
Huckleberry, with permaculture beneath
Hemenway's basic recipe is to lay down vegetation and soil amendments, then a thin layer of manure. On top of those goes a thin layer of newspaper or cardboard followed by another thin layer of manure or a nitrogen-rich substance. Top that with a very thick coat of hay or organic material. Lay down some compost and crown the whole thing with straw, leaves or other types of seed-free mulch.
Area of my veggie garden I permacultured last year with mulch and first layer of
vegetation down.
I decided if I followed the recipe exactly my yard would tower over my driveway and walks by several feet. So I modified. For areas I wanted to till -veggie garden- I kept it thin. It was virtually weed-free last year and tilled easily this spring.
The evil Ivy
For an area on the side of my house that had been infested with ivy- I went thick. The ivy has popped up in only a few places but either the straw sprouted or some grass-like seed took root.
My sprouting straw
Luckily it's on the surface, rather than running beneath, so it's easily plucked and used as a first layer elsewhere.
Now I have all my veggies planted I'll be after the big stuff- my front lawn.
In a later post I'll show some of the layers as I put them down.
Huckleberry, with permaculture beneath
Hemenway's basic recipe is to lay down vegetation and soil amendments, then a thin layer of manure. On top of those goes a thin layer of newspaper or cardboard followed by another thin layer of manure or a nitrogen-rich substance. Top that with a very thick coat of hay or organic material. Lay down some compost and crown the whole thing with straw, leaves or other types of seed-free mulch.
Area of my veggie garden I permacultured last year with mulch and first layer of
vegetation down.
I decided if I followed the recipe exactly my yard would tower over my driveway and walks by several feet. So I modified. For areas I wanted to till -veggie garden- I kept it thin. It was virtually weed-free last year and tilled easily this spring.
The evil Ivy
For an area on the side of my house that had been infested with ivy- I went thick. The ivy has popped up in only a few places but either the straw sprouted or some grass-like seed took root.
My sprouting straw
Luckily it's on the surface, rather than running beneath, so it's easily plucked and used as a first layer elsewhere.
Now I have all my veggies planted I'll be after the big stuff- my front lawn.
In a later post I'll show some of the layers as I put them down.
Friday, June 11, 2010
Friends and Enemies
As the garden battle intensifies we line up with our friends to face our foes. Bees- love 'em or fear 'em- you won't have a garden without them. I'll write another time about how I learned to love bees, worms, and spiders.
Worms. I have a lot of clay in my soil, so these are my best friends. I even touch them regularly.
I don't call myself the gloveless gardener for nothing.
Spider momma and babies to the right. If she stays put I'll take some more photos of her. Years ago I would never have gotten anywhere near close enough to take this shot.
Good old ivy. We actually planted this stuff in the yard when we first moved to the Northwest 30 years ago. And we're still beating it off. I'm hoping eventually the perma-culture will win this battle.
Slugs, our Northwest favorite. (Enemy, that is) With the wet spring we've had these beasties are a plague. More to come on using beer and copper in the fight against them.
Monday, June 7, 2010
Coming Attractions
You'd think I love these things!
I would love to have folks send in ideas and tips from their gardening life. You can make comments or be a guest blogger. I plan on doing two series of blogs. One on perma-culturing. I am gradually converting all my front lawn to garden and will report as I go. I am also doing a modified perma-culture in my vegetable garden.
This is my first section of perma-culture in my front yard. The topper of straw sprouted!
I am also experimenting on the best ways to get rid of slugs without poisons. I have tried for several years to be organic and would like to keep the blog focused in that direction.
The evil nocturnal slugs love a bite of Japanese eggplant
I would love to have folks send in ideas and tips from their gardening life. You can make comments or be a guest blogger. I plan on doing two series of blogs. One on perma-culturing. I am gradually converting all my front lawn to garden and will report as I go. I am also doing a modified perma-culture in my vegetable garden.
This is my first section of perma-culture in my front yard. The topper of straw sprouted!
I am also experimenting on the best ways to get rid of slugs without poisons. I have tried for several years to be organic and would like to keep the blog focused in that direction.
The evil nocturnal slugs love a bite of Japanese eggplant
Thursday, June 3, 2010
Peonies Adelman's Nursery
This is the Bartzella, one of my favorites. It is big and glamorous- just what a peony should be.
The Madame Butterfly- the name says it all.
The Chocolate Soldier- yum!
The cream puff is the one I bought, for now. I'm getting rid of my front lawn this year, so next spring I can go peony-crazy.
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Garden and nursery tour
I just got back from checking out Bauman's Nursery and Adelman's Peony farm with some friends.
These are fuchia from hanging baskets at Bauman's. More pix will follow.
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