Liz Slokar has volunteered to take our weedy waste to Western Disposal for commercial composting. Thank you very much! It is important to divert our waste away from the landfill, so we are committed to making compost instead of methane (vegetable matter decomposing without oxygen produces methane a potent green-house gas, according to Eco-cycle.) I may need to ask other people with trucks to also take our weeds. I've asked the city and Eco-cycle if we can get some kind of official compost pick-up, as well as recycling pick-up. The city has committed to starting a pilot compost project in 2010, maybe they will start with us.
Right now I have a little bin by the front gate of the West Side that is just for weeds we can't compost, like thistle and bindweed. Please, no plastic, dirt, or rocks! We pay by the ton.
Things we can compost include hair, vegetable plant parts, chopped up corn or sunflower stalks, kitchen vegetable waste, leaves, flower garden trimmings, and cut grass. Please bury food scraps in the compost.
I have topped-up the compost in bin 5 on the West Side. We (you can contribute here) will be using pitch-forks to flip it into bin 7, then back into bin 5, no more once than every third day. It should be as moist as a wrung-out sponge. See the shed door for details.
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Work share
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This last Wednesday was another volunteer day at the garden -- this time we didn't get rained out! Anne Knoll had a crew of people who put gorilla mulch in the shade garden. Adam Kemna generously lent us his truck, then Robert Young and Lisa Tannahill helped Anne get the mulch spread out all over the shade garden. (photo) Anne fixed the drip irrigation and Liz Slokar set the timer for us (yes, we were mystified) then took our weedy waste away to Western Disposal to add to their commercial compost. Michelle Crandell and Steve Balgooyen joined us to cover the front common area with mulch. Later, Paul Weiss worked into the dark putting compost on the raspberries (which are starting to ripen!)
Thank you, all!
I am going off to Yellowstone for a week. There will be no official work day next week, but we will be back on the eighth. In the meantime if you want to pitch in, you could: spread several inches of that mountain of mulch on our paths and common areas, turn the compost, pull or weed-whack the many weeds, put compost on the grapes, pick up garbage, or tend the herb garden or orchard on the east side. For details ask Judy Slack or Anne Knoll.
Monday, June 22, 2009
Drip Irrigation
Some of us are using soaker hoses at the garden. This can lead to conflicts with other gardeners if your device is flooding the path or promoting weeds. (And we wouldn't want the city to start charging us for water!) The Internet has a lot of info about setting up a soaker hose in your vegetable gardening. A pressure-regulator is a good idea -- the soaker hoses operate at best at between 10 and 15 psi, but it's difficult to set the pressure just right and make sure it stays that way. Even a cheap timer can turn off the water for you if you forget. You can see how deeply you are watering by digging down with a shovel after 15 or 30 minutes, or you can measure the inches of water you catch with a shallow container under the hose. Vegetable roots generally are not that deep, if you have actually double-dug the garden your roots might reach down two spade-lengths. Plus our clay soil absorbs water so slowly that any extra will end up just running off.
So how long do you set your timers for? What kind of system are you using?
I would love to hear how deeply you are watering your vegetables -- and tell me how you are checking.
I'm actually hand watering this year, after having used a drip-irrigation system last year. I like having more control over where the water goes and I like to SEE how much water I am using. I use soaker hoses at home for my landscape, where I want the soil to dry out for several feet down between deep soakings.
So how long do you set your timers for? What kind of system are you using?
I would love to hear how deeply you are watering your vegetables -- and tell me how you are checking.
I'm actually hand watering this year, after having used a drip-irrigation system last year. I like having more control over where the water goes and I like to SEE how much water I am using. I use soaker hoses at home for my landscape, where I want the soil to dry out for several feet down between deep soakings.
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Workshare
We had another good workday at the gardens. This time we pulled weeds in the East side -- around the compost bins, the herb garden, the squash patch, etc. Veronica and her children, Ingrid, Judy and I were there, and Anne and Kristen brought some veggie scraps from Terroir. We were interrupted by a big storm and had to take shelter in a hurry. Sometimes we wish the sheds were bigger!
Next week is another one, same time, starting at 6pm. If you can only be there for one hour, that's enough, we can get a lot done in an hour. I would like to build a new compost pile on the West side with manure and leaves, then turn it every three days. I need your help! Call or email me if you would like to be a part of making new compost. We can get compost in two to three weeks if we put the work in. Also, we should do the same thing on the East side soon.
In addition (and this work can be done any time) we need to finish pulling the weeds on the East Side around the compost and in the herb garden. We also need to add thin layer of compost and manure around the trees in the orchard, from a few inches away from the trunk, to the drip line. The grape vines and the raspberries also need some amendments. The paths also need mulching -- we have new mulch now! Several inches is very helpful in keeping down the weeds. Of course, the shade garden and the sidewalk garden on the West Side could also use some mulching. The trees overhanging the garden by the children's play around need trimming.
Please take some compost from the west side's bin. It's done, and looks pretty good aside from the big pieces (and, for some reason, rocks.) The sifter can be used to sift that stuff out. That's why we chop up big stuff with the machette or the clippers or trimmers! The newsletter has some good info about the compost.
Potluck
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The last potluck was a blast. At five o'clock I was standing on my brother-in-law's porch in Lafeyette, looking out at the pouring rain! But in Longmont it cleared up just in time for us to get together. Derise had arranged two grills, one for vegetarians and one for omnivores. A good time was had by all, the wine and sparkling juice was enjoyed, and we stayed until it was too dark to see!
Workshare Days from the Handbook
2009 WEDNESDAY WORK SHARE SCHEDULE
June 10, 6-8PM
June 17, 6-8PM
June 24, 6-8PM
July 8, 6-8PM
July 15, 6-8PM
July 22, 6-8PM
July 29, 6-8PM
August 5, 6-8PM
2009 WEEKEND WORK SHARE SCHEDULE
August 15, Saturday, 6PM-DARK
September 13, Sunday, 8AM-NOON
October 4, Sunday, 1-4PM
October 24, Saturday, 1-4PM
June 10, 6-8PM
June 17, 6-8PM
June 24, 6-8PM
July 8, 6-8PM
July 15, 6-8PM
July 22, 6-8PM
July 29, 6-8PM
August 5, 6-8PM
2009 WEEKEND WORK SHARE SCHEDULE
August 15, Saturday, 6PM-DARK
September 13, Sunday, 8AM-NOON
October 4, Sunday, 1-4PM
October 24, Saturday, 1-4PM
Starting Up a Blog for the Garden
So Facebook is getting too weird. I can't even find my link to the Second Start Garden blog without ten minutes of searching. Plus a lot of us don't want to join Facebook just to read about SSG. I've been reading about the Vibram Fivefingers on blogs on Blogger (next best thing to barefoot, apparently) so we'll give this a try.
Hopefully this blog will be a good source of information. I would welcome additional content from other gardeners. Someone who really likes blogs might just want to volunteer to keep it updated!
Hopefully this blog will be a good source of information. I would welcome additional content from other gardeners. Someone who really likes blogs might just want to volunteer to keep it updated!
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