Free worms from Vivian

My friend Vivian lives in the West End and in addition to her clothing-design and culinary superpowers, she has worm composting down to a fine art.  Every few months she gives me a huge bag (or two) of worm-composted food-waste from her kitchen.  Not only is it really fabulous quality but it always contains lots of live worms.  Important things I have learned about using worm compost:

(1) If you don’t put it on the garden right away and leave the bag of compost in the sun, the worms suffocate and die. (Oops)

(2) Even though my food compost bin also contains lots of worms -some of whom are direct descendants of Vivian’s worm colony – her compost process seems to be much more efficient as she gets more end-stage compost in less time.

(3) Spreading the worm compost in rainy weather works best, because it dissolves and combines with the rest of the soil faster.

(4) Compost sometimes contains unexpected surprises, like missing peelers, elastic bands, measuring spoons and other cutlery. This last batch contained wine corks!

Vivian, thank you.  I will repay you in kale….

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Implements of destruction

I am VERY excited about my new acquisition.  Despite many potential applications in dentistry or brain surgery, it is a “weed popper”, designed to remove dandelions. Definitely not something that I want to have tucked in my purse when I’m going through customs.Not sure how well it works yet, but I can’t wait to try it out on weeds (and maybe slugs).

Other extreme gardening excitement this week includes:

1) The first prototype garden frame was completed by the in-house engineering team.  It has passed the preliminary evaluation criteria and despite being lighter than anticipated, it seems to fit the frames well.   The team is going to work on creating about five or six more in the upcoming months.

2) Got a quote for rebuilding the stone wall in the back yard. Likely will go ahead with that, since my previous attempts at pouring cement were unsuccessful (don’t ask).

3) The seeds arrived! Peas + inoculent, parsnips, kale, carrots  (purple and orange), beets (mixed pack), lettuce, brussel sprouts, squash, pumpkins, corn, more kale, nasturtiums  and calendula. Potatoes, beans and pumpkins are back ordered.

That’s it.

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Compost Queen

Compost corner -The black food compost bin on the left, piles of garden compost in the wood bins and green bins of ready-to-use compost on the right.

Gardening for me isn’t just about planting things and watching them grow, nor is it eating vegetables that we grew. For me, the real miracle is how things break down, back into soil.

We have several compost bins at work right now in our yard.  The black bin is for food scraps and is sealed to keep the rodents out and the worms in. The bin is fairly efficient, however the final product is quite sludgy and isn’t suitable for use in the garden, probably because I don’t add enough dried leaves and grass. The bin never seems to fill up completely, but every few years I shovel it out and mix it into the garden compost (in the big wooden bins) where it rots for another year (or two) before it is sieved and used.

The things that never seem to rot in the compost is egg shells, pits and avocado skins.  I now just throw out the pits and avocado skins and save the shells separately for sprinkling around my plants to keep off the slugs. Whether or not broken egg shells really do deter slugs, or if that is just superstition, will be the topic of a future post.

The open garden compost piles are also really efficient.  At the end of the summer, the bin on the left was overflowing, and was about five feet deep. I covered it with a tarp and bricks (mostly to discourage people from putting more branches and leaves there) and now the pile is about a foot deep.  I have been adding stuff to the pile at the right all winter, and each week it rots down more.

The finished compost is stored in the big green bins until spring, until I spread it around the garden. You can see from the picture on the left, how fine and light the compost is. (Hmmm, I think that “fine and light” is how other people describe pastry). I am really excited about putting this in the raspberries and the flower beds in the front – but it never seems to go as far as I would like.

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Planning ahead

Cyclamen starting to emerge

This weekend’s gardening activities consisted of flipping through the West Coast Seeds 2011 Gardening Guide.  More than just a mere catalog, it provides all kinds of excellent advice for novice gardeners like “how to plant seeds” (page 42), a color-coded vegetable planting chart that tells you when to plant what (page 7) as well as pages of alluring photos.  They even have an “easy to grow” symbol for people like me! How good is that!

While the catalog is definitely inspiring, with fabulous photos and promises of huge harvests (cauliflowers that are 7-8 inches across, 1-2 pounds (page 20)) I need to take a reality check and remember what happened last year, and stick to the tried-and-true (kale, peas, kale, beans, kale, carrots, kale).  Anyway, speaking of peas and broad beans, they can be planted in Feb, so I need to order seeds soon.

Huckleberry branches

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Rainy season gardening

This weekend was surprisingly productive.  After having neglected the garden for months, I spent about three hours cleaning up.

My goal was to prune our apple tree in the back, but after the near-death pruning that we inflicted on it last year, there was really not much to cut off except for one cankerous branch.  Near the tree were lots of sprouting snowdrops, so I raked the leaves from the grassy areas (I wouldn’t call it ‘lawn’).  Once I started, I couldn’t stop…I ended up raking all the leaves from under the bushes in the shrub beds and from under the hazelnut tree with our crappy leaf rake. (Note to self: buy new rake).  Also pulled out a lot of evil ivy with my bare hands; yup, manicure season is over, girlfriend.

Today I bought a new three-pronged rake thingy and six huge bags of western tree bark mulch (6 bags for $50). I used all six bags to mulch the area under the rhodos, so will need more for the trees and raspberries.

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