Showing posts with label compost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label compost. Show all posts

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Repelling vampires on Halloween....

On a blustry, 39 degree Halloween day I planted garlic. It seemed fitting.


I have wanted to do this for several years, but never quite around to it. Here in Maine, garlic must be planted in late October. The weather at this time of year is not really all that condusive to digging in the dirt. This year I planned ahead. I bought the bulbs from a lovely woman at the Common Ground Fair. 3 different varieties, German White, Russian Red and another, the name of which escapes me. She included specific planting instructions with each purchase.

I bundled up and hoed a long row in my garden. My hands were frozen. Off to the hardware store where I picked up thermal garden gloves and a bale of straw. Once home I dug my row a little deeper. Next I delved into the bottom of the composter for dark, rich, fragrant compost to feed and nurture my precious garlic bulbs.
All year the kitchen waste, some garden clippings, some fall leaves and the occasional bucket of manure from my horse go into the compost bin. I water it from time to time, and give it a weekly stir. When I need it I have beautiful dirt full of happy worms. It never ceases to amaze me that potato peels, coffee grounds and egg shells can make such lovely soil!

Here is one of the garlic bulbs nestled into compost. I then topped the row with soil, followed by a layer of partially decomposed wood shavings from the hen house. I then blanketed the row with deep straw to keep it cozy in the icy winter. It is my hope that today's efforts will be rewarded with pungent, flavorful bulbs of garlic next summer. That would be sweet!






Monday, June 28, 2010

Yard Sale bucket...

The local Agway feed/seed store has their annual plants for sale, cheap! I couldn't resist and grabbed a few six packs of root-bound, wilted things that looked half dead. The Dusty Miller, (the silvery broad leafed plant to the rear and the right) looked particularly pathetic. Another plant shopper even commented when I bought it, "You must have a kind heart, that one looks in dire need of rescue." I brought it and the other unloved plants home, smiling. Then I mixed up potting soil with some of the "black gold" compost from the compost bin that hugs my garage and receives all our egg shells and wilted lettuce and such. I put it all in this oh-so-funky yard sale bucket, which I scored for $1.00! A yucky plastic pot this size would be $15, easy. And no where near as cool.

Less than 24 hours later the plants roots have discovered room to grow. A whopping thunderstorm last night gave them an extra good drink and they look so much perkier.