• Tag Archives wood’s edge
  • A Prolegomena to All Future Gardens

    17  bar rises 30.08  3mph NNW  windchill 13  Samhain

    Waxing Crescent Moon of Long Nights

    The black plastic has been laid down; the marsh hay rests on top of it in fluffy abundance.  A good snow right now would marry the two until early spring.  May it come soon.

    This was a long project.  I had to cut down weeds, trees, raspberry canes and shrubs, pull vines and dislodge a deadfall. All this was prolegomena.   The black plastic had to be rolled out, made to conform to the odd shapes created by various impediments, then cut and staked or held down with logs.  After a piece of plastic was cut and laid in place, then the marsh hay went over it.

    This process, too, is prolegomena for the next phase.  In that phase we will plant serviceberry, hawthorne, and other shrubs and small trees that produce food edible by and interesting to birds and varmints.  That phase ties in with the orchard as a distraction from the human edibles, in the hope that more–or enough–will end up for us.  It is this linkage of one piece with the other, all in the service of creating a sustainable enviornment for people and animals, that excites me about permaculture.

    I have also mulched all the bulbs I planted and/or transplanted at the end of August and the middle of September.  These are daffodils, tulips, hyacinths, snow drops, lilies of many kinds and iris.  I have both mulched and not mulched over the years and find that mulching the first year for all new plantings and after for those plants sensitive to cold increases the germination rate considerably.

    There are also many peppers now in the hydroponics.  Only one is large so far, but they keep sucking down nutrient fluid at a rapid pace so they are growing.  I have not yet convinced any eggplant blossoms to move on to fruiting but I imagine that’s only a matter of patience.


  • Home As A Political Statement

    15  bar steep rise 30.05  5mph NNW windchill 11  Samhain

    Waxing Crescent Moon of Long Nights   Day  8hr  56m

    Below are photographs of recent work underway along the wood’s edge here.  Almost done for this year.

    orchardinwinter350.jpg

    The fruit trees as winter takes hold.

    marshhay350.jpg

    Marsh hay before use.  AKA hay without seeds or straw without seeds.

    plasticandmulch1350.jpg

    View along the wood’s edge facing due north.  The straw in the foreground and mid-ground covers the black plastic.  The area covered is approximately 15 feet wide, that is, 15 feet between the truck path and the beginning of the forest proper and extends perhaps 150-200 feet from end to end.  This whole area will have shrubs and small trees planted in the spring.

    progress350.jpg

    This gives you a better picture of what’s going on here.  I ran out of hay on Sunday and had to get the new load visible in the first shot.

    Do you remember how you felt when you first realized you loved someone?  I have that feeling over and over with the land here.