Sounds like a plan...wish I still had pix of all those balconies and decks I did...I had such a blast back in the day. Where are you? Washington? Those mountains, like omg! Why would you put maters on a deck when you have ground space for them? You'll get better results with a deeper root run. I could see an herb garden on a deck, that could be beautiful.Ah that's really cool! I will want to pick your mind for sure when I finally get round to designing that space!
Though it's south-facing, light is going to be an issue, the other day I measured the lux (only roughly, with a cell phone app), max was 3500, and the spot where I wanted to place the tomatoes originally was even shy of 1000
I've just officially postponed that for a year - this year I'm just going to put some pots out there and see how things do, observe light, winds... observe observe, then plan and do
Great to have you aboard! Yes I hope there'll be a thing or two we can scratch our heads over haha!along for the ride!!! Looking beautiful! Those mountains.... wow! Part of the Alps range yes?? You are fortunate to have such a nice space to work in! I'm ready for a garden upgrade! Can't wait to see what is yet to come!
Nope other side of the big blue sea, in AustriaSounds like a plan...wish I still had pix of all those balconies and decks I did...I had such a blast back in the day. Where are you? Washington? Those mountains, like omg! Why would you put maters on a deck when you have ground space for them? You'll get better results with a deeper root run. I could see an herb garden on a deck, that could be beautiful.
Oh nice...I traveled through Austria...saw Insbruck where they did the Sound of music...funny story: the hostel I stayed in showed The Sound of Music every freakin day at noon for the travelers in the common area. I didnt watch it but I did take a selfie in the gazebo they used in the movie.Nope other side of the big blue sea, in Austria
Sadly my garden is going to get plowed under when they tear down the old houses and build new ones there. But that'll be another few years. So I have a bit of time to get my balcony garden up... Plus, I need zones, I do best at eating my veggies when they pretty much grow into my mouth
Best tomatoes are those eaten directly off the bush, I swear!
And herbs, most definitely! I have this hunch that truly alive herbs, I could get all my nutes from those alone!
Cheers!
This is a nice jam!! I can dig it!Just taking a step back, for the big picture.
What this is aaalll about.
Yes, we can heal this land!
omg lol! Imagine having to work there hahaOh nice...I traveled through Austria...saw Insbruck where they did the Sound of music...funny story: the hostel I stayed in showed The Sound of Music every freakin day at noon for the travelers in the common area. I didnt watch it but I did take a selfie in the gazebo they used in the movie.
Oh ur right it was salzburg...i was there too....i was a regular tourista....a dumb kid who just had a major break up and liked to run away from his problrms...always been like that.omg lol! Imagine having to work there haha
I think that must've been Salzburg though, Innsbruck's attractions are the Golden Roof View attachment 3913414
and Zaha Hadid's ski jump tower
View attachment 3913415
- though they used to take tourists to the old one too haha
What is your soil pH?
In Oregon all of the Hydrangea flowers are blue in reaction to the acidic soil. Here in Southern California the flowers are pink in reaction to the basic soil.
After I started amending my clay soil with leaf compost (I have the lawn people give me the clippings and leaves) my soil became soft and loamy. Now it contains worms the size of small snakes!
Make sure you promote predators in your garden - wasps eat aphids.
I burn all infected plant parts and then add the ash back to the compost pile.
Fish fertilizers and rabbit droppings can be used directly on plants without causing any burn.
You can collect leaves and organic matter from the floor of an old growth forest to obtain mature leaf molds and fungi as a nice starter for your compost.
Do you ever go hunting for fungi?
I want to visit Austria during Christmas. I have a friend who went and the experience he shared in pictures and words revealed a country that loves to celebrate Christmas in style!
Hey hi Mo, thanks for stopping by and sharing your garden "secrets"! I do love your garden, great to know it's got compost as its main engine!What is your soil pH?
In Oregon all of the Hydrangea flowers are blue in reaction to the acidic soil. Here in Southern California the flowers are pink in reaction to the basic soil.
After I started amending my clay soil with leaf compost (I have the lawn people give me the clippings and leaves) my soil became soft and loamy. Now it contains worms the size of small snakes!
Make sure you promote predators in your garden - wasps eat aphids.
I burn all infected plant parts and then add the ash back to the compost pile.
Fish fertilizers and rabbit droppings can be used directly on plants without causing any burn.
You can collect leaves and organic matter from the floor of an old growth forest to obtain mature leaf molds and fungi as a nice starter for your compost.
Do you ever go hunting for fungi?
I want to visit Austria during Christmas. I have a friend who went and the experience he shared in pictures and words revealed a country that loves to celebrate Christmas in style!
hmmm, well, somehow the first thought that comes to mind is "what would happen if I sprinkled baby oatmeal in there and lightly tossed it around, I wonder what types of fungal explosion it'd create?"Conundrum #4
oh, the myriad ways of composting leaves
So last fall, I collected lots and lots of leaves and put them into all sorts of scenarios.
@greasemonkeymann , mediate my madness please I'm driving myself crazy
The mulched ones
did a good job of keeping the soil covered over winter, though I took care to pin them down, either with dead branches or pieces of fencing - vs. storms and blackbirds
They're weathered and crumbly now, and will probably become part of the soil really fast when the first layer of fresh mulch comes on. Actually, they seem to be disappearing now already, loks the soil is taking them up as they crumble.
No doubts here, I would've liked to have more of them to mix with those hi-n greens!
The trampled ones
Quite a lot of leaves went onto the pathways, which are a bit lower than the beds, and got trampled on....
Well, they got stomped down when I put them there, and then there wasn't really enough traffic
Except the path behind the adopted roses - there, the top layers have been totally weathered, and I have a moist layer underneath, that perhaps can be a bit of a weed-stopper?
View attachment 3916226
(there's goutweed under, unweedable due to its being totally knitted up with the cypress roots)
We'll see about that
The ones mixed with woodchips
had disappeared before the big snows came
The woodchips were meant as browns for the thermal compost, hopefully fungal by virtue of having lain around all winter... I may add some, but I do also like this for wormbin bedding!
The composted ones
didn't compost, as I had too little greens, it was too late in the year, and I made the huge error of leaving town after setting the pile up - returning to an actinobacterial, 66°C pile 3 days later. Immediate turning and re-watering couldn't turn it around, not lastly because it got really cold shortly after.
I already know that these will definitely make up the "woody" part of my next attempt at thermal composting
Nice and orderly lol
halfcompost left, woodchips right
both are at around 30-40% RH (squeezing oozes water), enough for now?
View attachment 3916227
The stuffed and stacked ones
I made a tower out of fencing that was lying about, pretty much 1m high. The leaves really got stuffed down in there, and were left untarped at the mercy of the elements.
Sunk down to half the volume, the outside leaves are weathered, the inner ones pretty wet, and especially, stuck to each other in layers.
View attachment 3916229
The piled-up ones
Mainly maple, about half a m³
View attachment 3916232
in varying stages of decomposition, mainly dry and going flaky or very wet, not smelling bad though
And impossible to photograph too!
View attachment 3916236
I could just leave them where they are, and plant a pumpkin into them?
Or, I start a slow and pure leaf mold for future potting pleasures
I could add the stuffed and stacked leaves to it too.
But are those enough leaves to be worth even starting?
This garden is going to get scrapped sooner or later, at the mo it looks like the gardens will stay for a year guaranteed, and another almost certainly, but you never know..
And would the strip of "lawn" to the left of my leafy patch be a good spot?
It's pretty shady in the summer, there's access to water (in case it needs moistening? should it even?), but it's open to the north (cold side, even in summer) - would it be helpful to have that side a bit protected?
Or is it, all factors considered, just not worth the effort, and more sensible to make a second thermal compost with those, which I could use soo much sooner...
I could just use the lawn strip for collecting..
Cheers for your thoughts, ideas, admonitions and asides
hmmm!!hmmm, well, somehow the first thought that comes to mind is "what would happen if I sprinkled baby oatmeal in there and lightly tossed it around, I wonder what types of fungal explosion it'd create?"
now, i'm not saying go do that, but that's what i'd do, purely to see what happens.
Dry slow composts are usually more fungal anyhow..
Just a thought.
I just got a rush of customers to juggle at my shop, i'll post again in a lil bit
there are more practical uses for the leaves
alright, so my only complaint with doing a leaf mold where they are is that it'll magically disappear..hmmm!!
Thanks I completely forgot about oatmeal - also for my wormbin and such
Sounds like if I decide to make a pure leaf pile, I won't be having to check on it, not regarding humidity at least?
But yes, to juggle your customers first.