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Showing posts from April, 2024

Worm Barn Checkin - 2024 04 09

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  In early February I made an arrangement to collect rabbit droppings and used bedding from my friend. She has two bunnies who live indoors. They are housetrained and leave their droppings in a litter box. The bedding is a cellulose material and there is also straw in the mix. We have organized a bucket brigade - I leave an empty clean bucket and pick up the full bucket of droppings. It's working out to be a weekly or bi-weekly swap.  The material from the litter box is very dry. I soak it in the bucket for a few days before adding it to the worm bins so the material is moist and the microorganisms can begin their work for the worms to feed. Today I checked on the worm bins and found a very lively worm community in the damp rabbit droppings mix. I layer the droppings between damp cardboard to provide brown compost. When I put my hands down into the droppings mixture, it was nice and warm, not hot. At this point I have gone from one handful of worms and bedding last summer to n...

East Vancouver Rain Forest - 2024 04 07

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  It was a great day for gardening. First, we loaded the truck with 6 empty trash barrels and headed over to the Burnaby Lake equestrian barn. It didn't take long for the two of us to fill all 6 trash barrels with manure. I was digging from the back of the manure shed. The manure, sawdust and straw were already composted to the point that there were worms in the pile. Matt was out at the front of the other shed. He collected the fresh droppings and straw. It was easy enough to maneuver the full trash barrels back up onto the truck bed. Our second stop was the Coast Salish Plant Nursery at the Wild Bird Trust of BC just off the Dollarton Highway. It is hard to describe the feeling of returning to the salmonberries, huckleberries and thimbleberries of my childhood. Also the sword ferns and liquorice ferns.  I have been dreaming of turning our east boulevard into an indigenous understory planting in the shadow of the giant Lombardi Poplar tree. I pulled up the sad turf grass year...

Planting seeds - 2024 04 03

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  I finally got up the gumption to plant some seeds. I haven't had very good luck planting, germinating, and cultivating seeds. I realized that there wasn't going to be anything lost if I planted the seeds instead of keeping them in their packets in the kitchen drawer. My planting bins this year are scrounged from our big yard clean up last year. I drilled holes in the bottom to allow water to escape and then loaded in layers of leaves from last year, soil from the city composting system, compost from my pile, and worm castings from my worm barn. I scattered the seeds and then added a layer of composted soil from my pile. Everything was thoroughly soaked with rain water from the rain barrel. I am not a patient seed planter. I am not a knowledgeable cultivator. I was wondering if I should give them a cover of wet cardboard for a couple of days to give them a warm blanket. They are probably planted too deep in the compost and old leaves.  We'll see if the miracle of life can ...