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Composting

30/11/2013

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Compost is great for your garden soil. I think that looking after the soil in your garden is number one priority. Everybody remarks on how well things grow in my garden but it is because I like to look after the soil.

As you can see, I have some helpers. This morning I turned over the compost. The bin was three quarters full and getting a bit damp so it needed turning over. I didn't want to undo the ties at the sides of the bin so I wriggled and wriggled it until the sides came loose enough from the compost to allow me to drag the bin up and off.

Setting up a new Compost Bin

The soil was a bit uneven beside it so I levelled that out and placed the bin just beside where it was before. It suits me to have it here. It is in shade so the little worms and slaters that live amongst the composting material don't get cooked in the summer.

It is also near my chickens shed and the lid of the compost bin serves as a shelf for me to store the chooks food on. So, all in all, we are all happy. Whenever I go to place peelings etc in the compost bin, I can say hello to my little friends as well.






Just turned over the compost bin
My helpers have turned up after the job was done
Worms

The rubbish on top of the compost bin was placed as a bottom layer in its new position. bit by bit I filled the bin to halfway. There was some silver beet stems (sometimes called chard), that were still rotting down and lots that had already decomposed. There were lots of slaters. These seemed to live in the uppermost layers where things were dryer.

As I dug into the damper compost it was alive with long wriggling worms. I's sorry I did not have my camera with you so I could show you a photo of them. There were dozens of them. Some of these were forked into the new bin to continue their work.

As you saw, my chickens moved in so they will devour some of them and the rest will wriggle their way into the soil or move onto a new part of the garden as I move the compost around.


How to make a Compost Heap

There are lots of bins or boxes you can buy to make a compost heap. You can also make one yourself out of wood and wire or just wood. The bin needs to have some air getting into it so have some slats or holes around the sides.

Once you have this part all organized its a matter of filling the bin. Our bin is filled mainly with kitchen scraps but this means it does not have to go out in the weekly rubbish. Collect old grass, dried leaves or garden cuttings. This can be alternated with kitchen scraps, old newspaper - ripped up a bit, or old bills or shopping dockets you don't want to throw in the recycling. The worms won't read your private information.

Bit by bit fill the bin. Occasionally you can add a catcher full of grass clippings as you cut the lawn. Just make sure that these don't mat and that they mix with the other rubbish. Stir it with a garden fork occasionally and in a few months time you will be surprised to see all the insects and worms living in your heap and working for you - unpaid. The bin will get full and the next week you visit it you will be surprised that the rubbished has shrunk. Where did it go? It's turned into compost!

The compost at the bottom of the heap will be ready first as it will have been there the longest. So just do as I did this morning, turn it over, start again and spread the compost around your garden.

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Roses and Mosaics

28/11/2013

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Picture
Mosaic Bowl

No, this is not a posed photograph.

Some years ago I spent many an hour decorating this earthenware dish with pretty mosaics. I do love colour.

For a few years this bowl sat beneath the tap in my front garden filled with water for the wild birds. They came to drink and to have a bath in the hot Australian summer.

More recently it has been scrubbed up and is now used to feed my hens in the afternoon. if you look closely you will see little seeds still in the bowl.

The hens know that if they come to the back door about three or four o'clock they will get a handful of different seeds. it is a mixture of cracked corn, sunflower, millet and sorghum and whatever other seeds I find in my travels. it keeps the hens friendly.


Mary Rose
The bowl was placed on the lawn near my lovely Mary Rose rose. A stem of the rose bent over and lay beside the bowl. It had some buds on it so I left it lying there. A couple of days later it rewarded me with the sight of the flowers opening. I just couldn't resist taking a photo of it.

This rose grows well from cuttings so I have a few bushes dotted around the garden. It has a soft perfume and thorny stems. It  was my first rose planted in my new garden when we moved to this home on the southern coast of Australia on the eastern side. we are only seven minutes walk from the pristine beaches that spread into the distance each way.

The wind is often cool here especially in the winter as we have about 420 kilometres (about 260 miles) of sea to the south of us before you reach land in Tasmania, our southern most state which is an island out in the ocean on its own. At the southern tip of Tasmania there is only cold, blowing, blustery winds across the swelling sea until you reach Antarctica.







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    Author

    I love growing flowers in my garden and sometimes make Flower Essences from them. They have great healing properties. Chickens adorn my backyard and give me much pleasure too.

    My garden is free range like my chickens, there is no order here. All plants get along happily together.


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