brianrdu: (Default)
Of course, as I typed that, I just remembered that a friend on Facebook reported they just saw the HBO dramatization of "Grey Gardens" (which I loved), and is calling everybody "chicken" like Big Edie Beale. I need to watch this again ASAP, followed by the original documentary and then "The Beales of Grey Gardens", both of which I currently have on hand via Netflix.

ANYWAY...the framework of my new chicken house is up in my back yard. I went to the Habitat ReStore store and bought a used window (to be mounted sideways on the inner wall of the coop for easy cleaning, etc.) and a used door for the exterior. I'm putting enough dough into it that the guys building it are laughing that it's WAY too fancy for a bunch of chickens. I don't care, bear! I want them safe and secure, and I'd like it to be presentable. We'll see. If it looks like a pile of shit, it won't be for lack of trying.

So far, the mystery plant of 2009 in my compost pile is a potato plant, obviously from a rogue potato skin thrown in there at some point during the winter. This is a welcome surprise, as the past two years, there have been myriad tomatoes (from squeezing plum tomatoes when cooking, and this ends up in the pile) and some previously noted butternut squash (including last year's Audrey, which generated 12 squash, 3 of which are still on my dining room table). I'm trying to talk my parents into making a compost pile. The plants in the yard really love the results when it's added to their environment, much more than just chemical fertilizer. Plus, diverting all that sort of stuff really makes the trash a lot less smelly.

Date: 2009-05-04 04:25 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] brianrdu.livejournal.com
Mine's away from the house, about 25 feet away, in full sun. There are 4 old pressure treated posts (used to be a handrail in front of my house, one of the first things to get ripped out when I moved in), with hardware cloth nailed around 3 sides with galvanized U nails. It's sort of like layer cake. There is a layer of scraps (peels, rinsed eggshells, coffee grounds, tea bags), then a layer of grass clippings (in a separate pile on the other side of the yard), then some old compost or dirt, then it starts over. When I get dead leaves, I get them in there too. I always make sure the scraps are buried by other stuff, leaving them on top is an invitation for trouble (raccoons, possums, who knows what else). The pile heats up when it gets going; during the summer, flies lay eggs in it and when I turn it with a pitchfork, there are tons of maggots in it. I don't view this as a bad thing; they are not the gross maggots on meat, they are soldier fly larvae (http://extension.oregonstate.edu/news/story.php?S_No=802&storyType=garde)...I don't consider this a bad thing. Not especially pleasant, but they speed everything up, which is all I care about. In the cooler months, and when the pile isn't as "hot", earthworms show up in it. I let it sit in there for around a year or so, and pretty much empty it out in the spring, when I use it for planting things, mixed into the soil, and also put it around the base of some stuff after disturbing the soil, such as roses. I pretty much use this and Osmacote to make everybody happy.

Date: 2009-05-04 04:32 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] brokn2pieces.livejournal.com
i want to garden with you!

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