composting and worms: March 2009 Archives

I moved into this house in November, with my sweetie, excited to be in a new community and excited about having a yard. Somehow, as the economy continued to crash--and crash--and I started to read more blogs about sustainability, I become interested in doing more urban homesteading, following a diet closer to Nurturing Traditions and Weston Price's theories, growing vegetables and making more of our food, or trading for it.

At the same time, I became fascinated with permaculture, the study of environmental and agriculture systems. There are some great Yahoo groups around permaculture that I have been reading and I've tried to put some of what I learned into practice.

Here's what my goals are for this spring and summer:
  • Recycle/compost food scraps
  • Cut down on using bags and plastic of alll types
  • WALK MORE, DRIVE LESS (this is a pleasure)
  • Establish and maintain an herb garden we can cook with
  • Develop a worm bin and keep it going to we can use the compost
  • Build a series of container beds w/ fresh potting soil, manure, and gravel/stone(the bottom layer)
  • Plant vegetables: sow carrots, radishes; plant tomatoes, squashes, peas and beans
  • Keep the lettuce, chard and aragula happy; plant more of it
  • Plant vines along the fence: japonica, jasmine
  • Establish the lemon tree and keep it alive so it fruits
  • Establish a pattern in trading for eggs--offer marmalade(it is coming out great), cake, soup, cornbread, all of which I make really well)
  • Get involved  more with fruit foraging and with Forage Oakland-I love what they are doing.
  • Start going to the East Bay Permaculture Guild meetings and learning more by doing with others
  • Have fun with the above, this is a marathon, not a sprint, as we say in start up land.
Meanwhile, there is so much to read, and to learn; I have to remember this is change for the long haul, and it can't all happen at once.


Although most of my Oakland garden is going to be in containers this year, I decided to sheet mulch the two flower beds that were here when we arrived, partly for practice, partly to use as weed control, and also because I do expect to plan them with flower and food later in the spring.

My sheet mulching method was to save lots of the cardboard boxes from our move, stack them outside where they'd soften, then tear them up and use them to mulch the beds.

Here are some of the shots of the beds during and after the sheet mulching.
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About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the composting and worms category from March 2009.

composting and worms: February 2009 is the previous archive.

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