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November Saturday for Compost and Community

11/20/2020

 
"I have not seen a day like this all season.  Good learning day, wonderful weather and a steady stream of of members busy in their gardens and physically spaced with masks."  Neal Weissman wrote to the Board.

It did everyone's heart good to stay apart and yet also work together for the Compost Committee! 

We saw a few folks we haven't seen all season since everyone is being super careful.  The Compost Committee carefully took in and weighed 1845 pounds of organic materials: leaves, and garden clippings to create large compost piles to cook all winter. 

In addition, members of the landscape committee planted bulbs, and we got a big head start on the collection of hoses. On Sunday they were all drained and tied up and stored for winter. 

Enjoy a few pictures from this beautiful day.

Gentle Fall Clean Up Will Bring Healthier Soil and More Life

11/2/2020

 
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​Let Dry Leaves, Stems and Tree Branches Feed Your Soil & Shelter Pollinators.
compiled by Jack Burkhalter


Dry leaves on your garden’s soil are free and feed the soil! With the crisp days and cooler temperatures leading us to think of “fall clean-up,” in our gardens, consider a different approach this year. Fall’s brown leaves are rich sources of carbon and nutrients for your garden, and they are FREE!
​
Just rake them up off  the garden paths and spread them over your garden (about 2 inches).
​
These dead leaves enrich your soil by --
  • – Providing a natural mulch
  • – Insulating the soil to retain water and protect against damaging freezes
  • – Feeding micro-organisms, insects, fungi that decompose
Remember we feed the soil that feeds the plants! 

                        Be gentle with cutting back plants over the winter.  
Leave dead-flower stalks over the winter. Leave neat brush & twig piles. 

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Keep dead plant stems intact in your garden over the winter.  Get rid of messy plastic bags and simply leave piles of twigs, branches, or logs in your garden (slightly messy or neatly arranged!). 

Dead woody material (a branch, twigs, leaves) provide abundant habitat for cavity-nesting pollinators, such as carpenter and mason bees.
  • Leave dead stems intact over the winter and into the summer
  • Good stem bee homes (pithy stems are best):
       --Raspberry , blackberries
      --Sunflowers, Coneflowers

      --Joe Pye weed, Hyssop, 
      --Hydrangea
      --Native grasses, e.g., switchgrass, little and big bluestem

With a gentle clean up we can let the fireflies and certain butterflies and moths stay in the garden to be alive next spring!
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