Followers

Monday, May 29, 2017

🌻🍃🍅 No. 4: Milk Jug -> Cultivator #100GardenHacks 🍃🍓🍃

I am working on a project for the 2017
growing season to work my way through
100 garden hacks*.

Milk Jug -> Cultivator



🕊, 💌,  & 🍃
~KF

*101+ Garden Hacks magazine. 2017. Rodale, Inc. 

I found this copy on a CVS magazine stand :)
However, portions of this publication
previously appeared at RodaleOrganicLife.com



🌻🍃🍅 No. 3.5: More Dibbles #100GardenHacks 🍃🍓🍃

I am working on a project for the 2017
growing season to work my way through
100 garden hacks*.

Dibbles, continued: Old Toothbrushes

I've long noticed old toothbrushes are kept in tool boxes for various uses, and once I realized how handy they can be I started saving them as a craft supply. And now I've discovered another use for those brushes that get replenished every 3 months (assuming recommended dental hygiene is being practiced).
The end of the handle makes a great dibble, and unlike the chopsticks
the toothbrush can be used to brush the soil back over the seed 
or even disperse tiny seeds (e.g. chives).


🕊, 💌,  & 🍃
~KF

*101+ Garden Hacks magazine. 2017. Rodale, Inc. 

I found this copy on a CVS magazine stand :)
However, portions of this publication
previously appeared at RodaleOrganicLife.com



Friday, May 26, 2017

The Humans

I'm learning how one of the most the important parts of developing a community space requires me to stay open to land uses I don't anticipate. I'm thrilled my time spent in environmental science has exposed me to the importance of staying flexible: we can't dictate what natural spaces mean to one another.

This spring I let some dirt bikers have at the back of the property that hasn't been developed yet. They've done this amazing job building a really fun track and it looks great! What used to be nothing but a weed-filled tick haven is now a comfortable space for people! And a terriflc walking path when the bikers aren't there. And the bike racers have been nothing but polite to our gardeners, no trampling on growing spaces and they've even offered to help is fix a greenhouse roof. I'm thinking this back lot may just need to stay a dirt bike track indefinitely.
#theoryandpractice






Cottonwood seed is like nature's fingerprinting dust for cobwebs.


We are like the Little Shop Of Horrors for wild carrots back here!

I don't even understand what kind of vascular system I'm seeing here!! Until, that is I found out it's poison hemlock: purple blotches on stem and much earlier in the season compared to the late summer blooms of wild carrot (a.k.a. Queen Anne's Lace)

Thursday, May 25, 2017

🌻🍃🍅 No. 3: Soil Dibbles #100GardenHacks 🍃🍓🍃

I am working on a project for the 2017
growing season to work my way through
100 garden hacks*.

Repurposed Chopsticks

Another hack for overgrown takeout cutlery collections.
Disposable chopsticks make a nice soil dibble, for creating an easy seed planting space in soil or growing mix. Dibbles help new gardeners and kids to help ensure seeds are easily planted at the correct depths.

If you have a ruler handy, you can mark off measurements.
🕊, 💌,  & 🍃
~KF

*101+ Garden Hacks magazine. 2017. Rodale, Inc. 

I found this copy on a CVS magazine stand :)
However, portions of this publication
previously appeared at RodaleOrganicLife.com



Monday, May 8, 2017

🌻🍃🍅 No. 2: Plant Markers #100GardenHacks 🍃🍓🍃



I am working on a project for the 2017
growing season to work my way through
100 garden hacks*.
Garden Hack #2: Plant Markers (repurpose)

 Have one of these collections?

You can turn them into easy plant markers for a quick way to keep up with a large amount of seed sowing (like early spring when testing all those leftover seeds from last year). It can get as decorative as you want, like the photos below of some I used on a seed project with kids. I wanted to jazz them up a little for some fun & individuality.


I used nail polish because it has become a staple for garden use. It already designed for easy application in small areas, and it holds up well to weathering at least for a season; non-toxic varieties are increasingly easier to find, too, if that's a concern for you. 


Other, more perfunctory, easy labeling methods can just involve a sharpie, maybe even some tape. 


I liked this hack because besides helping with a large amount of spring plantings while requiring little planning or expense, it also helped spring-clean out the drawer of disposable takeout accoutrement.

🕊, 💌,  & 🍃
~KF

*101+ Garden Hacks magazine. 2017. Rodale, Inc. 

I found this copy on a CVS magazine stand :)
However, portions of this publication
previously appeared at RodaleOrganicLife.com



Followers