To be is to do …Kant
To do is to be ..Nietzsche
Do be do be do…Sinatra
My journal documenting my time living on the Stone Baerm Homestead in summer 2021: https://permies.com/t/160807/Stone-Baerm-Adventures
To be is to do …Kant
To do is to be ..Nietzsche
Do be do be do…Sinatra
To be is to do …Kant
To do is to be ..Nietzsche
Do be do be do…Sinatra
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
John Daley Bendigo, Australia The Enemy of progress is the hope of a perfect plan
Benefits of rainfall collection https://permies.com/t/88043/benefits-rainfall-collection
GOOD DEBT/ BAD DEBT https://permies.com/t/179218/mortgages-good-debt-bad-debt
Anne Miller wrote:Be sure to ask lots of questions and post lots of photos.
To be is to do …Kant
To do is to be ..Nietzsche
Do be do be do…Sinatra
Tinkering Forum: https://permies.com/f/11/tnk
How Permies Works: https://permies.com/w/how-permies-works
Visit Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
How permies.com works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
John Daley Bendigo, Australia The Enemy of progress is the hope of a perfect plan
Benefits of rainfall collection https://permies.com/t/88043/benefits-rainfall-collection
GOOD DEBT/ BAD DEBT https://permies.com/t/179218/mortgages-good-debt-bad-debt
How Permies works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
My projects on Skye: The tree field, Growing and landracing, perennial polycultures, "Don't dream it - be it! "
How Permies works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
My projects on Skye: The tree field, Growing and landracing, perennial polycultures, "Don't dream it - be it! "
I do think that the spring will do its thing and bring me up a bit with those sunspoons and stuff. I just sprinkled some ash on the hugelkultur beds I made last fall to assist on melting all the snow. I might need to take them apart and construct them again as there is no soil in between the wood.
) and I think that there’s enough fabric for all three of them. That will be some good practice!
Saana Jalimauchi wrote:It's wonderful feeling you get when you accomplish something... I'm super tired and have been running really low on spoons lately so this was a big win.

Stephen B. Thomas wrote:
Congrats on your wins lately Saana, and I appreciate the nudge into the "spoons theory" thread. Seems like just what I needed to think on.

Not much, but still. Now the day temperatures are around +5 degrees celsius(41F). Oh well, it's still early. Not even May yet.

I've heard that where late frost is a concern, planting on a north slope is recommended. If you don't have any of those, what about building a really tall hugel and planting the trees on the north side of it? I would make sure that the cold air can keep moving, so you'd need to think about the shape of that hugel and the slope of the land. Some frost/dry tolerant shrubs at the top could help with the height, but I'd want something like currants that root easily, because they may tip over as the hugel settles over time.Saana Jalimauchi wrote:Maybe actually trapping frost on the trees would be wiser to delay the bloom?
Since you asked... I got curious and to no surprise: "The past participle “sawn” is mostly archaic except in British English. “Sawed-off” is the overwhelming favorite in American English, “sawn-off” the overwhelming favorite in British English. My dad was off-the-boat Brit, so my brain was saying sawn, but sawed didn't look wrong either since Canadians are exposed to a lot of American English!Saana Jalimauchi wrote:We also now have all the pieces sawed(is that a word?) for the other growing bed in front of our house.
Saana Jalimauchi wrote:Do you know the feeling when you are walking on your property and then suddenly you get a vision of ”oh yes, that’s where that thing is going to be!”?
Nancy Reading wrote: mental box of garden jigsaw bits
I often put plants in their pots where I'm thinking of planting them for a while before they go out and see whether I think they belong there.

I’ll have to do some research on that, do tell if you have some insight on this matter!
Whathever you are, be a good one.
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Beans and pumpkins go well, but you'd have to chose the most cold tolerant bean you could find - like Scarlet Runner beans - and you'd have to put some sticks in for them to climb.Saana Jalimauchi wrote:I also prepared an area for zucchini and pumpkin. I put down some sod dug up from elsewhere, some quite good looking compost and then some bagged soil on top. Covered it with hay. I hope the pumpkins will like it! I’m not yet sure what I will companion plant with them.. Ideas?
Visit Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
How permies.com works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
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cat heaven has trees that produce tuna and tiny ads
The new gardening playing cards kickstarter is now live!
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/paulwheaton/garden-cards
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