Anna Demb

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since Nov 17, 2011
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Recent posts by Anna Demb

Sometimes we lay the seaweed out on a tarp to dry in the sun. When it's dry and crunchy, we either drive over it or use a weed whacker to crush it so we can store and spread it more easily and evenly. I also add it in this form when growing shoots and micro greens indoors in the winter.
2 weeks ago
I read somewhere that tomatoes repel asparagus beetles, so I tried growing some in front of my asparagus bed. So far, so good--many less beetles.

I tried using wild strawberries as a ground cover around the asparagus --after 2 years, can't tell if they're helping or hindering!
I grow with soil blocks that airprune veg. seedlings and they work really well. Air pruning in nurseries here in Maine seem to work well too. Here's an article from MOFGA:

https://www.mofga.org/resources/maine-heritage-orchard/sharing-rare-plant-material-at-the-seed-swap-scion-exchange/

And they look really easy to build. There's an explanation in the MOFGA article and also here:
https://www.motherearthnews.com/organic-gardening/growing-bare-root-trees-with-air-prune-beds-zbcz1903/
4 months ago

Many things struggle to grow in my thin, rocky Cape Breton soil. I seeded daikon/tillage radishes everywhere but the roots don't get very big here. It has reseeded and occasionally I find a big root, in with the gazillion seed pods... (progress?) Lupines seem to grow everywhere here. They're invasive but at least they're pretty and I've read they help to concentrate calcium in the soil.  



Elise, sundial lupin/lupinus perennis is native here in Maine and in Newfoundland so it might be native or almost native for Cape Breton. Pretty easy to grow from seed and it's a nitrogen fixer.
9 months ago
We've been having neighborhood afternoon parties to greet new neighbors. Potluck or something simple like snacks and drinks, so they can get to meet more people at once and the neighborhood gets more cohesive and neighborly. Part of the fun is the hosts walking around the neighborhood and knocking on doors to invite everyone.
10 months ago
Wendell Berry's novels are set in a farming community and are very beautiful. Kinda homesteading. And very inspiring in depicting the unique benefits of small, rural close-knit community.
1 year ago
I don't have a vole problem at this point, but here's a suggestion from fellow Mainer Elliot Colman from a old MOFGA article:

For vole control, Coleman builds small wooden boxes with a removable cover and with a mouse-sized hole on each of two sides.  He places a set trap inside each hole (The Better Mousetrap, from Intruder, Inc., www.intruderinc.com) and adds a long handle for carrying the box. “Don’t use bait,” he advised. “Just spring the traps.” Voles eventually associate the smell of baits with the death of fellow voles; without bait, they encounter a “small dark hole that smells like vole” after the first vole has entered, and they enter the box and run into the trap. Empty the traps daily.

https://www.mofga.org/resources/season-extension/colemans-low-tunnels/

Laura K wrote:I have been thinking about these for what feels like forever but never got around to building them anywhere that I lived. Then my parents moved to Maine, and one time I was visiting them and saw them in their windows! I don't know if they came with the house (not the kind of thing my dad would build, but maybe...), but it was cool to see them being used "in the wild"!

Other than being a little delicate, I love that you can still see out the windows. My head continue to swirl with modifications (usually more complicated and more expensive, but maybe not much) -- solid plastic or plexiglas panels, one that I would like to hinge so that I can still open one of the two windows it would cover......

They are the perfect Kreg jig project!


Yes indeed. Have to say, although delicate, they are also really lightweight, which makes them so easy to handle and use. Just have to avoid bumping them into corners of things when we switch them in and out fall and spring. And if that happens, we've been known to mend them with packing tape.
Also, tightening up the plastic film with a hairdryer is so entertaining.
1 year ago
Here's a little more about DIY window inserts/interior storm windows. We made some for our 1893 Maine house back in 2010, and they are only now needing some new film and weatherstripping. The cost was about $6 a window. At that time, we also insulated the attic and basement, but the window inserts felt like the biggest improvement in comfort, keeping out drafts and chill while allowing the sun in and our view out. What a great investment! With the 2 layers of film, together with the window glass, we get 3 layers with 2 air pockets, like the expensive windows used in passive houses.

You can just push them in and pull them out, so they are easy to change out in fall and spring, or when you need some fresh air in the winter.

Also, they're easy and fun to make if you have a drill and/or screwdriver, a handsaw, a square, and a hair dryer.

Here's a link to directions on how to make them from the man who, it seems, invented them:
http://www.midcoastgreencollaborative.org/Documents/storm_pamphlet.pdf
1 year ago