Rosa Bottel

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since Nov 11, 2015
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Recent posts by Rosa Bottel

Hey!

I've 2 questions coming up.
I'm wondering if the small trees can be planted direct from the beginning of the Hugelkultur?
or do you have to wait a bit for the dirt to become more solid so the roots will hold better and how do you help the trees stands up against the wind.

I've read about using willow wood. My experiance with willow (as we like to prune them in The Netherlands) is when you put a cutted branch back in the grond, it easely becomes a tree itself.
Is that not a problem when you put willow branches or just some willow wood in a Hugelbed and cover it with soil? Won't there grow trees out of the (smaller)beds then when the layer of soil isn't large enough?

Note: Willow is a very nice tree to have for the branches as a small tooth treat for your animals (horses, rabbits, dogs) or to make baskets or natural fences with it. Or for fencing a riverbank.
Having a pruned willow growing on your land is like receiving a very nice gift, so why not using them?

Thanks for your replies!
(Sorry for bad English)
9 years ago
Hey Casie,
thanks for your comment and link in your reply.
I considered borax, but, like Paul said in this threat: it is toxic. And the bamboo rolls are in the sleeping/living/ dining/ kitchen area. (well.. at least we have the bath tub in a different room)
With a nosy 8month old puppy, borax isn't the best solution I'm affraid. My second thought is that my idea for using hot steam will bend the split bamboo wood and will damage it also, but in a different way than de woodbeetles are doing already.

Yesterday the manager of the gardencentre (where I bought the bamboo) contacted me,
he would like to take back the Bad Bamboo roll and is willing to give me my money back AND a 50 euro coupon for the dissapointment. That is so nice!
I will give him the advice to treat the bamboo like its at a high risk for his other wood containing products, but I think he sure will see and even hearing the woodbeetles bugging around.

So today I did some reverse engineering with the structure, and apparently it was even worst than I thought. The woodbeetles had some feast inside the bamboo, so I think it is not bad at all that I took it away before they run out of old wood and started on my other structures.
Next thing I did was putting on some sticky paper tape that painters (some of them) use and put it backwards on the remaning poles, so they might get stuck when they are wonder around.
I also taped some of the holes that aren made from the screws we used to put the whole thing together, to visualize if there is still any action from remaining beetles.

Well.. it is time for me to re-think my other options for a low budget, sustainable, rental house proof -and bug free- room devider.
oh, my bad. I've made some very high quality videos of my efforts today, the bugs are kind of cute- so hopefully people can have a good laugh out of this one:)
https://vimeo.com/146311012


9 years ago
Hai everybody,

this is my first question as a newb in the world of Permies:)

I've made a small bedroom space inside my living area by using recycled wood and new (BUT bug infected) split bamboo rolls.
I do like the looks of it, but now I have to deal with the woodworm or some kind of wood eating beetles.

I live in the Netherlands, now it's mostly rainy wheater, and I don't have much gardenspace for any outside storage nor space to fix it, so it has to be done indoors.
Throwing it away is not an optinion (I really want to try to reuse them), so what to do next?
I dont have any experience with Borax or other solutions, but this is what I thought:

How about using a steam cleaner for killing the wood worms and maybe some amount of alcohol (for me) afterwards

Any thoughts about it?

Thank you so much!
Take care.
Rosa Bottel

PS. sorry for the bad English



9 years ago