Heidi Miller

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since Jan 25, 2013
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Hawaii/Idaho
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Recent posts by Heidi Miller

Hi again Fiona! Thank you! As for the trees, it seems that black walnuts are kinda toxic for other plants, mostly garden plants. The roots contaminate the soil. I think, in that line behind the house, we have 5 or more black walnut trees. There are at least 30 or 40 years old....they have a well established root system and even if we did cut them down it would take years for soil to be good again.....That's what I was told....if anyone knows better or different, please let me know...would be a lot less headache for me if it wasn't so! lol
12 years ago

Fiona Martin wrote:Hey there,

First post here, so bear with me! Not sure how practical it would be, but could you use the walls as a foundation for your greenhouse, or if you built up the floor or knocked a whole in the walls to provide access, could you use it (or part of it) for a chicken house, it would stop any critters from digging in. It would seem a waste to not benefit from the walls. Cheers



Aloha Fiona!

Thanks for jumping in.
I originally planned on putting the green house to the back part of the hole. Something like 40ft x15ft or so, but when I look at google earth it seems like it might get too much shade from the pine and the walnut trees.. I don't want it up on ground level because it would block the view of all my windows on that side of the house (we have beautiful sunrises out back)



Also would have the issue with the toxic stuff from the black walnuts.

We have more than enough land and concrete pads (two buildings burned down before we purchased the property) to put the green house and garden.

12 years ago
Thanks for your responses!

We have yet to remove the plywood and get a really good look inside, but as far as I can tell it is jus a perimeter wall and there is gravel at the bottom with an occasional cat living down there.

It might be hard to tell in the pictures, but its really, really big and pretty close to the house. A pond of that size would just be too much and too close for comfort. It's maybe 5 feet away from the door, would hate to trip and drown coming out of the house...lol.

Down the line we do want a green house and an aquaponics system, so filling most of it will be the option for us.

I like the idea of a mound on the perimeter so we won't need to go to the effort of knocking down the wall, but near the porch I guess we could rent something that we could use cut it level to the ground, then use the pieces as stepping stones or something like that near the shop out back. Same with the wide path with the pillars....has to go.

Would the leaves from the black walnut be a problem for the pond? I'm sure the roots wont because there will be a liner.
12 years ago
Hi there Leila!

Thanks for the response.

Here are a couple of pics of the hole (covered up with plywood). As you see they sawed off part of the porch roof to make room for the building they wanted to put up. we plan to fix that.

Around the edges the concrete is about 6-8" above ground. The sidewalk on the South side is slanted towards the house. There are also supports with screws sticking out that are a trip hazards.

I would rather put in a little bigger back deck and just let grass grow over the rest.





I was thinking about putting in a sunken garden with raised beds, it would have a bit of protection from the wind storms we get. But I just found out that it's not a good choice because on the other side of the foundation there is a grove of old black walnut trees.
12 years ago
I have a question that you might be able to help me with. We have a large hole in the back yard where the previous owners planned on building another house. The hole is 40x60' and about 3' deep. I has concrete walls. If I were to push in the concrete and cover it with soil, will the concrete effect the quality of my soil?
12 years ago
Thought I'd add a pic of our place
12 years ago
Thanks for the welcome
12 years ago
I'm really interested in putting something like this in our basement and in our shop and I know when we put in our Vermont bun baker on the main floor the insurance required that we have a fireman check it for safety and fill out some paperwork so they would continue to insure our home.

We've had so much bad luck with insurance that I have the sinking feeling that if you would just put it in and something were to happen in the home, even if it wasn't related to the RHM, and the insurance came to inspect they would find reason to NOT pay.
12 years ago
Aloha all! Currently we are in Hawaii, but have a small ranch in Idaho where we plan to do some homesteading and get back to basics!
12 years ago