Saturday, May 16, 2009

compost for thought



Photographing the freedom lawn contestants gardens/yards is always interesting and gives me lots of ideas. one of the most suprising insights from last years contest is that a compost pile doesnt need to be hidden away . We are used to thinking of the piles as unsightly, but they can be beautiful. The compost piles help us remember that gardening is not a dead end to grow pretty flowers or food, but part of a continuous cycle. The magazine pictures of perfectly manicured gardens with nary a pruner or rake in sight don't tell the real story. For me now , the compost pile , the garden supports made from string and branches, the reuse and recyling of pots and containers, the rain barrels...all the signs that the gardener is conscious of his or her place in the greater schema of nature are becoming what i treasure and admire the most

Make Pyrethrum Garden Spray - wikiHow

Make Pyrethrum Garden Spray - wikiHow

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Zen center marin county CA
Spring fields

Thursday, May 7, 2009

opening the shed door


Take a break from spring clean up to look at this blog,  basically a city girl,  this young woman is now farming in MA.  Involved in working the CSA , shearing lambs, sugaring and cultivating..


For those of us who garden in our backyards and marvel at the color of the soil, thrilling to the site of a red wriggler in the compost heap, this blog gives us a vicarious thrill. We are all, gardeners and farmers alike, interacting with the environment in the most basic of ways and feel blessed in the process! what a beautiful planet.... ahhh spring!

The blog is called the perfecta, named for the type of tractor used on the farm. The photos are gorgeous.