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Try calling your electric company. They usually contract out to tree companies to trim their electric lines. Mine contracts to 3 different places. I called my rural electric and they put me on the list for all 3 companies. So far, I've gotten 2 loads. I still need a bunch more, but it's more than I had.

I agree with LG. If you use fresh poo, it would be too hot for your plants. If you could compost it a few months first, that would help a lot. Have you tried liquid fish emulsion? That might help.

I've wondered about the round up. Around here, the state usually sprays their right of way along the highways with some kind of weed killer. It kills all the grass & trees, so they don't have to mow/trim as much. Thankfully, the counties don't do that. They get tree companies to do the trimming. I have noticed that some of the companies when chipping the trees just shoot it back out on the ground instead of into a truck bed.

I throw my coffee ground into the run along with everything else. I had a compost pile, but took it down to expand my garden. I decided it would be much easier to let my chickens turn it for me. That compost gets heavy and hard to turn at times.

Thanks for starting this thread LG. I try to read anything I can on the BTE method.
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I started my BTE garden last fall. I wasn't able to get chips, so I used leaves. I put down cardboard, composted cow manure & leaves/pine straw. I left it all winter & as long as I could in the spring to give it time to cook. I did end up planting late due to a lot of rain we had during the spring. I started out small since this would be my first garden I've done by myself. We did have one several years ago that did really good since it was planted where we had our horse corral. Lots of horse apples in that soil.



I finally got everything planted and it slowly grew. Then it really took off. I thought I had everything spaced far enough apart. But it turned into a jungle.



I finally got a load of chips, so used part of the first load to expand my garden. My chips had lots of leaves & twigs.



I used the rest of my chips to put on my new orchard. I don't know if I like it or not. I have grass growing up everywhere!! I have no desire to get out there and weed my orchard. I'm seriously thinking about pulling most of it up to use in the garden. I did not put down cardboard or paper. I would put it deeper, but I don't know when/if I will be getting any more chips. I could leave it and then just pile leaves on top this fall. I really don't know what to do.
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Nice job. I have an area in one spot where my GS put down chips without the cardboard underlayment. Lots of weeds popping up through. I plan to layer some cardboard over those chips, and then add more chips or leaves this fall.

I'm finding that it's very important for me to put down cardboard to exclude the weeds from coming up through. Those weeds are persistent, especially the shrubby ones. The orchard is mostly covered with those. My dump stopped separating the recyclables, so my source of cardboard disappeared overnight. I hit pay dirt at Sears. Picked up a bunch of boxes one Saturday in the tool department. One fellow said I could come back and get more any time. So, the following Saturday, I called the manager, and was able to back the truck up to one of their receiving bays and load the whole bed with huge broken down boxes. I pull all of the packing tape and staples off each box before putting it down.
 
The Jewel weed is blooming! I went out and pulled some this morning. Intent is to "try my hand" at making jewel weed/plantain/sage salve for relief of skin issues/poison ivy. Need to pick up a couple of old pots to use for my "lotions and potions".
 
Made my Jewel weed salve last week. It came out very nice IMO,
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. However my GD made a funny face and stuck her tongue out when I showed it to her
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. It does not smell as nice as I had hoped. But, it does not smell BAD! I put some lavender EO in it along with the good stuff. Makes my hands baby soft. My dental hygenist fell in a patch of poison ivy last week, and has it so bad she couldn't sit down until just yesterday. To add insult to injury, she's been recontaminating her self by contact with her car seat, seat belt, and other items of clothing. So, I plan to take her some tomorrow. Hoping it helps her, and she gives a report about how well it works for her.

Got a nice load of pine chips delivered today. Already spread 1/2 of it, need to get more cardboard to smother weeds before I can spread more.
 
That salve sounds great! I hope to eventually make my own herbal soaps, salves, syrups, etc.

I've had no luck finding free wood chips so far. I still have the county recycle place to check out, but there's no way to know if the stuff has sprays, insecticides and stuff on it. However, I have a lot of trees, so I know I'll have plenty of leaves!
 
Picked up a truck load of cardboard at the Sears appliance warehouse. They filled my truck to over flowing. There is a patch of poison ivy by the road. I plan to bury it with a very heavy layer of cardboard, and then with wood chips. Leave it to rot for a year.
 
That's awesome LG! I saved all my moving boxes and hope to put cardboard on the paths between my 4x10 raised beds. I Subscribed to the local paper and put that on the beds, along with leaves, manure, etc. as I make each new bed.

Congrats on your latest BTE acquisition!
 
@lazy gardener ~ Poison ivy is a tough one to get rid of. Putting down all that cardboard plus you chips should do a good job of eradicating it. If that fails, you could always get a goat!
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They love poison ivy.

We have poison ivy here, but it's mostly around the trees. I do have a problem with Peppervine. It's very invasive. I have it sprouting up all over the new garden area.

@GardenNut ~ I use mostly cardboard for my garden, but I do get a lot of paper from my Mom. I use it for weed control & to start my fires in the wood heater.

I've got a bunch of boxes put up in the shed to cover the new garden area. I've been saving them until it cooled off a bit before putting them down. I also needed to be able to rake up some more leaves/pine straw for my cover. I've given up on getting any more wood chips. Honestly, the pine straw does a better job keeping the bermuda grass away than the wood chips do. I just have to rake it up and haul it to the garden. Once it cools off some more, I will be able to go into our woods and get a good bit of pine straw without having to worry about snakes. I killed a copperhead last week in the barn. I'll be glad when they are hibernating.
 
Hubby got the chain saw going for me, and I cut up 2 dead trees that we took down in the viscinity of the HK. They were actually in the way of HK. Don't that beat all. Have to cut up and remove trees from the area so I can put trees in the area???!!! I love that little chain saw, but still can't start it by myself. I'm good for about an hour of such work, before I'm all done in. Good news is, I got a call from manager at the ALF I work at. They don't need me this week!!!! Not good for our finances, but, I'm sure looking forward to the time off. Have plenty gardening to do around here.
 
Weather has finally cooled off enough that I can do a bit of heavy labor outside. I was able to start the chain saw by myself today! I've been given an unexpected blessing of a week off from work, so, doing what I can do on my own in HK area. Have the bed marked out with string, so it hopefully stays along it's intended path, instead of jigging and jogging across the slope! It will not be parallel, but that's ok. One end is likely to be a bit wider than the other. So, I'm taking it slow and easy with the chain saw, only bound it up once in a felled tree so far. Slow going b/c I have to limb a lot of stuff that either blew down, or we knocked down last year.
 
Started cutting up the charred mess in the burn pile that did not burn. Hope to have an other go at burning it late this fall, but in the mean time, I'm hauling the big monster charred logs out of there, and heading them into the HK. Making slow head way building up the log berm, then.... it's scavenge to come up with the material to cover that.
 

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