Thanks Bucka, but I'll stick with the handle of Lazy gardener. The lazy part refers to avoiding extra gardening tasks (ie: weeding and watering and tilling) by using a deep mulch. Every aspect of my gardening is designed to limit the work input. I only loosen the soil that I will be planting in. Why till your walking paths... for that matter, why till at all? If it's under mulch, the soil stays soft and moist year round. It thaws earlier in the spring, it doesn't turn into the soggy mud mire in the spring... while others are waiting for their gardens to dry out enough to get the tiller into them, I'm happily putzing around in my garden, never have muddy feet, and can plant as soon as the frost is out, which, as I stated previously, is way earlier than my neighbors! Although I wish I had more garden space available... what gardener doesn't! I plant most of my crops in wide beds, interplant, trellis, sheet compost (why clean up your garden, haul the stuff to your compost pile, spend time turning it, only to cart it back to your garden as finished compost... when you can just shove the stuff under the hay between a couple of rows or beds and not have to tend it. While most gardeners are toiling in their gardens mid summer, fighting the weeds, I get to visit my garden often, enjoy the sights and smells, pick a few flowers, (I never plant vegetables without having flowers to go with them) and harvest what I want. My garden is a never ending adventure and teacher.I'm trying to do a few things to get the chickens ready for winter. The hoop coop will have plastic on the ends in the winter, but right now the ends are wide open (covered in hardware cloth). The hoop-shaped roof is corrugated metal on one side, and corrugated clear on the other. When DH built it, he had started to line the metal part with a silver bubble-wrap-type insulation, but never finished. We had a rooster with frostbite, but otherwise everyone was fine.
We still have the roll of silver insulation, so I decided I would try to finish lining the ceiling last weekend. I did not finish. This morning I looked out and things were quite frosty, but the roof of the hoop coop looked like patchwork. Every where there was insulation was covered in frost, and everywhere else, the heat from the chickens had melted the frost away. I was pretty surprised by this. The ceilings are 10 feet high and the ends are open to the air, but apparently the chickens give off quite a bit of heat! I was thinking putting up the insulation was pointless, since the other side of the roof is just thin plastic, but now I am inspired to finish the job. I'm hoping the new rooster can get through the winter without frostbite.
Lazy gardener, I think you might need to change your name to hardworking gardener. Your chickens are lucky having someone dig up dandelions for the winter! I still haven't even dug my potatoes or carrots. The cooler weather that's coming ought to get me moving.