Hi allI’m about a hundred pages behind
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I can't keep up with this thread and I come here almost every day. I am sure I am missing lots of good knowledge and things I would love to know by missing lots of postings.
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Hi allI’m about a hundred pages behind
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The basket, of course, flipped over on the way down & unfortunately I can't bend (spine surgery) so they went to waste. Washed em away with the hose. I'd have let the dog eat them normally, but he's not been feeling well.I would just scramble the broken eggs and feed them back to the chickens - if the eggs are not fit for my consumption. And yes, I've broken a few eggs over the years. My egg collection basket is nothing more than an empty ice cream pail. However, if I break any eggs, all the stuff stays in the pail, so I have the option of frying up those scrambled eggs for the chickens. Then I just wash out the pail for the next day.
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Funny how when you raise chickens and collect eggs yourself that each and every egg seems to have more value to me.
Congrats on replacing the solenoid! Next time you'll be able to replace it in no time at all.I like to think I'm the better for having fixed something myself. Replacing the solenoid on a lawn mower is not considered a major repair that requires lots of experience. I had no problem understanding what and how to replace the solenoid. My only problem was with where the solenoid was located and how I could get to the mounting bolts. Maybe you need special tools for that particular mower?
In the end, it took me 3 hours messing around with it before I got it done. The minimum repair shop bill is now over $100. So, I'm OK with having done it myself. Also, the shop was backed up for 3 weeks, so I"m real happy to have my rider back in action, now, and not sometime in mid to late July.
Can you stick a plant in the ground where the eggs got dumped? Sounds like a well fertilized little piece of ground.Collected eggs & put them on the garden bench to take a quick walk thru the garden & fill the critter water - called the dog over for a drink & his chain knocked over the whole basket of eggs & smashed them to bits.
Wrapped some bean runners on the trellis. Cukes tiny fruits are flowering but no males yet. Saw a few bees on the wildflowers.Still need to get DH to pick some rhubarb.
Still nasty humid out, hear the smoke is coming back this way. Joy.
The basket, of course, flipped over on the way down & unfortunately I can't bend (spine surgery) so they went to waste. Washed em away with the hose. I'd have let the dog eat them normally, but he's not been feeling well.
So, I'm not familar with sub irrigated beds. Is there a pan or container in the bottom of the bed to hold water?That's too bad about the eggs. Worm food, I guess.
A number of weeks ago I met a couple while picking up some pallets. The wife was recovering from surgery, and she was unable to bend over at all. They were going to make pallet wood raised beds using the full pallets so she could continue to garden but not have to bend over. That would be a lot of soil to fill in a full pallet sized raised bed, but they had a tractor with a front loader bucket.
A few years ago, I built 3 sub-irrigated elevated planters that are 3 feet high. The bottom 3 inches of the planter holds about 15 gallons of water. A person does not need to bend over to maintain that garden, and the water reservoir only needs to be refilled maybe once a month in a normal summer with average rainfall. It's a very low maintenance planter that I grow beans in out on our deck. We love beans.
Picture of my sub-irrigated elevated planter full of beans last fall....
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Congrats on replacing the solenoid! Next time you'll be able to replace it in no time at all.
And I know you seem to do Hugelkultur with all your beds, at least the ones you've been showing here. I'm not sure where I read it, but it seemed like valid information.
So, I'm not familar with sub irrigated beds. Is there a pan or container in the bottom of the bed to hold water?