The temp is in the mid 50s but it's breezy and COLD outside. I took a hot bubble bath and talked DH into starting a fire in the fireplace. Chili for dinner.
Right now, life is good.
Right now, life is good.

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I truly cannot breathe wearing a mask and go into panic mode.I use sand in the coop on the floor and poop boards. I created a custom scooper to sift the poop out of it but it creates an INSANE amount of dust. Even with a mask (which I admittedly only wear sometimes), when I blow my nose afterwards it's brown sludge every time. Gross... I can imagine what's getting into my lungs. I should probably wear an actual respirator but my husband would never let me live it down....![]()
Hopefully there's not a lot of silica dust from the sand being kicked up. That's really hard on the lungs.I use sand in the coop on the floor and poop boards. I created a custom scooper to sift the poop out of it but it creates an INSANE amount of dust. Even with a mask (which I admittedly only wear sometimes), when I blow my nose afterwards it's brown sludge every time. Gross... I can imagine what's getting into my lungs. I should probably wear an actual respirator but my husband would never let me live it down....![]()
Wow! And you eat them [bitter melons]? It is really bitter... I'm always confused on why people grow them... I am thinking it's extra healthy?
Avoid wood from allelopathic trees like black walnut (for its juglone toxicity); high-resin trees like pine, spruce, yew, juniper and cedar; and hard, rot-resistant woods such as black locust, Osage orange and redwood. Any type of wood with sprouting potential (such as willow) should be completely dead before using.
I dug a hole and stuck a 5-gallon bucket with 3/8-inch holes down in it. Then filled the bucket up with banana and tea leaves and covered it with a little dirt to contain the smell. This is my local worm play pen for now. I wonder how many worms will find it and how long it will take to break everything down.
I think, I should have put some shredded paper on the bottom. Oh well, I'll put a roll of toilet paper and dry oatmeal in when the green leaves compost down.
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I do love how the raised beds are easy access for folks with bad backs. Mine has kinda come good, the chief neurosurgeon said the herniated disc was all but gone but it may have a chance to return. I dread the day.No doubt, I consider my elevated sub-irrigated planters my best producing and easiest to maintain system.
However, buying the lumber, liner, and drainpipes cost me about $75 per one 2X4 foot sub-irrigated planter. Compare that to building about 40 4X4 foot hügelkultur pallet wood 16-inch-high raised beds for the same cost.
If I was a younger man, maybe it would be worth it to me to invest a lot of money, one time, for all the materials for wicking beds/planters. An IBC wicking bed like that would last a lifetime, so spread out over 30 or 40 years, it would be a much better deal.
Well, the hügelkultur raised beds are almost as good as the wicking beds because I moved everything to my backyard where I can water the raised beds with a garden hose anytime I want. It's pretty easy to water my raised beds now, and the little effort it takes me to turn on the timer for the sprinkler is not worth complaining about.
The only upgrade to my setup that I have been considering is some kind of gravity drip irrigation system where I could fill up a large rain barrel and just have the drip irrigation automatically turn on per a schedule. That would be nice, but it's not necessary for me. I still enjoy going out to the gardens and working the beds a few times a week.