Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Experiments in Permaculture

One of the brilliant things about having a sister who pursued a degree in environmental science is that she pulls out words like "permaculture". To the best of my understanding, permaculture is a system of agriculture, gardening, or interacting with nature, that develops an interrelated bond between the elements to eventually create a self-sustaining unit. Something like that. Anyway, our first gardening experiment for 2012 was to build up our soil in a healthy and sustainable way, with no negative environmental impact. That is a fancy was of saying that we are trying to build up our soil with trash.

The basic process is to layer the garden with cardboard, leaves, newspapers, and compost, and to then top it all off with mulch. So here is what we did.

We had plenty of cardboard lying around because of Christmas. We were out of town over the recycling pick-up after Christmas and then we missed the next one because we forgot. So I didn't have to look far to find some cardboard. I simply went to our garbage storage area, and pulled out all of the boxes that were waiting to be recycled.

This is what I collected.
While I was at it, I pulled old newspapers out of our recycling (again, thank goodness we missed two recycling days!) -- seven to be exact.

Ready to collect leaves!
Next Johanna and I loaded up the kids and headed to Balls Bluff (a Cival War battlefield (from the Battle of Leesburg) and a regional park located about a mile from our house). We had some reusable bags with us. Out we went into the woods (a full 100 yard from where I parked the car) to collect oak leaves. According to Johanna, our resident expert, oak leaves provide the most balanced nutrients to soil, so they make excellent mulch or compost. We collected our bags of leaves. That took us all of about ten minutes and then we had some time to climb around on the fallen logs and to hunt for Winnie-the-Pooh. While the kids were occupied I stole a little moss because moss is amazingly beautiful and I want me garden to be overrun with moss.

Hard at work collecting
Oak leaves
Our bounty
With the kiddos
After some frolicking in the woods, we headed home to get to work. And by "we" I really mean, Johanna, since my primary job is to keep the children from rampant destruction. First Johanna and Isaiah prepared the cardboard. This involved stripping off any tape and as much of the ink-covered cardboard as possible and then cutting it into manageable sizes. Isaiah was charged with the task of keeping the pieces from blowing away, which he did with incredible dedication and more than a little anxiety.

Taking his responsibility seriously
Once all the pieces were ready the three of us (by this point Lianna was tucked safely inside the house, munching on a peanut butter and jelly sandwich while Charles did the dishes) set to work laying cardboard on any exposed area of the garden. When we were done, our yard looked trashy, pun intended.

First layer -- cardboard
Minor side note to add that we had to prepare the garden for the laying of all of this cardboard. That meant removing any extraneous "pretties" and rocks and such from the area where we wanted to build soil.
Pretties and such

The next step was to lay the leaves. This was more or less a failure since it was windy and also, we needed probably three times as many leaves as we had collected. After that, it was time to lay the newspaper. Johanna did this as quickly as she could to try to keep the newspaper in place because of said wind.

Second layer -- not nearly enough leaves
Third layer -- newspapers
At some point in the process, Johanna quickly turned our compost pile to deposite the fresh compost to the bottom of the heap and to expose the soil beneath. It was teeming with worms, which is a wonderful, wonderful thing!

So, after the newspaper Johanna deposited compost on the newspapers. We were quite a bit short on compost because we had spread our compost back in October, when we got the the garden ready for winter. So our compost was sparse and not fully decomposed. Alas.

Fourth layer -- compost
At this point our gaden looked extremely ugly. It really did look like we had just spread trash all over our garden, which, I guess, is what we had done. But then Johanna spread the mulch. Mulch is truly beautiful! Suddenly our garden looked respectable and even beautiful again.

Fifth (and final) layer -- mulch

Beauty restored!
 Johanna placed my moss under my japanese maple, watered everything down and pulled the last of the dead morning glory vines off of our trellis. Now our garden is ready for the rest of winter! I hope our experiment works. If it does, I encourage you to try it in your own garden.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

January Photos

This is what our garden looks like in January. This has been an atypical winter so far and we have not gotten any snow. It has been a pretty mild winter so our grass is still green. Typically our grass dies off around the first of December and will begin to turn green again at the beginning of March. I am thrilled to see that it is still green. 
Aerial view (from the deck)

Right side of garden

Left side of garden

Cherry tree (back left corner)

Crape Myrtle (garden spiral)

View from the back fence looking toward the house

Wisteria climbing the stairs

St. John's Wart. Still alive and green! 

Sunday, January 1, 2012

And So it Begins

Happy New Year and welcome to Our Humble Garden!

My intention was to start off this blog with before and after pictures of our garden, but the before pictures are buried deep in the Williams Family Digital Archives and I don't even pretend to know how to plumb those depths. I must rely on Charles for this and that means it is unlikely that they will ever be uncovered. He is fabulous at many things, but not so good at mustering up the excitement to dig around in our various external hard drives looking for long-lost pictures.

Instead, I shall begin by posting some shots he took of our garden last May, after it had been all spruced up for the spring. In addition to that, I'll give you a brief synopsis of what I envision for this blog.

When we moved into this house in May of 2009, the yard was just that -- a yard. It was mostly green and in the back right corner there was an eyesore of a shed. My sister, Johanna, moved in with us that same month and she set about transforming our yard into a beautiful garden. She put in many, many hours of manual labor and even more time and love into planning, designing and planting our current garden. She has a true talent for taking something boring like a rectangular patch of grass and turning it into something unique and beautiful, which is what I believe our garden has become.

I would like to use this blog to celebrate that transformation and the ongoing transformation that is our garden. My plan is to take photos of the garden at the beginning of each month (barring inclement weather) and post them. I want to show how our garden evolves with each season. I also want to visually document any major changes that take place, including the intensive work that Johanna puts into the garden each spring and autumn. Beyond that, I would like to chronicle our experiments with organic gardening, our major projects like putting in a patio, and anything else that comes up.

Without further ado:

The right side of the garden (main garden area)

The left side of the garden (our path)

View from the back fence toward the house

Our garden spiral surrounding our Crape Myrtle

Aerial view of the garden from our deck