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Four Season Harvest

A book full of valuable information on how to harvest fresh vegetables and salad ingredients literally year-round--yet without an expensive greenhouse or indoor light garden set-up. Coleman combines succession planting (small sowings three or more times, rather than one big endeavor) with cold-frame growing in the winter months. He includes how-tos for building simple cold-frames.

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Easy Composting Method

Save time and energy with this easy composting trick.

If you aren't already making compost, you'll be amazed at how easy it is. Don't believe us? Try out this plan and then you tell us how hard you worked.

  1. Watch your neighbors bagging their fall leaves. (Be a good neighbor: avoid looking too relaxed while they work.)

  2. Offer to take the bags of leaves from your hard-working neighbors before they drag the bags to the curb. (If you can, get a few bags of grass clippings to mix with the leaves or, better yet, grab mixed bags from neighbors who cut the grass and shred leaves with their lawn mowers.) If you're too shy or proud to ask for bags of leaves and grass, snitch them after dark. No one will report you if you get caught.

  3. Composting Leaves Bag
    Eco-Friendly Alternatives to Plastic Leaf Bags
  4. Bring the bags home, poke some holes in the sides (near the top and bottom) to let oxygen and some water in and carbon dioxide and excess water out. Moisten the leaves thoroughly.

  5. Scoop up a shovelful or two of garden soil and pour the soil into the bags.
  6. Mix by shaking or rolling the bag. Mix again occasionally every few weeks and moisten the leaves when they dry out.

  7. In 2 to 3 months, pour out the dark, crumbly stuff inside. Technically speaking, this is "leaf mold." But for simplicity's sake, call it "compost" and use it as a mulch, soil amendment and fertilizer in your garden. About a half-inch to an inch layer on top of the soil will feed your plants, prevent plant diseases, suppress weeds, and conserve water.

Fast and easy

If ignoring bags of leaves for a few months is just too simple or slow for you, you can try a little harder and get faster results. Shred the leaves first, then pile them up alone or mixed with grass clippings and kitchen scraps. Keep the mix moist.

You don't even need a shredder to turn whole leaves into smaller pieces that will decompose faster. Just run them over with your lawn mower. Or put the leaves into a plastic garbage can and then use a string trimmer (aka weed wacker) like an egg beater to chop them up. Wear goggles and a dust mask when you do this to protect yourself from flying dust and debris.

Go Back Organic Composting Next

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Declare your yard a "Pesticide Free" Zone!

Organic Pest Control
... and spread the word! Once you've converted your lawn, let the neighborhood know -- maybe you can persuade others. You can Proclaim Organic Pest Control! to post and get tips on talking to neighbors from the Washington Toxics Coalition.
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