Our beautiful hickory tree! |
Neighbors bringing leaves. |
We are blessed to have two "neighbors" who bring us leaves from their oak and maple trees that amount to ten or more trailer-loads full each year. We use them to cover large areas of our gardens so they have time over the winter to compost and feed the worms and other soil-organisms and suppress weeds.
This year, we are very happy to announce that Monroe's City Hall is including a flier about our need for leaves in this month's newsletter which is mailed to all the town's residents in their water bills.
Here is the text of the mailing:
Please bring bagged leaves and
grass to:
664 Orchard St., Monroe (bright yellow house behind the
big, white Methodist Church) and leave
the bags in a pile under the big, hickory tree at the back of the church
parking lot.
Please no animal waste, trash or sticks/branches, no holly or roses (too sharp), or walnut leaves (they can kill plants). Just leaves and grass 😊.
Free bags to share... |
We have plenty of
previously-used lawn/leaf bags to share. They are available in a trash-can underneath the hickory
tree. Please take what you can use.
Please don’t fill
bags too full and tie them lightly (so we can re-use them).
We would prefer that you bring the filled bags to the Sharing Gardens but if you
have more bags than you can bring in your own vehicle, please save up enough
bags to make it worth our trip to come get them. Place them on the curb, up-side-down
(so no rain gets in) and give us a call for pick-up. Chris and Llyn
(541) 847-8797 (Before noon or after 2:00, please. We take a rest
mid-day).
Each year we must replenish the organic-material to keep our gardens fertile. That's a lot of leaves! |
Llyn spreading leaves |
There are many materials that work well for solarizing: carpet-scraps, old pieces of green-house plastic (greenhouse plastic is specially coated so it's protected from UV-rays and won't break-down as fast - beware of using regular plastic sheeting because, as it disintegrates it breaks-up into many little pieces which are then polluting for the environment). Black plastic works too.
Another great source of solarizing material comes from lumber-yards. Much of their lumber comes wrapped in a woven plastic "paper". They give this plastic-wrap away for free and it appears that it holds up fine for at least two seasons.
Tarping the leaves keeps them from blowing away and kills many weed-seeds that germinate in early spring. |
We use metal fence-posts and pieces of pipe to weight down the tarps/plastic. |
We weight down the edges of these materials with fence-posts, metal piping or whatever we have on-hand to keep the tarps from blowing away.
Another neighbor collects used-coffee-grounds from a local coffee-shop and brings them to us. We now have over 150 gallons of them stock-piled for the spring! We heat our home exclusively with wood and use the ashes as another source of soil-fertility. Here's a post about the "Benefits of Coffee-grounds and Wood Ashes in the Garden".
Leaves make excellent mulch for trees... |
We add leaves to the raised-beds in our greenhouses too... |
Here are some links explaining this style of deep-mulch gardening that we practice:
Benefits of Deep-Mulch Gardening
Grass-clippings for soil-fertility! |
Mulch We Love, and Why
More on Mulch
Something to be aware of when you're using donated mulch materials...Some materials - particularly un-composted horse manure can contain high levels of herbicides and can pollute your soil and compost piles if you are not careful. Here is a post we wrote about our experience with this:
Herbicide Contamination?
This compost pile was made entirely from leaves and grass-clippings... |
...beautiful compost leads to... |
...bountiful harvests. Buttercup (green) and Delicata (white) squash. |
...and playing in the leaves is just good fun too. |
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