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Composting the leaves of venerable old trees will provide a rich source of minerals and micronutrients. The soil in your garden where you use this compost will also be filled with micorrhizae, a beneficial fungi. In many cases, the beautiful trees in your garden, though beloved, are a bit of a nuisance, dropping leaves and seed pods on a regular basis. For those who have no trees, there is no downside, as the fall leaves are a valuable resource. Uses of Fall Leaves
Besides the exercise and fresh air of raking the fall leaves, they have multiple uses in your garden. Compost made with the leaves chopped finely with a weed whacker in a metal garbage can takes only until the spring to produce rich dark leaf mold. Leaving the leaves whole will take longer to break down into compost, but if you add a few shovels of already matured compost to each bag, they’ll rapidly break down into compost right there in the bag, ready for use in the spring.
I also retain a few bags of primo leaves, preferably dry and of the smaller types of leaves like birches or Manitoba maple. These are put against the Eggporeum for insulation, to be brought out during the coldest days and scattered for the hens to scratch in, and for deep litter mulch in their house.
Mulching with leaves alone can sometimes make a sticky slippery mess, but letting the chickens mix them up first and get them started on the process of decomposing makes it possible to get a head start, as well as being safer to walk on. Used as an ingredient in sheet composting fall leaves are an invaluable component due to their ability to shut off light and air to germinating weed seeds, effectively smothering them. I hope you’ll start seeing fall leaves as a precious resource instead of a mess to be dealt with, and come up with your own ways to utilize them. go to Drought Smart Plants home page
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Sustainable GardeningThe Unbroken Circle in an Organic GardenLearning how sustainable gardening all meshes together in a fascinating and miraculous web is all consuming for those of us that like to see how things work. Click on the pictures to explore... Whether you're starting a garden or you're an experienced organic vegetable grower, here are a few easy ways to get started on sustainable gardening.Raising some backyard chickens for eggs and compost, learning how to make compost tea, and composting are all useful skills. Follow the composting instructions and these useful composting tips for the best compost ever. Find out some ways to improve your soil with composting, making new gardens with lasagna gardening.Solarization is an easy way to harness the suns power. See how your sustainable your garden can be. Learn about the 'stinking rose' - garlic and how to make garlic braids from your organically produced crop.
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