
Happy New Year! Sister and Bartlett
Help Our Planet--Grow Worms! Amazing creatures safely turn kitchen scraps into wonderful soil. Without chemicals -these simple creatures help all plants,vegetables, and/or fruit trees safely. Our hat's Off To Worms.
http://www.thegrowspot.com/know/f5/rooftop-gardens-from-around-the-world-54020.html
ScienceDaily (Jun. 15, 2007) — It has been an elusive goal for the legion of chemists trying to pull it off: Replace crude oil as the root source for plastic, fuels and scores of other industrial and household chemicals with inexpensive, nonpolluting renewable plant matter. Go to Science Daily here to read the whole story. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070614151749.htm
You can continue worm composting all winter long if your bin is in an area that does not freeze (a pantry, laundry room, basement, or heated garage or porch). Or, you can let your worms rest through the winter outside by burying the bottom half of your bin in the ground and piling straw or leaves around and on your bin for insulation. You do run the risk of losing your worms outdoors during an uncommonly cold winter. Get more good Worm information here.


'Fine Gardening' has a great article on creating Garden Lanterns. Check it out and get all the instructions in this magazine here. http://www.taunton.com/finegardening/how-to/articles/garden-lanterns.aspx?nterms=74888
We all enjoy a good cup of tea--even our garden. Good compost, worm castings or vermicompost added to the soil carry to the root zone a rich compliment of soluble plant nutrients and growth enhancing compounds, a diverse and populous consortium of microbial life and a substrate of organic matter harboring a storehouse of nutrients that are not lost to rain and irrigation. The plant is delivered an ongoing, reliable food source when bacteria and microscopic fungi feed on the organic matter, releasing some of the nutrients to the soil and storing others for their own energy and reproduction. When nematodes and protozoa in turn feed upon them the nutrients stored in the bacterial and fungal bodies are released to the soil in a plant available form. According to Dr. Elaine Ingham, when soil, compost or castings support protozoa numbers on the order of 20,000 per gram of solid matter, 400 pounds of nitrogen per acre are released through their predation of bacteria. When we feed organic matter to the soil, the soil life feeds nutrients to the plant. Click here to return to our main Worm Guys Site. http://www.wormguys.com/ Thanks.
We all know why we should compost - a constant supply of organic matter is the gardener's version of the magic wand, helping out with every horticultural headache, from nutrient deficiency to drainage. Home composting is the cheapest way to acquire this invaluable substance.
This list I found online from the University of Illinois. They have lots of information about worms and also have information in Spanish. This is a great kid's Web Site as everything is made easy and simple. Click here to go to their Site. http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/worms/neighborhood/20-buryfood.html Thanks.
"One of the best ways to provide a steady water supply to your plants without your constant attention is the gradual watering system or drip irrigation. Through this method a device is employed that slowly delivers water into the soil directly around the roots. Commercial watering spikes can be purchased from you local garden centre however, using recycled materials you can make your own drip irrigation system for free. "Click here for instructions.---
To return to our main 'Worm Guys' Site--click here. www.wormguys.com Thanks. Have a great Holiday Season.
