Category Archives: Lulu

Too much to do

The look on her face pretty much sums up what I have been feeling lately. Can you say “Bah! Humbug!” In July?  Actually it’s not that bad, I am just not getting some of the things done that I want to, which is always frustrating. What kinds of things are on my list?

  • Finish tiling the bathroom. I’ve got the point where I need a tile saw, but I just need to finish the bathroom period.
  • Make grilled peach ice cream. I am going to try to make a cobbler topping that I can mix in to give some texture. We’ll see.

More Silkscreening and a helper

afar_3_color

I still have SO much to do, but I feel oddly calm. Perhaps that is side effect of the insanity I have inflicted upon myself. Above is a third color applied to one of my posters. This has been an interesting process, sometimes the color lays down perfectly and sometimes it does not and the WHOLE print is ruined. Argh. This weekend has been fraught with mistakes and missteps. But, I am trying to Keep Calm and Carry On. And of course, Lulu supervising the process. She has been very helpful.

Straw Bale Gardening

straw_tomatoes

A couple of years ago my sister-in-law told me about straw bale gardening. The idea stuck in my head and I have been wanting to try it ever since.  Tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, and herbs like parsley, basil and cilantro will work well with this technique. Root vegetables will most likely not work with this method. You have to prep the straw for a few weeks before you plant into it by soaking the bales really well every day. This will cause the interior of the bale to decompose, which raises the temperature and is a perfect environment for heat loving veg. In the second week, start adding a fertilizer to the water when you soak the bales. I filled a 5 gallon bucket and added an appropriate amount of fish emulsion.  I have read that you need anywhere from two to four weeks for this process and I think I ended up with soaking for about three before I got around to planting.

The hardest part of this whole process was digging the hole in the bale. I thought that part would be cake, but it was not cake at all. It was back-breakingly hard and I am going to have to figure out another way to dig the holes if I do this again. Perhaps a saw. After I got the holes dug I added compost, and then the plant. Well see what happens! So far so good. Now I have to figure out how to keep the deer away from them.

straw_cucs

I also planted cucumbers (mexican sour gherkins!) in a straw bale and made a cucumber ladder I saw in my Lasagna Gardening book.  As per usual, the fuzzy brown pest was involved and oversaw the whole process.

Glorious Sunshine

lulu_puddle1

Finally! The Sun!