Hi there.
I have been in my house for 4 months now. It is the first time I could call something my own in over a decade. ( but that is an entirely different story).
I was an enthusiastic gardener and Koi breeder in South Africa, but being in Europe is a different experience, climate wise and plant wise.
Also space...The 3 bedroom house that I have......4 if you include the loft conversion, is less in area than my main bedroom from my last pad in RSA.
It has a small footprint and small gardens to front and rear. The rear one being larger. Both front and back are covered in ornamental stone......i.e. no grass, but some established plants ca. 3 yrs old, in the back, front and around the side. (the heathers on the side are particularly attractive)
I will post photographs soon.
The onset of some kind of spring in February, after a particularly harsh winter, made me want to get some colour into the place. I bought 2 planters and bulbs, used some other containers I had and set them on their way. I had to buy soil.... potting compost, because the stuff in the garden was quite frankly unusable...heavy clay, devoid of life, and difficult to dig.
75L of compost cost 5.00 euro, cheap I thought and manageable within my budget.
Then I got the bill for the bins..........110.00 euro to take the stuff away.(That is fixed cost). green bin free, brown bin free, black bin...12.00 euro a shot.
Bit of a shock, after the turbulence of moving in, because I had a skip and everything got dumped into that and taken away.
So I looked into the bins....I am very good at recycling.
Green bin..paper plastic etc
Brown bin.... carrots, cabbage, tomatoes, celery, oranges etc. etc
Black bin.. honey jars, a wine bottle, metal toilet roll holders, nuts screws and odd bits of metal .
some carpet....wrong bin!!!
12 bucks to have that taken away.
That would feed Charlie for nearly 2 weeks!
....Charlie is a bearded dragon whom I inherited from my mad Kiwi friend who is now in Dubai, earning mega bucks as a nurse, and quite probably finding an outlet for them just as quickly.
Way to go Kath
Love you to bits!! Hope the farm in NZ comes right. If I don't see you, best of luck honey.
I'm rambling aren't I?
The bulbs were a bit of an experiment, and they are thriving so far. If that works, they need to go into the ground, maybe at the end of the year, to come up next year. But...not in my soil!
That obviously led to the organic stuff in the brown bin, a compost heap was out of the question. Could I try and bury it? Will it produce soil? ................RESEARCH.....www.Internet.geek (or stupid questions to google in my case)
You obviously know where I ended up.............WORMS
It kind of satisfied the whole green ethos that I have and also looked like a source of inexpensive food for Charlie and my desire for bait (for fishing).
What follows will be my kind of scientific approach to the project. As best as I can do, with what I have.
It was George Pilkington's book that finally convinced me. Without that, I would have been quite frankly disillusioned from all the sniping on the net. ( from people wanting you to buy their stuff, most certainly not the Forums.)
I could have easily built one, but a windfall allowed me to purchase one (see later). This was also a desirable option because if it didn't work I would have blamed my design or something.
How I set it up is in the next post.
THE FIRST DAYS
An attempted mass exodus on night 1, was quelled, (mass exodus is an understatement it was a river of all the worms, they were like sheep I assume, one wanted to try and get out and the rest piggy-backed in a kind of rope, moving in the darkness, with some destination other than my carefully constructed environment.)
That was quickly sorted with a flick of the light switch.
Only on day three did I actually put wet newspaper on the top and some of their food.
12 hours later....lots of worms and lots of munching. Good sign I think.
Only one attempted escape.
And only one who did not escape the light....... He stayed on the surface, pulsating, struggling. Bulging in the upper part of his body, obviously in distress. He had the constriction in the middle that some bloggers have referred to as being "cut in 2". I watched him for a while...like 15 Min's. I did not know what to do, should have taken a photograph, well maybe not, I felt sorry for him! Taking a photo would have been more scientific.
I covered him up with the newspaper, put everyone to bed.
He was dead in the morning.
My first...visible loss.
He will be recycled.
He was an unnamed soldier in the circle of life.
And his death was not trivial.
Visit vermicomposters.com
2 comments:
Thanks for the very entertaining blog (and no I didn't scream at the set up of the trays ) Ronnie x
LOL.... you should see the wardrobe I built from IKEA!!
L
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