Tag: #wyominggarden

  • Bean Harvest Sutra One: Feed One, Feed All

    Bean Harvest Sutra One: Feed One, Feed All

    Bean Harvest Sutra – One: Feeding One, Feed All1. Cut the stem of the pinto bean bush just above the soil. Leave the roots to rot. They will release nitrogen as they decay and leave  organic matter to feed the soil. Their death and decay will leave space in the soil for water, air, microbes,

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  • Bee Nature; Be Nature

    Please feel absolutely free to share this postvwith others who may bee interested. 🙏🌱🙏 Bee Nature; Be Nature: As for pollinators… In the Casper Wyoming area, my OLLI 4 hour Pollinator Garden class is on Sat July 13, 2024 from 10am to 2pm. Call the Casper College OLLI Office to sign up! 307.268.3401 For everyone,

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  • New USDA Zone Map: Critical Thinking and Your Observations Are More Important

    New USDA Zone Map: GIS and 30 years of data and over 30,000 collection points still requires that you use your elegantly evolved powers of observation.  This map is “general” within the millions of years of the planet, and general to your personal portion of the landscape. But it is important for a trend, a

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  • Pumpkin Spice Right Where It Belongs

    Fall light in the afternoon. Cooling nights, warm afternoon. But the leaves are hardly showing their color. I had pumpkin left from last year. Sweetie Pie variety. And this Alpen glow afternoon light finally got to me. Pumpkin Custard. I’m completely over all the “pumpkin spice”  commercials: candles, perfumes, coffee and ice cream flavoring. The

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  • Everbearing: Time and Space

    A humid, wet spring ends your hope for Red Currants, but a few warm, clear days gives you baskets of Black Currants. A monsoonal down pour destroys the Native Plum blossoms, but the tiny, hidden green flowers of the Valiant Grape give you pounds of grapes in August. Honoring diversity of plants and temporal and

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  • Que Tan Verde! Anaheim Peppers

    Two tiny Anaheim pepper plants…. I planted them in an empty mineral lick tub with a mix of native soil and potting soil. The soil I kept just damp, not wet. The pollinators had no problem finding the small white flowers inside the potting shed. The shed allowed me to control how much rain, and

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  • The Flowers of Late Summer

    Late summer is so important for the plants, for the pollinators, and for our harvest. These flowers provide food for pollinators that are getting prepared to hibernate; food packed as tiny pellets placed in pollinator nests with their eggs in hollow stems and underground to feed newly hatched babies after spring thaw… food to prepare

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  • Spring Into Action 2

    Tasks for April 18:Pasture Management – move cows into Hayfield #2 to graze cheat grass and foxtail coming up. Duck Mulch – continue cleaning out duck pen and shelters and move to storage to compost. Also reduces mice, which reduces snakes close to the cabin. Rain Capture – install new parts for 250 gallon poly

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