I was inspired to try urban/suburban homesteading by reading about The Path Project and other successful small-lot homesteaders.
Well, yesterday I started. Started really small but I started.
I decided to start by putting in a compost bin in the back yard. Rather than build one myself, I purchased a stacking recycle bin and started there (I can change in the future, if need be).
I've more or less neglected my backyard since I bought my house. I wanted to put the compost bin near the fence on the north side of the back yard so that it would be out of the way. I have been piling leaves and stick up in a compost heap but I haven't really been managing the compost. Yesterday, I discovered several things.
First, I have some really nice soil under the leaf pile. Lots of it.
Second, I had a nice little patio under the leaf pile and the really nice soil.
Well, rather than stop at simply clearing enough space for the compost bin, I decided to clear the entire patio off.
Having been inspired by my success in clearing the patio, I went out and bought a pot and planted tomatoes, jalapeños, cilantro and rosemary in the pot and placed it on the patio. I used soil from the bottom of the leaf pile as potting soil.
I also replanted my kitchen planters (it required re-moistening the soil). In the kitchen I planted peppermint, more rosemary, oregano, parsley, and cilantro.
Oh, I should probably say a little bit about my property. My house faces more or less due east. There is an addition that sticks off of my house at the southwest end. I have tons of trees, especially pine trees. The property slopes down to the north with the low point of the property near the basement door. The neighbors to the south have a chainlink fence along the back yards, the neighbors to the north have a fence across their back yard which doesn't cover the length of my backyard on that side. The west property line does not have any fences, although I probably need a nice tall wood fence there, most of all.
Unfortunately, my point-and-shoot digital camera is hiding from me at the moment so I don't have any photos of the progress to share. I will shoot some at a later date and post them back in this post.
2 comments:
Keep in mind that pine trees suck a lot of moisture from plants that surround them.
One more reason to spend the money to lose the pine trees. They really are a menace for suburban lots.
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