‘Bin Composting?


Finally! I took on the compost corner, strewn about by scratching chickens, and turned it into a tidy system. I’d been struggling with what to do about composting since we moved in. This would be my first opportunity to make compost, not just have food ever-decomposing in a large neglected pile.

I decided on a 3-bin system – because I think big and plan to do everything full bore, even if I never find the time. This particular construction project was long delayed because I wanted to use all scrap lumber leftover from our other projects. This included punky wood found on the property when we moved in, the pallets we collected back in October for our chicken coop, and odd-sized lumber from building our bottle fence & arbour. It was difficult because nothing matched and I didn’t want to buy anything new. Plus I’ve never built a compost system before and had some technical issues to work out on the ground.

So one afternoon when Scott was away, I decided enough is enough and I set out to build it. I dragged pallets here are there, deciding between orienting the bins east or north – I wanted to make them a full meter cubed, but didn’t have enough room in my chosen orientation. And I didn’t want it to fall apart. I settled on facing it away from the kitchen window and compromised so the bins are just under 3-ft wide.


Here is what I ended up with: pallets for side and back walls, set on bricks and secured to each other by cross pieces of scrap wood. Inner walls of leftover lumber covered with a variety of plastic fencing, hardware cloth, and OSB. Slots in the front edges of the walls so I can slide down incremental retaining walls. The idea here is that the retaining wall holds back compostables so the chickens can’t scratch them out, but allows the birds in to cherry-pick, turn the pile, and leave manure.

Other photos include the now-really-really-almost-done bottle wall, replete with tomatoes and cucumber vines, and *of course* a chicken photo.






Posted in baby chickens, bottle fence, compost bins | 1 Comment

The Garden Gargantuan

OK, no stories cause there’s too much going on. Instead, photo overview of happenings ’round the homestead. Click on each photo to see it enlarged.

Cherries!!! Another few weeks and they’ll be ripe – but I’m snacking on them already.


Chicken who knows she’s not supposed to be in the house…


Cucumber flowering against bottle wall


Tomatoes by bottle wall. Flowers on all and first fruit set on Stupice.


First melon plant attempt. First tendrils appear.


Garlic wanting to bloom


Garlic scapes for omelettes…yum!


Greta’s double yolker with garlic scapes and kale made a perfect meal for the two of us


Beautiful fennel plant – my first year growing – yum roasted fennel…


Garden madness!


Trellising peas, tomatoes, squashes, beans! Without having to work so hard to combat gravity, plants really do grow faster.


Squashes galore. I’m growing a variety of winter and summer squashes this year. High hopes for summer grilling and winter soups.


First potato flowers! Plants have topped the 16″ potato boxes and will now make tubers.



Wee art project – casting the maple shadow against the house.


First strawberries! Saved up enough for strawberry shortcake last night. So good, Scott didn’t even miss the whipped cream I forgot to make. I planted two varieties (Tristar and Seascape) but of course forgot to mark which was which. Now I want to know cause one variety makes large strawberries, the other small. [I think it is Seascape that is the larger, tarter variety.  Tristar is smaller and sweeter.]


Trellising beans with old twigs – Tiger’s eyes that weren’t supposed to vine! I also have bushy-looking squashes that were supposed to vine and aren’t.

I hope to have more project postings soon. Besides the endless walkway project, we’re working on arbours for the wee backyard, and a compost bin. More soon!

Posted in bottle fence, chickens, cucumber, eggs, vegetable garden | 1 Comment

The Bottle Wall Project


Although equipped with a huge and elaborated front yard, the back yard of our house is tiny. One hop, one skip, and one jump from the back door and you’re in the alley. Not a lot of opportunity for quiet reflection in the rare and precious sun of a fall or winter afternoon – especially with the fleet yard of O’Neil plumbing just off portside. The only reason this matters is that in the off-season this western exposure gets the best sun on our property.

When we moved in last fall we were pretty sure we wanted to privatize this wee space. But how? Wooden fences can be expensive and might cast too much shade. Bamboo is expensive and would take too long to grow. Brainstorming renewable/recyclable ideas, I hit on a bottle wall.

Typically bottle walls are set in concrete or cob, but our needs were special. Because the wall would be along an alley in a less than model neighbourhood, we needed to be able to replace bottles if they were broken. We also needed the wall to have a minimal footprint. And we thought it might be really nice to have light shine through.


So we started accumulating bottles. I was thinking wine bottles, but Scott thought beer would be more appropriate along the alley. Plus he wanted to call the project ’99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall’. We ended up with a mixture of beer and wine.


Like the chickens and the garden and the composting fence in the front yard, the bottle wall is a conversation starter with neighbours. We like that. Some even drop bottles off for us. We’ve starting buying beer because of the beautiful bottles. And we bring home empties from parties and scavenge interesting bottles from the curb when we’re out on our bikes.

It’s hot back there now that it’s summer. Over several grueling afternoons last week, we dug down into the gravel and hardpan to make a hot plant bed. It is filled with tomatoes, and cucumbers that I hope will twine up the fence posts. We have also planted eggplant, melons, and basil in pots, and strawberries and flowers colour the corner of the house where we recently planted a combination plum tree.


From our redneck recliners, we will continue to drink our fence until it is full (feel free to drop to help!), later we’ll put an arbour atop the fence, perhaps allow hops to crawl up the alley-side… Until then, we are enjoying the new sense of privacy as we sit in the warm sun in the early evening.


Most unexpected benefit? The wall hums when the wind blows through…





Click here for further posts on the bottle wall.

Posted in bottle fence, DIY | 5 Comments

Attack of the Black Spot


When I first started planting this spring, I thought the 1-mm-ish black spots appearing on my plants were alive. I.e. fungus or other biological agent of destruction for my young seedlings. However, although they continue to appear on plants young and old, they do not grow. I also notice them now on unliving objects, such as my hose (in photo). Conclusion: atmospheric fallout. Of what? From where?

To be continued…



UPDATE: If you read the comments, I am correctly informed that the insidious ‘black spot’ syndrome is actually biological. Specifically, it is fly poop! And we did have a lot of flies that summer from the chicken poop dotting the yard – a problem we later dealt with by expanding the chicken run.

Posted in bugs, chickens, pest control, update | 6 Comments