You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Daily update and a repurposing of moles August 8

in #gardening7 years ago

Oh no!!! He was spraying Roundup? Arghhh. I wished people would get how dangerous that stuff is - for all of us.

Anyway - does the yellow fungi turn brown and powdery? If yes, I have it too. When you see it grow, turn it over because the black powder is not so much fun to deal with.
From what I read, it is edible and people are fixing it like scrambled eggs. But I have never been brave enough to try it - not without someone by my side who knows fungi really, really well.

And here is the latest podcast that for some reason did not publish via steempress on my podcast steemit blog :)

http://sustainablelivingpodcast.com/chicks-hen-start/

Sort:  

Yes it does! When I spray it, it kinda washes off down into the bed. I'm not gonna eat it, I'm gonna let the soil here eat it. It'll make better use of the stuff than I will.

Check this stuff out too! It grew up in about five hours while I slept!

IMG_20180808_162216823.jpg

And then...

It rained tonight!

You lucky goose!!!
We are looking at 95 degrees today - which is very hot for our area - and rain is not even in the conversation until winter...

Yup, they grow fast - but are breaking down the wood. The turning over trick works well for me, it seems to eliminate the brown dust - and I don't water my mulch LOL

Yeah, California is having a hard time this year. The fires aren't near you, are they?

So I should be turning this over? In this bed I put down compost first, then cardboard, then this 6-8" of mulchy leaf stuff. I water it daily. Should I stop?

Are you gardening in it? Sounds like a lasagne garden? Or are you trying to break it down for planting. Then you probably want to treat it like a compost and keep it at a certain moisture - like a squeezed out sponge ...

Yes, I read a (very little) bit about a lasagna bed and ran with that. It's not growing yet, I kinda wanted to let the good yummy stuff soak in and plant it in the spring.

It's pretty damp in there and I see worms every time I dig a small hole to check. Exciting and encouraging!

This one was my first ever no-dig bed after I learned about them from @brockolopolis and @elfmyselfandi

I'd say it's wetter than a squeezed out sponge, so I'll cut back a bit on the water.