Hi Everybody!
(((Warm Hugs on a Cold Day!)))
My Holly bushes in front are doing well and loaded with reddish berries. A nice sight in the winter.- Tom
The arugala and kale are still growing, strangely. This might be their last weekend, since it is supposed to get in the low teens for two or three nights. I’ll throw some sheets over them, give them a chance if they decide to try to make it.
Lady Bender will have a hip joint repair soon and then perhaps a knee repair so we will have a very skinny garden this year. I will attempt to spade and plant a potato patch to preserve the seed stock for another year
Good morning. Love that picture.
Gardening???? We got 7” of snow yesterday and a few more overnight and still snowing. The Lake effect snow machine is in effect in west Michigan and who knows when it will dissipate. Yes I am complaining.
Turns out a little bug we dont think of much is one of the best protectors of soil ever imaginable. Read on to find out more!
Turn over a brick or a board lying in the yard and underneath you may find a collection of pill bugs scurrying about. Also known as rollie pollies or wood- lice, these grey-colored creatures can be found in many dark, moist environments feeding on decaying matter.
Actually, these critters are not bugs at all. They are crustaceans and more closely resemble crabs and shrimp, not insects. They are characterized by their ability to roll up into a ball when they feel threatened.
Breeding or collecting pill bugs may be an important practice for homesteading and gardening. The guts of these pill bugs contain a number of microbes that help the critter feed on dead, organic matter. By releasing mass quantities of pill bugs into a mature garden, one can be assured that dead plant matter is being properly broken down and returned to healthy soil.
Pill bugs play an important role in the cycle of healthy plant life. They return organic matter to the soil so it can be digested further by fungi, protozoans and bacteria. This process produces a natural supply of nitrates, phosphates and other vital nutrients that plants need to thrive now and in future growing seasons.
One very unique feature of these crustaceans is their ability to safely remove heavy metals from soil. For this reason, they are important for cleaning up soil pollutants such as lead, cadmium, and arsenic. In coal spoils and slag heaps, pill bugs also come in handy.
When they take in heavy metals like lead and cadmium, they crystallize these ions in their guts. The heavy metal toxins become spherical deposits in the mid gut. With this special cleanup capability, pill bugs survive in the most contaminated sites where most creatures cant.
The magic of the pill bugs can reestablish healthy soil and prevent toxic metal ions from leaching into the groundwater. This means pill bugs are protecting well water from becoming contaminated while stabilizing soils.
Ugh. Likely hard frost tonight. I just got back home; in a few minutes it’s “out” to try to protect what I can, bring in some of my wife’s tropical plants. Big change in forecast from a few days ago!
Unrelated question, not exactly about gardening:
My Mom was having a bit of a “problem”, so I went to Wally World to get her prunes and prune juice. The prunes were pricey, the prune juice was out of sight, IMO. Even the “Great Value” who-knows-where-it-actually-came-from cheapo stuff was $4.68 for 64 oz. I was expecting $3-something. Nothing jumped out at me when I tried a web search.
By contrast, our local Aldi and Wal-Mart have for some time been having a milk price war. $1.59 per gallon. Of course, that doesn’t help Mom’s regularity.
If anyone is reading tonight:
Assuming air temps remain above 32 deg. F, will moving plants under large trees that are still well leafed out help prevent frost from forming on those plants?
I’m thinking the “canopy” should significantly reduce radiational cooling...
Ah, apparently the answer is “yes”.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1997-10-21-9710210333-story.html
https://wxguys.ssec.wisc.edu/2017/10/09/frost/