ParkHowell.com

Archive for the ‘Our Organic Garden’ Category

New Website Welcomes Green, Sustainable and Social Cause Videos

Matt Dibble of Detroit shows us the merits of composting in one of his latest videos. I particularly like his shirt. It came from our Water – Use It Wisely conservation campaign. Thanks for the promo, Matt!

Compost Happens from Six Minute Men on Vimeo.

picture-11Matt has started a new venture called Detroit Guerrilla Video where creatives looking for an outlet can use the new blog & network to showcase their stuff.

Also, if you’ll allow me one last shameless plug for water conservation, our water-saving-tip-of-the-day widget is now available. Click on the widget to add it to your site.

Post to Twitter

The Sustainable Marketer’s Ultimate Guide to Composting and Other Dirty Things

The inital bounty from our new organic garden in Phoenix

The initial bounty from our new organic garden in Phoenix

Let’s get one thing straight: My specialty is green, sustainable marketing. My hobby (at least one of them) is organic gardening.  And yet I’ve had more questions about composting this past week than how to avoid being a greenwasher.

Then something really weird happened.

Micah, from CompostInstructions.com, emailed me over the weekend about including a link to their composting website in my blog. I’m not making this up.

So I figured the organic gardening Gods have aligned their corn rows and are sending me a message.

Here is a link to “The Ultimate One Page On How To Compost”

And, here’s one of their videos, “How To Cheat at Composting.”

Now that I’ve loaded my cosmic fertilizer spreader with the ultimate growing karma by sharing this link, I should be enjoying a bumper crop this summer.

Cheers!

Post to Twitter

Just Because I Turned a Halfpipe Into a Composter Doesn’t Make Me an Eco-Nerd. Right?

halfpipe-demo3

EVERYTHING HAS A SEASON, EVEN AN OLD HALFPIPE

I suppose our old skateboard halfpipe is a model of sustainability.

It was created from all natural materials in 2002, starting with the reclaimed posts and beams from my neighbor’s demolished carport. It served a healthy outdoor recreational purpose for many years. In dismantling it, we saved about 90 percent of the wood, nails and screws. We’ve re-purposed some of the materials for a composter. From ashes to ashes, and dust to dust.

Don’t snicker, but our next project is a chicken coop. I mentioned this in my first post about my third attempt at creating an organic garden, which garnered a surprising amount of surprise from my readers. Not sure why?

I thought it was pretty cool to breathe life into this old structure by creating something new and purposeful out of it.

HERE’S WHAT THE BIRTH, LIFE, DEATH AND REINCARNATION OF OUR HALFPIPE HAS TAUGHT ME

  1. A dad can get instant street cred among his son’s highschool friends  with the mere consideration of, let alone acutally building, a halfpipe in his backyard
  2. You get to spend  unforgettable quality time with your boy and his buddies, especially during the numerous Home Depot runs
  3. It’s an invaluable opportunity to teach an old world craft like framing and carpentry
  4. In the teen’s hands you put gnarly power saws and drills and chainsaws and saws-alls and all the stuff computer screens and video games can’t emulate
  5. You work with your impressionable crew to design and problem solve and measure and cut and bend nails and re-cut and make another trip to Home Depot
  6. When finished, the young men are proud of what they’ve created; a monument to their ingenuity
  7. They learn to become promoters as they throw the official halfpipe launch party
  8. Your backyard becomes the cool hangout for a time, and yet cooldom is fleeting
  9. Like so many remote control cars under the Christmas tree, the novelty wears off and the halfpipe grows silent
  10. Interests change and sons move off to college and the mesquite and lemon trees begin to retake their rightful portion of the backyard as the plywood starts to splinter and crack
  11. Fast-forward seven years and our youngest son and his friend help me dismantle the structure
  12. In their hands I replace computer mice with the same gnarly power tools, but for a different purpose
  13. They learn to saw, and unscrew things, pull nails, remove lag bolts
  14. They learn a new term: dunnage
  15. The autopsy reveals to them the engineering behind the structure spurring lots of questions about why did you do it this way, and what’s that for?
  16. It’s nice to again have the back portion of our yard clean, neat, reclaimed, with the lemon tree trimmed and the mesquite tree soon to be removed to make way for fruit trees
  17. You can turn anything into something

This has been a great project that has taken on a life of its own, and has added immeasurably to our own.

TweetIt from HubSpot

Post to Twitter

My Third Attempt at an Organic Garden and the Greening of Me

garden-1

Our Organic Garden

I’ve learned tons in my third attempt at organic gardening. I either had the wrong exposure, the wrong dirt, the wrong watering technique, the wrong varieties, the wrong skills, and/or the wrong combination of the aforementioned organic gardening shortcomings.  Finally, there’s signs of life.

We started in November by re-purposing a half-baked old wood pool deck and built two raised planting beds. Then we brought in a number of yards of a mulch and soil mixture to get things started. We put in a separate watering valve for the micro-tubing drip system so we can be precise with our irrigation. I planted three tiny sprigs of artichokes over the holidays (you can see the now thriving bushes in the back). And the rest of the produce went in in early February (One of the great benefits of living in the desert).

garden-2We’ve got everything from lettuce, sunflowers, broccholi, zuchini, carrots, and tomatoes, to basil, spinach, peppers, and some other stuff we haven’t yet identified.  We think it’s edible.

Here’s what I’ve got into my urban “Green Acres:”

  • $280 Skil chainsaw (I’ll explain in a later post)
  • $450 in mulch/soil
  • $325 in irrigation supplies
  • $35 in nails/screws

TOTAL: $1,090

With the price of lettuce alone these days, I think our new organic garden will pay itself off in a year or two (We get two great growing seasons here in Phoenix), plus I’ve got a cool new chainsaw out of the deal.

Next up: We’re going to repurpose an old skateboard halfpipe for a chicken coop and composter (two separate structures), which will make room for fruit trees. I’ll bring you progress reports as our ag projects grow. In the meantime, if you have a tip on how to insure it’s – and our – survival, or have a great website to recommend, please let us all know.

Post to Twitter