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I got a new hip

Your endurance will improve in leaps and bounds
I find now that I can walk for ages just so long as I don't try and get up any sort of speed

Thinking of endurance, I think my break is about over -- time to go finish mowing, making Bammer buckets, and then taking the Bammer for a bike ride.
 
I know what Bammer is. What is a Bammer bucket?

It's a conservation thing.

Goes like this:

1. sprinkle some twigs and grass clippings in the bottom of a five-gallon bucket
2. pull weeds, trim the lawn edge, and make a layer about an inch and a half thick
3. follow with a layer of leaves, flower petals, grass clippings, shredded cardboard, and other biodegradables
4. toss in one pile of Bammer's Best "fertilizer"
5. repeat 3, 4, 3, 4, 3

The bucket is then ready to be taken out to my conservation project's next planting zone to build up patches of actual soil and growing things. Each bucket is inverted, leaving weeds and grass at the top of an organic column; bucket loads are placed close together and the space in between filled with sand and shredded newspaper.

Among these go "planting boxes", which are wooden frames nine inches on a side, where come next fall we can start transplanting native trees and bushes to thrive amidst the "enhanced soil".
 
An interesting way to enhance and create fertile soil where you need it.
 
An interesting way to enhance and create fertile soil where you need it.

The trick is not getting it too rich. Three "doses" per bucket is pretty much the max.

Sometimes I wonder about the water table down below, though.


BTW, just managed a ten-block bike ride with Bammer on the sidewalk. Not too bad, though the cold air has both my hips aching!
 
It's a conservation thing.

Goes like this:

1. sprinkle some twigs and grass clippings in the bottom of a five-gallon bucket
2. pull weeds, trim the lawn edge, and make a layer about an inch and a half thick
3. follow with a layer of leaves, flower petals, grass clippings, shredded cardboard, and other biodegradables
4. toss in one pile of Bammer's Best "fertilizer"
5. repeat 3, 4, 3, 4, 3

The bucket is then ready to be taken out to my conservation project's next planting zone to build up patches of actual soil and growing things. Each bucket is inverted, leaving weeds and grass at the top of an organic column; bucket loads are placed close together and the space in between filled with sand and shredded newspaper.

Among these go "planting boxes", which are wooden frames nine inches on a side, where come next fall we can start transplanting native trees and bushes to thrive amidst the "enhanced soil".

You must have either hundreds of buckets or a yard that would make monsanto weep with envy. If I pull out the weeds and trim the edge of my lawn, I'd wager on a layer being a bit more than an inch and a half thick.
 
It's a conservation thing.

Goes like this:

1. sprinkle some twigs and grass clippings in the bottom of a five-gallon bucket
2. pull weeds, trim the lawn edge, and make a layer about an inch and a half thick
3. follow with a layer of leaves, flower petals, grass clippings, shredded cardboard, and other biodegradables
4. toss in one pile of Bammer's Best "fertilizer"
5. repeat 3, 4, 3, 4, 3

The bucket is then ready to be taken out to my conservation project's next planting zone to build up patches of actual soil and growing things. Each bucket is inverted, leaving weeds and grass at the top of an organic column; bucket loads are placed close together and the space in between filled with sand and shredded newspaper.

Among these go "planting boxes", which are wooden frames nine inches on a side, where come next fall we can start transplanting native trees and bushes to thrive amidst the "enhanced soil".

I have to admire your dedication to your garden.
The best I do in the same vein is to toss everything organic into a compost heap and leave it.
I have 5 years' worth that I just can't be bothered to do anything with. At least it provides a very nice home for a colony of ants!
 
I have to admire your dedication to your garden.
The best I do in the same vein is to toss everything organic into a compost heap and leave it.
I have 5 years' worth that I just can't be bothered to do anything with. At least it provides a very nice home for a colony of ants!

It's not even a garden -- it's a project out in the sand dunes to get native trees and bushes started to improve stability, and in places to provide shade and wind protection to hiking trails.
 
I've learned two things today:

On the way back from my pain management appointment, we stopped at a highway wayside by the beach, and I experimented with walking in dry sand. As long as I didn't get too frisky, I was fine.

Just this early evening, we washed the main porch, and I learned that leaning on a broom to scrub the little valleys between the porch boards is NOT helpful in terms of hip pain.
 
90% of their allowed amount.
You would be responsible for 10% of the adjusted amount - not the gross amount.
 
It's not even a garden -- it's a project out in the sand dunes to get native trees and bushes started to improve stability, and in places to provide shade and wind protection to hiking trails.

In that case, even more commendable :)
 
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