Building Compost at Serendipity Gardens

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Compost

I told my grandson once that compost was one of the reasons I believe in God.

“Only God can take a mess like this” I said, pointing to my compost corral topped with a recent addition of eggshells, potato peels, and the innards of a couple of green peppers, “and turn it into black gold.”

Right now, Serendipity Gardens is smothered by the deepest and longest-lasting snow in its nine-year history. But underneath all that snow lies its most important component, the soil in which all the plants grow. And the very best way to enrich and nurture that soil is to add compost. Here, in this photo, we have a wheelbarrow full that will become part of the soil in the herb pots. ... Read More

Be a Citizen Scientist: Join the Great Backyard Bird Count!

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Bird count photo

A photo taken from the 2014 Great Backyard Bird Count.

How do scientists learn about birds? How do they know where they are at any given time, given that fact that some bird species migrate?

You Can Help

One way is with the help of ordinary people like you and me in the  annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC), one of several citizen-science projects sponsored by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society, along with Bird Studies Canada and many international partners.

This year’s count happens February 14-17. All you have to do to participate is visit the GBBC website, register, spend at least 15 minutes observing and counting the birds in the area you designate, and then submit your data. The Bird Count folks amalgamate all the data from people across the United States and since last year, from several other countries as well. ... Read More

What’s a Gardener to Do When the Groundhog Sees His Shadow?

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snow pic 1 2014

Yesterday, February 2, in celebration of Groundhog day, Punxsutawny Phil came out of his burrow in Pennsylvania, saw his shadow, and darted back in. According to the Groundhog Day legend, that means six more weeks of winter. (Groundhog Day began as a Pennsylvania German tradition in the 18th and 19th centuries. “It has its origins,” says Wikipedia, “in ancient European weather lore.”)

Be that as it may, my goodness, what a winter it has been! Michigan, where Serendipity Gardens is, has had one of the coldest on record, with temperatures well below zero on many mornings. According to Michigan meteorologist Mark Torregrossa, in an article posted at MLive.com,  it may have the most snow cover of any state, with as much as 40 to 60 inches on the ground near Lake Superior. ... Read More

Three Reasons to Work Toward Making an Eco-Friendly Garden

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Butterfly

Reason#1: Bring Life to Your Garden

It’s a heck of a lot more interesting to sit in a garden buzzing with life than it is to sit in a still one. You can watch the birds bathing, see butterflies and bees up close, and count the frogs.

The truth is, if your garden is missing its wildlife, you probably won’t be sitting in it very often, either.

Liz Primeau, a Canadian gardener and author, describes the difference between a lively garden and a lifeless one in her book, Front Yard Gardens. “Esthetics may have been the primary reason I finally dug up the lawn and planted a front yard garden,’  she writes, “but I did have other more lofty considerations. Over the years I’d come to consider our lawn more than merely boring, there seemed to be something wrong with it. The birds and the bees shunned it, the bugs stayed away in droves. There was no movement, no rustling, no chirping Jiminy crickets to leap up in front of me as I passed by on the pathway … ” ... Read More

The Shocking Truth about the Moles that Tunnel in Serendipity Gardens

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Mole 2 - map

Leave It Alone!

Creating a backyard ecosystem is a good thing to do for many reasons. One reason is that you, the gardener, have less work to do. Why? Because someone else does it for you. Thus, an important part of having a backyard ecosystem is leaving the parts of it alone to do the work they are there to do.

Welcome the Diggers

Despite a somewhat shady but largely undeserved reputation, as well as their less-than-beautiful looks, moles like this one are an example of an ecosystem player that provides benefits a gardener wants. ... Read More