Saturday, June 20, 2015

Labor Saving Tip for Jessica Walliser from the Jackson Rose Farm.
Jackson Mulch on the Lawn

Jessica Walliser has plenty of labor-saving suggestions in this book,
so I am returning the favor.


My three favorite gardening writers are Jessical Walliser (bugs), Sharon Lovejoy (everything), and Jeff Lowenfels (soil). They are also Facebook friends with a wealth of knowledge and gardening joy to share.

installing and maintaining the insectary border 
Before planting your border, take the time to create good growing conditions. As many of the plants you’ll be growing there do indeed require half-decent soil, spend some time considering the conditions of your site. The large majority of insectary plants featured throughout this book do best in average garden soil. No matter your soil type, additions of compost or well-aged animal manure improve soil structure, amend drainage issues, and serve to add various nutrients. As many of the best plants for beneficials actually prefer leaner soils, there is generally no need to add supplemental granular fertilizers. A few inches of compost each year is adequate. 

Beginning your insectary border from scratch can be quite a challenge. If you have any reservations about your physical ability to create a new planting bed, you may want to consider hiring $omeone to do this part for you (and that is precisely what my husband and I have done ever since using a torturous sod-cutter to create a new planting bed at our farm). If you do decide to prepare the planting bed yourself, be aware that after any sod is stripped, the site should be tilled and a few inches of organic matter should be added before planting. There is also the “pile-it-on-and-wait” method, which involves placing 1 to 2 feet of well-aged animal manure, shredded leaves, grass clippings, compost, or even newspaper and unwaxed corrugated cardboard in layers over the bed to essentially smother the turf and, over time (you may have to wait six months to a year), amend the soil. 

Or build a raised bed—one method capable of generating your new insectary border with a single weekend’s effort. Plenty of do-it-yourself frame kits are available these days that snap together and don’t even require tools. Or if you are handy, you can build your own frame with rot-resistant locust, cedar, or redwood planks. Stacked rocks, blocks, and bricks are good options, too. Once the frame is built, fill the bed with a mixture of three-quarters garden soil (or carefully sourced topsoil if you don’t have any extra soil from your own property) and one-quarter screened compost. It’s ready to plant in just a few hours.

Walliser, Jessica (2014-02-26). Attracting Beneficial Bugs to Your Garden: A Natural Approach to Pest Control (Kindle Locations 3204-3211). Timber Press. Kindle Edition. 

Labor Saving Tip for Jessica Walliser
Notice the time and effort involved in cutting sod, removing it somewhere (for composting?) and laying down mulch and compost to rebuild the soil.

Decades ago I discovered the power of composting sod, when I took large amounts of it from a maintenance project and filled a small compost pit with sod alone. That composted area was like jelly, like a waterbed, undulating months later when I walked on it. That happened long ago on the prairie soil when settlers jumped off their wagons and landed on the ground. They felt the waves of rich prairie soil beneath them, not compacted hard-pan.

Previous to that, I composted sod upside down to prop up a downspout, observing how fast it decreased in size, a characteristic of good compost material.

I reasoned that the Jackson Rose Farm, with its first arrival of 8 bargain rose bushes, could be planted in the front lawn, directly into the grass. Before that, I experienced rapid weed growth through mulch alone. One site or book suggested a layer of newspapers first.

Note that Jessica mentions the use of newspapers or cardboard, but that is after cutting and removing the sod. Another labor-additive method is to build raised beds. That means buying lumber and knowing how to make raised beds that no one laughs at. Tain't easy. My landscaper neighbor had trouble with his, built on a slope.

Newspapers interfere with the weeds ability to germinate by shutting down the light and heat, absorbing the nitrogen needed by the nasty little weed seeds. Sure crab grass is a grain, but that does not make the plant any prettier.

Nota bene, as the Romans used to say. Weeds also make good compost, so I took many big patches of crabgrass and converted them to gardening spaces with Jackson Mulch.

Jeff Lowenfels is on the right.


Easy as 1-2-3
Regular readers know that Jackson Mulch is the solution for turning lawns into productive gardens, immediately or over the winter.

  1. Lay down the newpapers, overlapping edges to prevent grass and weed breakouts later
  2. Pour on the mulch. Rake. Smells good.
  3. Add red wigglers on top from Uncle Jim's Worm Farm.

That can be done after bushes are planted in the lawn - or in anticipation of a new gardening area.

I planted corn and pumpkins in mulch, so the weed problem was addressed last fall, 2014, and the soil creatures had plenty of time to enhance the soil in the months intervening. As Jessica has written in various places, the fall trashy area is a good place for beneficial insects to overwinter.

When it comes to preventing weeds in the first instance, nothing beats mulches. The nitrogen, phosphate, and sulfur weeds need to germinate and grow are tied up by the biology at the interface of the mulch and the soil. This makes it doubly hard for weeds to do well, as in addition to facing no light and a physical barrier to their growth, they are given a poor supply of nutrients. Really, when you think about it, why fuss around with the other tools, compost and compost teas? Put down 2 to 3 inches (5 to 7.5 centimeters) of a bacteria-supporting mulch before weeds appear, taking care to leave a bit of “bare” soil around the stems of your plants.

Lewis, Wayne;  ; Lowenfels, Jeff;   (2010-09-10). Teaming with Microbes: The Organic Gardener's Guide to the Soil Food Web, Revised Edition (Kindle Locations 2869-2873). Timber Press. Kindle Edition. 


The John Paul roses were hit hard by aphids,
but the beneficial bugs took over.


Why Is the Jackson-Mulched Lawn So Good for the Soil?
I am not a soil chemist, a bug specialist, or a trained horticulturalist. I have no science degrees, only the best and easiest to manage rose farm around.

Grass is rich in nitrogen material, crawling with soil creatures, and packed with miles of roots. I see no reason to remove sod, only to build soil up again.

Red wiggler earthworms are great for the soil, but only if they have plenty of food. Nothing is better for them - and the soil - than to have a layer of food on top, to hold the moisture, prevent wind erosion, and feed the soil creatures beneath.

Putting Jackson Mulch around the newly planted roses meant that each bush received a double blessing of earthworms ready to work and many inches of lawn, newspaper, and shredded wood to feed the worms, bacteria, protozoa, nematodes, and fungus.

My resident soil expert, Jeff Lowenfels (on Kindle) states that soil creatures trap nutrition in the top foot of soil. The growth of creatures will mean a constant exchange of usable elements for the plants. The nutrition is not lost and hauled away but fixed in the constantly moving, dying, reproducing, eating, and excreting ocean of life.

First, a fully active soil food web will have better nutrient retention in its soils. The bodies of all its members hold (immobilize) materials that will eventually be broken down into plant nutrients. Every time a fungus or bacterium is consumed and digested by a protozoan or nematode, nutrients are left behind in plant-available form. And since plants attract fungi and bacteria to their rhizospheres, the nutrients they provide are in the right location to be easily absorbed.

Lewis, Wayne; Lowenfels, Jeff;  (2010-09-10). Teaming with Microbes: The Organic Gardener's Guide to the Soil Food Web, Revised Edition (Kindle Locations 1532-1536). Timber Press. Kindle Edition. 


Mr. Lincoln

Remember Ann Rhoades at the Jeske Confab Blessed by Jon Buchholz?
But Jon Bugged Out on the Worship, So That Makes Jon UOJ Orthodox

I love the look of hilarity, which says,
"You paid $25,000 to hear me babble about values?
That is so amazing."
Fee level - 4 - $15,000 to $25,000

Here is the conference -

Keynote and General Session Speakers

SPEAKER

SHARON BUCK

Leading a Volunteer Army!
READ MORE
SPEAKER

DR. RAVI JAYAKARAN

Leadership and Empowerment – a Contradiction of Terms?
READ MORE
KEYNOTE SPEAKER

PASTOR MARK JESKE

Transformational Leadership
READ MORE
KEYNOTE SPEAKER

ANN RHOADES

Built on Values
READ MORE

Leadership and Change

Presenter 2B

JOSH BIRKHOLZ

The Future of Christian Stewardship
READ MORE
Presenter 2D

MATT BUROW

Applying Business Principles to Church Work
READ MORE
Presenter 4A

REV. MARK CARES

It Takes Faith to Build a New Ministry
READ MORE
Panel Member 6B

SUSAN DOHERTY

The Christian Woman in Leadership
READ MORE
MODERATOR 3A

SCOTT GOSTSHOCK

What is Effective Leadership in Christian Education?
READ MORE
Panel Member 6B

WENDY GREENFIELD

The Christian Woman in Leadership
READ MORE
Presenter 3C & 5C

DR. RAVI JAYAKARAN

Learning "Total Health Village" Analysis Tools
READ MORE
Panel Member 3A

DR. DAN JOHNSON

What is Effective Leadership in 
Christian Education?
READ MORE
Presenter 6A

MIKE KLATT

Facing Facts and Changing the Course of your Ministry
READ MORE
Presenter 5A

DAN KUNZ

Collaboration in Ministry
READ MORE
Presenter 1B

TIM LEHMAN

Applying Business Principles to Church Work
READ MORE
Presenter 4B

MARILYN MILLER

Applying Leadership Lessons from Nehemiah in Today's World
READ MORE
Presenter 1A

ARVID SCHWARTZ

Board Leadership Qualities in Non-Profits
READ MORE
Presenter 2A & 3B

PASTOR ELTON STROH

Do Metrics Belong in Church?
READ MORE
Panel Member 6B

KATE TOHAL

The Christian Woman in Leadership
READ MORE
Panel Member 3A

HENRY TYSON

What is Effective Leadership in Christian Education
READ MORE
Presenter 5B

KATHIE WENDLAND

Christian Woman in Leadership in the Church and Secular World
READ MORE
Presenter 2B

ART WESTPHAL

The Future of Christian Stewardship
READ MORE
Panel Member 3A

REV. MARK ZARLING

What is Effective Leadership in 
Christian Education?
READ MORE

Outreach and Evangelism

Presenter 1E

PASTOR TIM FLUNKER

Working in a Cross-Cultural Kingdom
READ MORE
Presenter 6D

LAURA HARSTAD

Be "Salt!"
READ MORE
Presenter 4E

BILL KESSEL

Apache: A Mission Example
READ MORE
Presenter 5E

REV. DON MOLDSTAD

Millennials on a Mission
READ MORE
Presenter 6D

MICK SCHEUER

Be "Salt!"
READ MORE
Presenter 2E

ROCHELLE TRAUB

It Only Takes a SPARK
READ MORE

Global and Community Health

Panel Member 1C

DR. REBEKAH CAREY

Improving the Health of Your Congregation and Community
READ MORE
Presenter 2C

JUAN DIAZ

The "Sombrero for the Teenage Mind
READ MORE
Panel Member 1C

AMANDA PALTZER

Peer Support for Diabetes
READ MORE
Panel Member 1C

JASON PALTZER

Improving the Health of Your Community and Congregation
READ MORE
Presenter 4C

PASTOR DAN SCHMIDT

Utilizing Community Resources for Outreach
READ MORE
Presenter 6C

DAN SCHWARTZ

Community Agriculture Methods
READ MORE

Building and Expanding

Presenter 3D

JARED JUSTMAN

Building Financing
READ MORE
Presenter 1D & 5D

JOHN LAUTZ

Builders For Christ: Concept to Completion
READ MORE
Presenter 4D

HERB MEHNE

What does it mean to volunteer with
Builders For Christ
READ MORE

Worship Leaders

Worship Leader

REV. JON BUCHHOLZ

Emmanuel Lutheran,
Tempe, AZ
Worship Leader

REV. CHARLES DEGNER

St. Peter Lutheran,
St. Peter, MN
Worship Leader

PASTOR DON MOLDSTAD

Bethany Lutheran College, 
Mankato, MN
Worship Leader

PASTOR MARK JESKE

St. Marcus Lutheran, 
Milwaukee, WI
Worship Leader

JOHN SEBALD

Arizona Lutheran Academy, 
Phoenix, AZ
Ann Rhoades' people-centric values are at the core of JetBlue’s extraordinary success. She shows how great things happen when organizations believe in their people—and give them the authority to succeed. 

The remarkable story of JetBlue Airways is founded in the people-centric values of Ann Rhoades, one of its five founding leaders. With the goal of bringing humanity and enjoyment back to air travel, JetBlue is one of very few commercial airlines ever to earn a profit in its first full year of operation. The airline and its innovative culture have captured the imagination of its customers, whose loyalty borders on obsessive. Rhoades has made a habit of creating high-performing cultures, with her influence pervading among other high-flying companies including Southwest Airlines, Doubletree, First Interstate Bank and most recently, CareLeaders, a company dedicated to helping US hospitals attain a new level of performance. With enthusiasm, humor and candor, Rhoades urges audiences to throw away the rule book in developing and sustaining companies that treat people fairly, build loyalty and produce solid profitability. She describes her strategies for empowering people and building successful cultures in her book Built on Values: Creating an Enviable Culture that Outperforms the Competition (January, 2011).