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🌳Orchard Updates & Putting Gardens to Bed🍂
🌱 Cover Crops, Mulch, and Turning water off🍂<!–
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The Fall Festival was a massive Success!! Thank you to everyone who came out to support the event!
In this newsletter, I have some orchard updates for everyone and some additional information down further below about putting gardens to bed for the season.
We have officially turned off the water at the orchard and community gardens. This was done in preparation for winter to protect the system against freezing temperatures. We will turn on the water again next spring after the risk of damaging the system has passed.
We need some help putting the gardens to bed this year! If you rented a garden bed, please come out to break down your garden in the next couple weeks.
If you would like to rent a garden bed at Weaver Creek next year, fill out our reservation list now before all of the spaces are filled up! We will email you in the spring to discuss your garden bed and payment:
Reservation Form: https://forms.gle/NaKUps71RuCwTuvU7
Lastly, On October 26, we are hosting a compost drop-off with Compost Colorado from 10am – 12pm. Come by and drop off your compostable materials for free!
PS. Please bring us your leafy leaves for our garden! We would love to use the leaves from your trees as mulch to help us overwinter the gardens!
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Not going to lie, one of my favorite parts of the fall festival were the Alpacas! Their fleece was sooo soft and fluffy.
We estimate that we saw about 1,000 – 1,500 people during the event which was from 12:00-4pm. That is an incredible turn out! We had free food and good times!
We signed up some community members who were interested in renting beds, we sold some pumpkins and honey as a fundraiser, and we had a ton of fun.
If you are interested in renting a raised bed garden, reserve your plot now! We provide automated irrigation for all raised bed gardens during the active growing season.
Reservation Form: https://forms.gle/NaKUps71RuCwTuvU7
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Sausage Stuffed Spaghetti Squash
A healthy, hearty, and semi heavy fall dish for the season!
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Putting a Garden To bed..
is a practice which will help regenerate soil and prime gardens for a healthy and productive growing season in the spring.
The process begins with a thorough harvesting of all vegetables and fruit in a garden. Then, it is very important to discard any heavily diseased or insect infested plant materials such as leaves, stems, and even full plants in severe cases of disease. Plants with numerous dark blotchy leaves or stems with sunken brown patches and large decaying sections should not be added to home compost piles but can be dumped in municipal compost bins. A temperature of 150-180°F is needed to kill most plant pathogens and home compost piles often do not reach this temperature.
We put any fibrous parts of plants (like tomatoes, corn stalks, and broccoli and cabbage stems) into industrial compost bins. Other plant material can be composted or chopped up with a shovel and mixed into your garden with any amendments this fall. This plant matter will break down over the winter and contribute to a healthy soil.
Tree leaves can also make a wonderful fall soil amendment and are a great source of organic matter for our gardens. Organic matter can contribute to the water-holding capacity and improve healthy microbial activity in our soil.
Disconnect and Turn off your irrigation!
We put any fibrous parts of plants such as tomatoes, corn stalks, and broccoli and cabbage stems into industrial compost bins.
Keep an eye on the forecast, and make sure to disconnect any soaker hoses, sprayers, drip irrigation or other watering implements before our first freeze. You’ll want to drain irrigation materials and store them in a protected area over the winter so that they can be used again in the spring. Some complex irrigation systems and underground systems will need to be drained and “blow out” with compressed air.
Cover Crops
Cover Crops can be planted to improve a soil over the winter, they include plants such as Winter Rye, Crimson and Red Clover, Austrian Winter Peas, Hairy Vetch, and even Daikon Radish. These plants are allowed to grow over the traditionally dormant season and then they are worked into the soil about a month before planting begins again in the spring. Over the winter, cover crops can minimize erosion and increase the activity of microbes in the soil, some cover crops will contribute much needed nutrients (such as Nitrogen) and then they will contribute organic matter to the soil when they are later worked in. If planting Winter Rye, you can broadcast about 1lb of seed for a 500sq ft area, then lightly cover the seed with soil and add a little bit of water; providing water 2-3 times this fall should be enough for the rye to become established. Or….
Use Tree Leaves!
Leaves can make for a wonderful mulching material. Ideally, after being chopped up or shredded (for example by a lawn mower with the blade at the highest setting), they can be added to vegetable and flower beds. Mulches conserve moisture, help to prevent erosion, and as leaves break down in the soil they contribute organic matter and nutrients. A layer of leaves about 4-6 inches thick when used as a mulch and mixed into the soil can improve aeration and even benefit overwintering pollinators! Leaves can even be used as a winter mulch to help insulate the crowns of landscape plants and act as a temperature buffer to help maintain a uniform soil temperature and slow down the freezing-thawing cycles of winter.
For further reading on these topics, I highly recommend the following links.
Cover Crops
Using Leaves this fall
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