[Biofuel] Fruit Trees and Compost

2007-05-02 Thread robert and benita rabello

Hello Everyone!

   Although the weather around here has been warmer than it was a 
couple of months ago, it's still quite cool, rather cloudy and we've had 
a lot of rain.  It's warm enough, however, to warrant selection of 
desired plants over Keith's beloved deep rooting herbs--a task I 
generally perform with my boys as kind of a family outing on late Sunday 
afternoons.


   Two nights ago I received a phone call from an elderly friend of 
ours who lives in Kamloops--a city roughly three hours to the 
northeast.  Mr. Lunan has been working with fruit trees far longer than 
I've been alive, and has come over to teach me how to prune and offer 
advice for maximizing healthy fruit production.  He affirms my efforts 
to grow food without inputs, other than compost and compost tea, and 
phoned to inquire about our blossoms.


   My trees have been COVERED in blossoms, but there haven't been very 
many bees out.  Normally it's rather warm at this time of year and I can 
actually hear the sound of beating insect wings from inside the house.  
It's been too cold to warrant opening windows, so I've missed the sound, 
and after reading Kirk's post on vanishing bees I wondered how much 
fruit my trees would actually produce this year . . .


   Last autumn I spread a LOT of compost around my trees.  This was 
before my compost bin disaster occurred, so I had some decent material 
to work with.  Now, even the sickly pink dogwood that lives in our front 
yard has burst with a flurry of flowering I've never seen before.  Our 
magnolia had so many blossoms on it some of the branches actually BROKE 
in the wind!  (And we've had a LOT of wind!)


   But now the blossoms have mostly fallen off.  (The apple tree in our 
backyard is an exception.)  Mr. Lunan told me to mix a concoction of 
baking soda and water, with a little bit of dish soap to act as a 
surficant (Surfacant?  If the root word is surface, why does the 
spelling change?  Sometimes I HATE this language!) and spray my trees as 
soon as the blossoms fell off.  I expressed concern that this might have 
a negative impact on the wasp colony that feeds on my insect pests, but 
he said that it shouldn't be toxic to the predators.


   Hmm . . .  How can that be?

   Having written this, I noticed that the plum trees and the apple 
have ALREADY begun suffering from pestilence.  Some of the tender, new 
leaves are folded within the silky embrace of Archips argyrospila (a 
moth) nests, while other leaves have been perforated by larval feeding.  
My trees are probably healthier than they've ever been, but I decided to 
make Mr. Lunan's concoction and give it a try.


   I've learned to start spraying at the bottom of the tree and work 
up, using a ladder, so that nothing drips on me.  I heard NO bee wings, 
but I did see the occasional fly while I was working.  In all, I used 
less than a liter of my homebrew insecticide and I'll be watching my 
trees carefully to see what happens.


   On the compost front, I've taken advice from Fritz and obtained 
sawdust from my saintly father in law.  Whenever I add something to the 
pile, I cover it with sawdust and put the lid back on.  Last Sunday when 
I opened the lid to dump new kitchen scraps inside, I was rewarded with 
a rush of heat . . .  My composter is FINALLY hot!!!  So thanks for the 
suggestion, Fritz!  It seems to be working now.


   We're probably going to have to wait for planting because it's still 
very cold and wet.  I need to get the rotovator into the main part of 
the garden, but it'll get stuck because the ground is still WAY too 
soft.  For the first time in two years, I'm battling equisetum arvense 
in the main part of the garden.  That's a pretty strong indicator that 
beneath the surface the soil is VERY wet.  I put four blueberry bushes 
into the back yard near our peach trees (which are growing more 
vigorously than any other tree on the property!), and while digging I 
was pleased to discover that we've got at least 15 cm of good soil in 
the garden before my shovel hit the clay muck that underlies the entire lot.


   Progress is SO MUCH nicer to report than trouble!

robert luis rabello
The Edge of Justice
The Long Journey
New Adventure for Your Mind
http://www.newadventure.ca

Ranger Supercharger Project Page
http://www.members.shaw.ca/rabello/

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Re: [Biofuel] Fruit Trees and Compost

2007-05-02 Thread dwoodard
Robert, is this really supposed to be an insecticide or is it an 
anti-fungal agent?

By the way, I think the word you're looking for is surfactant.

Doug Woodard
St. Catharines, Ontario


On Wed, 2 May 2007, robert and benita rabello wrote:

 Mr. Lunan told me to mix a concoction of baking 
 soda and water, with a little bit of dish soap to act as a surficant 
 (Surfacant?  If the root word is surface, why does the spelling change? 
 Sometimes I HATE this language!) and spray my trees as soon as the blossoms 
 fell off.  I expressed concern that this might have a negative impact on the 
 wasp colony that feeds on my insect pests, but he said that it shouldn't be 
 toxic to the predators.

   Hmm . . .  How can that be?

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Re: [Biofuel] Fruit Trees and Compost

2007-05-02 Thread robert and benita rabello
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Robert, is this really supposed to be an insecticide or is it an 
anti-fungal agent?
  


He said it would kill aphids.  I've used ordinary dish soap for this 
in the past, and it works, but I worry about my friends, the wasps.

By the way, I think the word you're looking for is surfactant.
  


It figures I'd get it wrong . . .  What a bizarre language!

robert luis rabello
The Edge of Justice
The Long Journey
New Adventure for Your Mind
http://www.newadventure.ca

Ranger Supercharger Project Page
http://www.members.shaw.ca/rabello/


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