



| Sweet Soil |
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| Written by Administrator | |
| Saturday, 09 June 2007 | |
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Sweet Soil is a project that raises frugality to the 100th power. It represents not the sort of hoarding that results in cupboards stacked with newspapers from 1956 but the kind that turns newspapers into a useful product that enhances the environment. The scope of this project is so huge that you keep expecting to see the "little engine the could" chugging over the compost pile or the "ant" tugging his "rubber tree plant" over the horizon. We’re talking environmental Disney World here.
Impressed yet? If not view the 20 foot high piles of wood chips mixed with calcium carbonate (limestone) and paper fibers (all from Weyerhaeuser Company of Johnsonburg} composting in the sun. Check out the huge pile of 25-year-old sawdust that was collected from an old sawmill. Jacqueline has added horse manure to her "mix" this year. She says that all composting must be done on impervious pads to protect the ground water from drain-off.
Not only outside recyclables are used. The land is enriching itself. Grasses cut from acres of land are baled and used as an organic augmentation on other sections. As the environment improves the wildlife is returning. The land is now supporting deer, turkey, birds, butterflies, etc. In 1999 the area was certified as a Bartramian Autubon Society Wildlife Sanctuary.
A large greenhouse built entirely of recycled materials has recently become a functioning reality with the addition of a solar panel. This small panel provides the electricity to run the pump, which draws water from a well. The well will now provide water for the greenhouse and for the vegetable plot growing beside it.
I have my eye on the picnic shelter. Jacqueline says that Sweet Soil in the spring is an entirely different proposition. What say you to another trip in the spring? If we beg really hard perhaps we can turn it into a picnic and make use of that grill. We can also keep our eyes peeled for that "ant" with his "rubber tree plant". |
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| Last Updated ( Saturday, 23 June 2007 ) |
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