Don Alaska
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2025
- Messages
- 1,422
The ground is white this morning, but not enough to merit plowing. Temp at 26 F./-3 C. and cloudy. The snow has stopped.
DiscussionHQ is a general discussion forum that has opened December 2024!
We provide a laid back atmosphere and our members are down to earth. We have a ton of content and fresh stuff is constantly being added. We cover all sorts of topics, so there's bound to be something inside to pique your interest. We welcome anyone and everyone to register & become a member of our awesome community.
You can put wet leaves into a black plastic trash bag and leave them in a sheltered area. They should then be leaf mold by sometime nest year. Not as good as compost as fertilizer, but it does contain a lot of trace minerals and can easily be used s a mulch. If you don't want to send them to the landfill or wherever. The idea came from Gardening Canada, so it should work fine in Michigan.Coming up on 3 AM here, it is 24F out right now.
Saturday I gathered and ground up leaves until I was sick of it. Sadly, I left two piles out front even though I had wanted to grind them first. I definitely have a load for Thursday pickup though, and only two more pickups for the season left after that.
The "dampener" was the snow late Saturday night and throughout the day on Sunday. It alternated between flurries and drizzle and I'm just not used to hanging around outside in these temperatures yet.
I'm still gradually dropping more weight, and this does seem to be making me less cold-tolerant, just as one might expect. Just one more thing to deal with.
I was determined to enjoy the snow antithetically but...so much for that!
The battle of the leaves will continue, as it always does this time of year. While I'm dumping some at the treeline out back, just as every year I'll end up storing up a bunch to get rid of come April when lawn pickup resumes. Hopefully the price doesn't rise too much again.
I don't have enough nitrogenous waste to make composting practical. When I dump leaves out back it takes years for the worms to work through it even if I try forking it over for aeration. We haven't been allowed to burn leaves for decades now here. So I'm stuck just making it all work.