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BrotherJoe

July 2007 - Posts

  • The "RecyclerMower"

    The piece of equipment that I remember best was a 19" Toro "RecyclerMower". My parents picked it up used at some point in the late 80's - whenever it was that the idea of GrassCycling really took hold. Toro was marketing this piece of work as a mulching mower. It was the first I had ever heard of the concept of "mulching" grass clippings, but as a fairly young kid mowing a fairly big yard, I was immediately a fan of the idea. Environmental stewardship had less to do with it than the simple fact of never having to stop, empty the bag, and eventually pull the usually overloaded tarp back to the compost pile. But in retrospect I do think it was a bad drought year, so I was helping the grass as well.

    The mower had an adjustable speed rear wheel drive that broke very quickly. It might have been broken when they bought it, but it would tease you by occasionally engaging the drive mechanism, and then quitting when you really could use it. We never bothered to get it fixed, so for the entire life of the machine it would take off on flat ground and require you to muscle it up hills. Really charming.

    I used the mower a lot growing up, and when I got married and bought a house of my own, I was surprised to find it still lurking in shadows of my parents' garage. They didn't need it any more, so I inherited it. I had a small yard, but it's amazing how heavy a mower like that can be. It was designed to be propelled, so the focus was not on ergonomics. It had tiny wheels that usually spun, and usually stayed in a straight line. Usually.

    After about one season in my new house I was fully ready to get a new mower.  Unfortunately, I've got this hangup about buying a replacement when the one I've got works. So I kept waiting, figuring that it had to stop working sooner or later.

    Another season went by. It became a bit of a battle. I stopped checking the oil. I started on the first pull. I left it full of gas in my shed all winter, it roared to life the next spring without complaint. (Please note: this is not a good way to treat a mower).

    Finally I lost the battle. After several years of abuse at my hands, my trusty RecylerMower, with the broken drivetrain and holes in the deck, outlived my willingness to keep it. I bought a new house and got a new mower. I donated the old one though, and I'd lay a bet that somebody out there is still using it today. 

  • A Word About Manure.

    I'd like to say a quick word about manure. Yes, manure. The smelly bovine byproduct that I have recently become an advocate of.

    Prior to planting anything this spring, my father laid some sage advice on me, "A smart gardner spends 90 cents of every dollar on the soil, and 10 cents on the seed."

    The previous owners of my house had a funny way of laying mulch. They must have figured that if 2" was good, 8" MUST be better. (This is a bad way of thinking, by the way) So I tilled all this mulch under last fall, and following my old man's advice went searching for the cheapest effective way to amend my soil. I don't have a pickup truck, so my options were a bit limited, but I ended up finding bagged manure at Meijer. I figured, hey, all those farmers can't just be using it because they enjoy the smell. They had a whole skid of 40 lb. bags, and there were weeds growing out of holes in the bag - which I took as a good sign.

    I bought about 600 lbs. of the stuff, which made for a comical scene in the parking lot. There was this older gent sitting in a truck parked next to me, wearing a Navy ballcap and chewing on a toothpick. He seemed fairly amused to see a long haired individual like myself packing bags of manure into a Honda Civic. It's good to find amusement in things.

    I set about the spreading and tilling of all this manure into my planting beds, much to the chagrin of my downwind neighbors. When I was done it looked promising - I had somewhere in the range of 6"-8" of fluffed up soil to work with, and into that went all the seedlings I had started a few weeks earlier.

    In our part of Ohio we've had massive rain shortfall and all through May it was unseasonably warm. With the help of my wife and son we kept on a pretty strict watering schedule, and now I've got an agricultural overflow going on the southside of my house. It's like a jungle of vegetables, and it's the most success I've had growing anything, ever.

    Here's some pictures.

     This is my son standing next to some sunflowers he planted. He had no idea what 'planting seeds' was all about. He does now.

    The tomatoes. I have rarely been as excited about a plant.  

    These are cantaloupe. My son really wanted to plant them, I'm surprised how well they're doing. There's a handful of little melons on these vines, and it's also taking over my yard. 

    The Squash Monster. I've never seen anything grow so fast. If I see a squash in the morning it'll be ready to pick that evening. Crazy.


     

  • Garden Adventure (The before pictures)

    As I mentioned, I've planted a vegetable garden. Really it's just a strip of dirt off the south side of my garage. There were some overgrown boxwoods there, which actually survived transplanting and are doing very well, which is a bonus.

    I started a bunch of stuff from seeds; tomatoes, peppers, squash,  basil - even cantaloupe at the urging of my son. These are some pictures from shortly after planting.

    Right after planting

    You've got beans there, and the squash further back. If you look REALLY close you can see some seriously puny tomato plants in the foreground.

    The reverse image

     Reverse angle, with my daughter in the background.