Garden Cleaning & Composting Tips
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How To Harvest Root Crops
Planting Fall Vegetable Crops
Planting Fall Garden Vegetables & Flowers
Planting Fall Perennials
Deadheading Flowers to Prolong Bloom
Garden Cleaning & Composting Tips
Fall Lawn Care Tips
Simple Lawn Care Tips
Controlling Lawn Grubs
Planting Bulbs For Spring Flowers
Herb Harvesting & Storing Tips
How To Revitalize Container Gardens
Growing Tomatoes
Revitalizing a Fall Garden with Colorful Perennials
Fall Herb Harvesting Tips
Fall Lawn Care
Plant Bulbs Now for Spring Blooms
Buying Gifts For A Gardener
Winter Rodent Control Tips
How To Harvest Root Crops
Fall Pruning Procedures
Winter Orchid Care Tips
Gift A Living Bouquet For Valentine's Day
How To Start Tomato Seeds
How To Plant Onion Seeds
How To Make A Garden Site Analysis
How To Test Garden pH Levels For Ideal Conditions
How To Test Garden Soil pH Levels
Make Recycling Electronics An Eco Friendly Habit
How To Create A Shopping List For Your Garden
How To Care For Cut Flowers
Understanding USDA Updates To Plant Hardiness Zone Map
Cancer Fighting Greens
Tomato Planting Tips
Tips To Make Spring Weeding A Snap
How To Care For Cut Flowers
Fall Pruning Procedures
Fast Fall Garden Clean Up
Garden Tool Maintenance
Storing Garden Machines for Winter
Planting Trees And Shrubs
Storm Damage Pruning
Preparing Container Plants for the Move Indoors
Putting The Garden To Bed
Raking & Bagging Leaves
Christmas Tree Shopping Tips
Composting & Mulching Fall Leaves
William Moss has loved nature and the outdoors since childhood. Gardening is just an extension of that passion. The effects of his gardening efforts on the local ecosystem were intriguing and inspiring. His gardens provided nectar for swallowtails and skippers, shelter for carpenter bees and writing spiders, and an endless supply of voles and rabbits for the neighborhood red tailed hawk. On his websites, www.garden.org/urbangardening & www.wemoss.org , he chronicles the challenges of gardening in a city and discusses horticultural techniques. William also covers a wide array of "greening" topics ranging from soil contamination and remediation to eco-friendly pest management to the intricacies of native habitats. To comprehend and better explain the complex life-webs right outside his door, William enrolled in the extramural Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences program offered by the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign. His focus is on creating wildlife corridors in urban areas. Concurrently, he has sought out opportunities to be involved in local environmental projects. While at the Chicago Department of the Environment, he worked with WRD, an environmental construction company, at North Park Village Nature Center. William supervised Greencorps crews and volunteers and they removed invasive plants and replaced them with native trees, shrubs, and perennials. At this point William began to focus more on presenting lectures, and he joined the Chicago Botanic Garden as an environmental educator.
Garden Cleaning & Composting Tips
Master gardener William Moss demonstrates how to compost, including the best time to start and what to include in your pile.
Transcripts
William Moss: As cool weather arrives, the garden can look a little bit messy. Now it's a good time to tidy up and feed the compost pile. Today we're cleaning and composting.
Clean out anything that's dead; diseased or dying and remove all weeds, you want to get the garden as tidy as possible for the fall season. Recycle the nutrients in your garden waste by composting them. Almost anything can go in to the compost pile, but you don't want to put in diseased plant or weed seeds and kitchen scrap can go into pile as well and you just want to avoid meats, fats, oils and cheeses. If you put in clam shells or egg shells, be sure to rinse them first.
Turn the pile every few days and keep it moist to help speed up the process, you can also use a compost starter, just sprinkle a little bit at top of the pile and work it in. By spraying you should have rich home-made compost ready to enrich your garden soil. Clean your fall garden and recycling the waste and the compost keeps the garden looking good today and prepares it for next season. Get out and grow.
Herb Garden
Herb Garden - How to Select a Container
Herb Garden - Making Sure You Have Adequate Container Drainage
Herb Garden - How to Choose Your Herbs
Herb Garden - How to Make Your Own Potting Soil
Herb Garden - What Location is Best
Herb Garden - How to Water
Herb Garden - How to Fertilize Your Potted Plants
Herb Garden - What to do if You Have Pest Problems
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