The Acorn Didn’t Fall Far From The Tree
This Acorn Did Not Fall Far from the tree; but as is often True to “nature” ended up elsewhere on the winds of growth. My son Kristopher in North Carolina brewing and spraying Compost Tea.
This Acorn Did Not Fall Far from the tree; but as is often True to “nature” ended up elsewhere on the winds of growth. My son Kristopher in North Carolina brewing and spraying Compost Tea.
Presented by Michael Kolenut of Lincoln Landscaping, this in-depth look at an organic transition as it relates to organic turf management, organic lawn maintenance, organic gardening and living naturally and enhancing the environment.
Within the scope of this Organic Lawn and Turf Management at a residential home we are core aerating, overseeding and then following that up with an application of
There have been many studies done about the benefits of gardening with children with regards to a child’s development. Along with the fun of getting dirty, gardening helps children learn valuable lessons about patience as they wait for vegetables to grow, responsibility as they see how necessary their care is to the garden, and even loss when flowers die at the end of a season.
Lincoln Landscaping has been maintaining this park organically for three full seasons. Dealing with a variety of issues from compaction to low organic matter in the soil and a poor pH, this field challenged us as we tried to improvise a plan of action.organic turf management -dehart-park-maplewood-new-jersey.
Compost Tea, in fact, is all the rave for gardeners who repeatedly attest to higher quality vegetables, flowers, and foliage. Compost tea is an aerobic water solution that has extracted the microbe population from compost along with the nutrients. In simple terms, it is a concentrated liquid created by a process to increase the numbers of beneficial organisms as an organic approach to plant/soil care. Very simply, it is a liquid, nutritionally rich, well-balanced, organic supplement made by steeping aged compost in water.
Magic Weed Killer - no such luck. Sure chemicals work. They work really well. But their effect is not limited to the weed itself, regardless of marketing claims. There’s a downside. An herbicide will make a broadleaf “weed” disappear from your lawn, but at the expense of the soil and biology beneath (and maybe your evergreen trees, as we saw with imprelis).