Backyard Chicken Basics

admin | May 8, 2012

“Backyard hens not only provide high-quality eggs, but also serve as master gardeners, organic pest exterminators and unpaid city workers.”  Leah Zerbe of Organic Gardening.

Ever considered raising your own chickens? Now is your opportunity to take that leap and start. We have all the information you need to get started on raising your own chickens this weekend in our Free Tools of the Trade: Backyard Chicken Basics with Vicki Marks.  Vicki will be walking us through not only the benefits and the basics of raising chickens but she will teach us how to manage a modest flock for both egg and compost production.


Tools of the Trade: Backyard Chicken Basics
, May 12th, 1-3pm
Cost: Free (Reserve your ticket here)
Extra reading: http://bit.ly/J0kUGX , http://bit.ly/HZ1ku0

Also coming up….

Backyard Skills: Make Your Own Veggie Box-Saturday 4/ 21, 1-3pm
Cost:Member: $15 + $20 (materials), Non-Member: $25 + $20 (materials)
Finally, put your rich new soil to use and grow your own. In this workshop you will not only construct your own box but you will learn the advantages to container gardening, what to grow and how to care for your veggies. The materials fee for this workshop will includes the wood to build your veggie box and a variety of organic, heirloom seedlings to take home.

Q & A with Resident Beekeeper Diane Wyzga

admin | March 1, 2012

Diane Wyzga was kind enough to answer a few questions before hosting our upcoming Tools of the Trade workshop on March 10th.  Here is just a little taste of what’s to come…

How long have you been interested in beekeeping and what prompted you to start?

I actually took a class at the University of Minnesota when I was younger.  However it wasn’t until 2003, I actually started beekeeping.  A swarm had colonized in my neighbor’s 6ft wooden fence.  Intrigued, I spent a whole day with a beekeeper rescuing the hives and the bees. We had to cut out the comb, attach it to the frames and put it into the hive boxes.  That was all pretty easy but rounding up the 100,000 bees was the tricky part!  We used a smoker, a dust brush and a bread pan to get a lot of them.  However, once we got the queen, her pheromones attracted the rest of the workers into the new hive.

What is the best thing about keeping bees for you?

It is so Zen!  Just last week, I saw the queen return from a mating flight back to one of the hives.  There was something so magical about seeing her return to her children.  Where did she go, how far did she travel, what did she see?  It is magical, zen, unimaginable really.  It is all of those things and so rewarding knowing I am helping the environment in the process.

What benefits do we get from honey and what should we look for when we buy honey?

Honey is simply a whole food.  The obvious is that it’s sweet and tastes great but honey also acts as an antiseptic treating cuts and burns and it can be used as a detox as well.  What you need to be careful about is the process in which your honey was obtained, know whether it was treated and know the integrity of your source.  Ideally, you want untreated, unheated, gravity strained, local honey with no pollination servicing. I know that is a lot and we will go more in depth on these terms in our workshop.

Okay, the dumb question.  Do you get stung often?

Yes!  It is the badge of honor to beekeeping! Did you know though that only 1% of America is actually allergic.  Most people just have a reaction where it swells and turns red, like a mosquito bite.  The trick…scrape the stinger with your nail or a credit card, wash it with soap and warm water, ice it and then make a little paste of baking soda and water and apply it to the sting.  If you don’t have the baking soda, honey will work too!
Bees have no interest in stinging you.  In fact, they must have felt pretty threatened to give up their life as when they sting you, they die.  If a honeybee is flying around you, it is just checking you out.  Walk away or stand still.  Don’t swat or they will get defensive and don’t blow, they hate carbon dioxide.

If someone was interested in becoming a beekeeper, what information would you give them before they start?

I suppose, I would want to ask their intent. Where do you want to keep them? Is that okay in your neigborhood and in your community?  What purpose do you want for your bees and is it for honey or to pollenate your garden and your neighbors garden? All in all,  know your intent and then do your research.  My favorite resource would be this amazing video taken of a Bon Terra observation hive.  I would actually, really encourage anyone planning to come to watch it before hand and also read this article on store bought honey.

So that is it for now, but be sure to join us March 10th at 1pm for our FREE Tools of the Trade workshop with Diane Wyzga.  Diane will not only teach us the basics of beekeeping “A to BEE”  but will wrap up with an incredible tasting where she will walk us through wonderful varieties of organic honey.

This event is FREE, so reserve your spot quick!

Another great documentary to watch: The Vanishing of the Bees and the Queen of the Sun.


Spring is in the Air!

admin | February 22, 2012
Spring may not be here yet but you can feel it in the air. You can literally smell the peach blossoms and with our Backyard Skills Fruit Tree Pruning and Grafting workshop last Saturday, I can almost taste the peaches too. Thank you to Dr. Doug for another great workshop and thank you to all that participated. Your supports is always appreciated!
Be sure to sign-up for our next Backyard Skills on March 17th. Plant-alchemist Kristin Morrison will lead us through the process of dyeing fabric naturally – from harvest to dye.

Winter Fruit Tree Care / Part 3: Plant a Bare-Root Tree

admin | February 17, 2012

The third and maybe the most gratifying in my opinion is to simply plant a new bare-root fruit tree this winter. Your new tree will use the winter dormant season to establish new roots and when the spring arrives, your tree will be on its way to providing an abundance of fruit and shade. Expect a first crop two to three years after planting but know that before then, it will give you something picturesque in the spring and shade in the summer. Taken and simplified from a Sacramento News source, the Sacramento Bee, a few great basics to planting are given as follows:

• Before planting, soak the tree’s bare roots in water several hours or overnight. That helps rehydrate them.

• Prepare the planting hole and the surrounding ground. Roots can’t grow in compacted soil. So dig a hole twice as wide

• Trim off any damaged roots before planting.

• After positioning the tree, use the same dirt to refill the hole halfway and firm gently, squeezing out any air pockets

• Lay the shovel handle (or other long straight edge) across the top of the hole to check the tree’s depth. You don’t want to plant it too deep. Once the hole is filled, the soil should slope gently away from the trunk so water can’t collect at the base (which can rot the crown).

• Finish filling the hole, gently firming the soil around the roots. The top roots will be just below the surface of the soil.

• Water deeply. Water once or twice a week (less if it rains) until the tree is well established.

• Wait until new growth is several inches long before applying any fertilizer.

• Keep the area around the new tree weeded. Don’t plant anything else under the sapling; that undergrowth will compete for water and nutrients. Use mulch to maintain soil moisture for the new roots, but keep it 2 to 3 inches away from the trunk.

Your winter checklist is complete.  Prune, fertilize and plant a new tree this month.  Rearing up for the summer months gets us back into the soil to get a little dirty and most certainly closer to nature.  It won’t be long until we will be relying on our trees for a cool place to rest. Until then, get outside and take care of your trees.

To learn more, sign up for our Backyard Skills: Fruit Tree Pruning and Grafting workshop tomorrow, Saturday, February 18th, from 1-3pm. You’ll learn the basic principles of fruit tree grafting, pruning, and care with our local fruit tree expert Doug Hibbard. We hope to see you there!

$10 members, $15 non-members + $10 material fee (includes a grafted apple tree to take home)

Resources:

http://www.groworganic.com/

http://www.greenback.com.sg/product/organic-and-chemical/

http://www.idiggreenacres.com/

http://www.sacbee.com/2011/12/03/4088065/winter-is-ideal-time-to-buy-plant.html

Winter Fruit Tree Care / Part 2: Fertilizing

admin | February 16, 2012

The second way we can take care of our trees in the winter is to fertilize and to fertilize right. Depending on the variety, the soil beneath it, and where you live, how and what you fertilize with will need to be determined. The general consensus is this: Fertilize fruit in the fall or winter, before they go into dormancy and can’t absorb the nutrients. In addition, check with a local nursery or another knowledgeable source if you need more information.

More importantly however than to just fertilize, is to organically fertilize.  Yes, chemical fertilizers may in fact seem to have its benefits giving us quicker results with specially formulated blends that can balance our soil to an exact science, but in turn we are left with the dangers of over-concentration or over-dosage of nutrients.  In addition, chemical fertilizers are generally not as biodegradable allowing chemical fertilizers to release harmful chemicals that end up contaminating our land and bodies of water. Organic fertilizer gives us long-term effects and allows us to stay in character, leaving less of an environmental footprint.

Summing up, slow is good!  Slow and consistent absorption at a sustained natural rate allows for the plant or tree to adjust properly. Microorganisms works on the organic fertilizer, breaks it up, release the nutrients and ensures long-term fertility in the soil.

To learn more, sign up for our Backyard Skills: Fruit Tree Pruning and Grafting workshop on Saturday, February 18th, from 1-3pm. You’ll learn the basic principles of fruit tree grafting, pruning, and care with our local fruit tree expert Doug Hibbard. We hope to see you there!

$10 members, $15 non-members + $10 material fee (includes a grafted apple tree to take home)

Resources:

http://www.groworganic.com/

http://www.greenback.com.sg/product/organic-and-chemical/

http://www.idiggreenacres.com/

http://www.sacbee.com/2011/12/03/4088065/winter-is-ideal-time-to-buy-plant.html

Winter Fruit Tree Care / Part 1: Pruning

admin | February 15, 2012

Our trees stand stark, cold and appear to look gloomy in the winter months. Awaiting the spring sun, those bare trees hopefully will explode with color and fruit once again.  Lonely as they look however, they actually really need tending to now. Winter care ensures not only a good crop of fruit the following season, but our care now will promote good health and longevity to our ever-giving fruit trees for years to come.  As for what exactly you can do for your dormant friends outside, three basic things come to mind for winter care: pruning, fertilizing and planting.

Pruning may seem like something that would be optional if the tree appears healthy enough, but in fact, pruning in the winter months may be the only reason your trees will bring you full, tasty, perfectly shaped, beautiful colored fruit.  Without pruning you leave your trees vulnerable to infestation or rot.  In addition, the tree most likely will be less productive, congested with old branches.

Before starting off, it is important to keep these few Pruning Principles taken from Lewis Hill’s book “Pruning Made Easy” in mind:

-Train the young tree to grow in a spreading shape

-Keep in mind an image of the mature tree as you clip or snip off the buds or tiny twigs.  Aim to develop a strong tree with a branch structure sturdy enough to hold up the crop.

-Prune in accordance with the tree’s natural growth habit

-Thin! Keep the branches sparse enough for fruit to get enough sunlight to ripen.

To learn more, sign up for our Backyard Skills: Fruit Tree Pruning and Grafting workshop on Saturday, February 18th, from 1-3pm. You’ll learn the basic principles of fruit tree grafting, pruning, and care with our local fruit tree expert Doug Hibbard. We hope to see you there!

$10 members, $15 non-members + $10 material fee (includes a grafted apple tree to take home)

Resources:

http://www.groworganic.com/

http://www.greenback.com.sg/product/organic-and-chemical/

http://www.idiggreenacres.com/

http://www.sacbee.com/2011/12/03/4088065/winter-is-ideal-time-to-buy-plant.html

Interview with Dr. Hibbard: Fruit Tree Expert

admin | February 9, 2012

Back by popular demand, local fruit tree expert, Dr. Doug Hibbard will be joining us once again for Backyard Skills on Saturday, February 18th on Fruit Tree Pruning and Grafting.  In preparation, we thought it fitting to take a little time, sit down with our expert and ask Dr. Doug a few key questions.

Q: How did you get into fruit tree pruning and grafting and how long have you been doing it?

A: I’ve been doing both for about 20 years now. Both my grandparents were gardeners and, though I was gardening a lot before that, I realized it’s easier to grow fruit than veggies. I wanted to learn to grow as many things as I could on our property so I got involved with the California Rare Fruit Tree Growers – they were the best source for what would grow in our area.

Q: Why did you decided to propagate your own, what grafting techniques are there and which do you use most?

A: The goal of fruit gardening is variety, not necessarily quantity. Grafting allows us to create far more variety of fruit in a smaller space. The one I use the most, because its easiest, is called cleft grafting, where you make a scion and graft it onto the mother. This is the technique we used in the workshop at The Ecology Center last year and will use again this year. I have also bark grafted and done pea budding, both of which are tougher to do. Using the pea budding technique, I was able get the Gravenstein variety from my grandparent’s land years after their farm was torn down.

Q: Has the art or technique of it changed much over time, or since you’ve been involved?

A: Not since I’ve been doing it, but it has changed in the last 30 years or so with the use of Parafilm – a wax tape that’s actually used more in the surgical industry. It creates a little greenhouse that allows the grafting wound to heal without drying out.

Q: Why is it important for people to learn more about fruit tree care and culture?

A: The number 1 reason is taste and health of the fruit – growing your own is far superior to buying at the market. Number 2, the real joy of grafting and pruning, it tunes you into the seasonal changes within our year because each part of the process has to be done in it’s own time. Also, it’s really fun to be able to grow varieties that you can’t find in the market, like my grandparent’s Gravenstien apple. One of the major benefits is that you can have a lot of variety in a little space, which greatly extends your season – if you do it right, you can be eating fresh apples from late May to January (in California). It’s also important to continue saving heirloom varieties that would otherwise be lost.

Q: With these techniques, could we reforest our communities with edible plants and trees?

A: Absolutely, especially in this area.

We hope this interview has enticed you to come and join us here at The Ecology Center!  This is going to be an incredible day with great instruction.  In addition, you will be able to take home your very own grafted apple tree (included with your material fee).

Great things are happening!

Be sure to sign up to reserve your spot with Dr. Doug.

$10 members, $15 non-members + $10 material fee


Backyard Skills: Seasonal Seed Calendars

admin | January 11, 2012

This last weekend we kicked of our 2012 Backyard Skills workshops at Center for Living Peace with Seasonal Seed Calendars. Participants decorated a seed packet for each month of the year with construction paper and markers. Each person went home with seed to plant all year long. We can’t wait to see the results!

Wondering what to plant when? Check out this planting guide for southern California gardens:

JANUARY
beets, broccoli, cabbages, carrots, cauliflower, chard, kale, leaf & head lettuce, mustard greens, green onions, peas, radishes, spinach, turnips

FEBRUARY
beets, broccoli, cabbages, carrots, cauliflower, chard, kale, kohlrabi, leaf & head lettuce, mustard greens, green onions, peas, potatoes, radishes, spinach, turnips

MARCH
beets, cabbages, carrots, chard, cucumbers, herbs, kale, kohlrabi, leaf lettuce, green onions, peas, potatoes, radishes, spinach, summer squash, tomatoes

APRIL
beans, beets, carrots, chard, corn, cucumbers, edamame, eggplants, herbs, leaf lettuce, melons, peppers/chilies, potatoes, radishes, summer squash, sunflowers, tomatillos, tomatoes

MAY
beans, lima beans, beets, carrots, chard, corn, cucumbers, edamame, eggplants, herbs, leaf lettuce, melons, okra, peppers/chilies, pumpkins, summer squash, winter squash, sunflowers, tomatillos, tomatoes

JUNE
beans, lima beans, beets, carrots, chard, corn, cucumbers, eggplants, herbs, leaf lettuce, melons, okra, peppers/chilies, pumpkins, summer squash, winter squash, sunflowers, tomatillos, tomatoes

JULY
beets, carrots, chard, mustard greens, summer squash

AUGUST
beets, carrots, cauliflower, chard, chicories, kale, kohlrabi, leeks, peas

SEPTEMBER
beets, broccoli, brussel sprouts, carrots, cauliflower, chard, chicories, garlic, herbs, kale, kohlrabi, leeks, leaf & head lettuce, parsnips, peas, radishes, spinach, turnips

OCTOBER
arugula, fava beans, beets, broccoli, cabbages, carrots, cauliflower, chard, garlic, kale, kohlrabi, leaf & head lettuce, parsnips, peas, radishes, shallots, spinach, turnips.

*This is a good time to plant cover crops (wheat, rye and legumes) to replenish the nutrients to your soil.

NOVEMBER
fava beans, beets, broccoli, cabbages, carrots, cauliflower, chard, garlic, kale, kohlrabi, leaf & head lettuce, mustard greens, short day onions, peas, radishes, spinach, turnips

DECEMBER
beets, broccoli, cabbages, carrots, cauliflower, chard, kale, leaf & head lettuce, mustard greens, peas, radishes, spinach, turnips


Seasonal Seed Calendars at Center for Living Peace

admin | December 29, 2011

It’s time to start planning out your garden for the coming year and we’ve got just the thing: seasonal seed calendars! In this Backyard Skills workshop at Center for Living Peace you will make a 12-m0nth calendar that not only tells you what to plant each month but supplies the seeds as well! Don’t forget to put it on your calendar, Saturday, January 7th from 1pm-3pm at Center for Living Peace.

Center For Living Peace
4139 Campus Drive
Irvine, California 92612
949.854.5500

  • $12 per person or $10 each for families/ groups of 3 or more.
  • $5 for all high school and college students with valid Student ID.
  • $5 for all UC Irvine staff, faculty and their families.

Gifts for the Gardener…

admin | December 20, 2011

Still in need of a gift for the gardener in your life? We’ve got you covered. Whether it’s new tools for the garden, seeds for the upcoming year, or simply an inspiring book, our general store, Tools for Change, is full of gift-giving ideas. We’ll be open all week long and we’d love to see you!


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