Things I love in theory
May 6th, 2009 in blogsThere are lots of things in my life that I wish I could love. Like melons. I eat a lot of fruit, and a big, juicy watermelon looks so yummy and juicy and huge, but I cannot stand the taste of it or any of its melony kin. Same goes for whole wheat pasta. Why can’t it taste as good as whole wheat bread, instead of the cardboard it is?
But the most confusing of these conundrums is my love-hate relationship with earthworms. Earthworms are amazing things. They aerate and fertilize our gardens, turn kitchen scraps into wonderful compost, and remind us that our soil is a living ecosystem. But let me tell you, if I come upon one in the garden, I’m a shuddering mass of uselessness. I let out an embarrassed shriek and drop my trowel. I look around to see if anyone has heard me, and I stealthily move along to another part of the border until the worm has disappeared into the soil again. And don’t get me started on worm composting. The thought of keeping a whole BIN full of a writhing mass of slimy worms inside my house is enough to make me pass out.
Links
American Society of Landscape Architects Clatter Valley Dave's Garden EdenMakers' Blog Farm to Fork Flat Bottom Flowers Garden Rant Garden Smart Garden Wise Guy Gardening Gone Wild Gardening While Intoxicated Gardening With Confidence In the Cottage Garden Kitchen Gardeners International Lee Reich Melinda Myers Julie Moir Messervy Design Studio The Professional Gardeners' Guild Susan Belsinger Sustainable Gardening Blog The Garden Girl The Mulch You Grow Girl Vegetable Gardener
Home OutsideCreating the Landscape You Love
Julie Moir Messervy
Buy now!
Container Gardening250 design ideas & step-by-step techniques
From the editors of Fine Gardening
Buy now!
Gardening Techniques 1, 2 & 3 DVD-ROM SetLearn essential gardening methods from professionals in the field.
From the Editors of Fine Gardening
Buy now!






Comments (7)
There's no way to name the thousands of little buddies that I have, so I sorta do them in troops, based on what garden bed they are in. East Wing, Up The Hill, South Park.
Always great fun! Posted: 1:13 am on May 23rd
they chew at my Coccolova uvifera, destroying their symmetric
round thick leaves.
Yet, I love that my garden planned, installed as a habitat,
serves others, birds, lizards, spiders, in my surroundings. Destructive or beneficial.
What can one do? I have great difficulties to destroy insects,except with dish soap/hot sauce my secret weapon, and
never feel comfortable with pulling beautiful weeds, that otherwise will take the whole space...
Posted: 7:16 am on May 19th
You sound like a perfect customer for "Rent a Composter" full service composting. Just leave your scraps by the front door and receive of bag of "black gold" in return.
You never see the worms!
Shirley Posted: 12:54 am on May 8th
In my bin, they all come to the side of the box when I opening it up, wag their little tails and I greet them each by name: Hi Doc, yo yo Dopey, lovely day Sneezy, gee your hair smells terrific Moe, wazzup Larry, mah man Curly, S'happnin; Bambi, glorious day to you Thumper, eh Dubbya, grrrr Cheney, top of the mornin' Ebert, how DEE Siskel, you da man Hannibal...you get the idea. Posted: 12:35 am on May 7th