Archive for the ‘Humanure’ Category

Plaster, Compost, and the beginnings of a Forest Garden

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Since my last post Dakota, Emily, and I have finished the discovery and infill coats of earthen plaster on the house.  Others participated in various plaster parties and I’d like to thank them all graciously, but I especially want to thank Dakota and Emily.  The infill coat was a herculean task, and took just over a month to complete.  I’d guess we mixed a couple hundred batches of plaster in the cement mixer altogether, but the really time consuming part was smearing it on the walls and smoothing it out.  The walls look relatively flat and it just generally made it look like a serious building.  Tom Mudd, a local housing contractor, came by earlier today and told me it was “professional”.

There’s still a thin coat of lime plaster to put on before the walls are totally complete, but that’s going to wait until after the granite chunk footing goes around the very bottom of the walls.  I’ve been picking up loads of free granite chunks from a counter top maker in town and I’m going to mortar the chunks together with a lime mortar.  Functionally, it protects the gravel-filled bags that make up the stem wall from degrading in UV.  It also acts as a splash guard and a moisture barrier for the bales and clay plaster.  Aesthetically, I think it’s going to make it look kick ass.

We’ve also set up a basic tarp storage area outside the house to get all of the tools and supplies out of the house so work can start on the earthen floor.  There are a couple of things that need to be done inside before the floor can start being poured, but that should begin within the next few weeks.

The garden is in decline.  I knew it at the time, but I really should have done succession planting so I wouldn’t be swamped with different crops all at once.  The tomatoes have come and gone, and without a solar dehydrator many of them either rotted or were given away.  Emily is working on an Appalachian style solar dehydrator, which ought to be completed in relatively near future.  Many of the turnips and beets went bad before they could be eaten as well, so food preservation and succession planting are the name of the game for next year.

I spent this last week weeding and working on the garden.  It had been badly neglected because of all the work on the house.  The flowers I’d planted had overtaken large swathes of the beds, and so had inadvertently become a kind of weed and so were trimmed back hard.  I also put a bunch of compost and mulch around the fruit trees and berry bushes, as well as laying down some paths.  I’m essentially going to sheet mulch 3/4 of the area around the vegetable beds and plant a whole range of useful plants in the under-story of the fruit and berry bushes.  I did roughly 1/8 of what needed to be done, but it’s certainly a start and it felt good to improve the garden after all the neglect.

The majority of the work in improving the soil involves importing organic material.  I’ve used compost and manure from a number of sources, some were good and some weren’t.  Right now my main source is William Woods University’s horse stalls.  The fine people there load me up for free, and it’s only a 15 minute drive away.  The food forest section that I sheet mulched used basically two truck loads of material.  Once all of the soil has been improved though, I won’t need to be trucking in material any longer as long as there’s a closed nutrient cycle and all of the waste and humanure is composted and returned to the soil.

I also spent this last week making two large compost piles, improving on my previous straw bale system.  The original pile I made didn’t get compost in the very core of the pile.  It just wasn’t wet at all because the mound shape had hardened and redirected all of the water to the sides.  My new piles were slightly rectangular to handle the full truck load and be flat on top so the water would soak in more evenly.  Also, I layered the horse manure/bedding with weeds and other garden wastes which are high in nitrogen.  Horse manure by itself has the perfect C:N (Carbon to Nitrogen) ratio for composting, but with the wood shaving bedding material added it puts more carbon in the mix, so the greens help to balance that out somewhat.

I also sprinkled a shovelful of finished compost on each manure layer and wetted it down thoroughly.  Then I topped the whole thing off with several inches of straw to stop it from forming that hardened surface and to hold the moisture in better.   I stuck my soil thermometer in one of the piles and by the 3rd day it had reached 140F.  It’s cooled a little since then, but I think that’s because it didn’t have enough water.  Because it got so hot I decided to build the 2nd pile with humanure in the core to sterilize it.  If a compost pile spends 24 hours above 121F it will kill all the harmful pathogens in the poop.

The two piles should give me enough compost to give the vegetable beds a good layer and re-energize them for another productive year.  I’ll continue expanding the sheet-mulching of the food forest as I have time and available helpers.

I’ve got 4 new guineas in the guinea house and I’ve moved the lone chicken up by my camper as a personal tick guard.  I’m going to go get her a friend soon though.  I think she’s starting to go a little crazy by herself.  The guineas should provide excellent tick clearance, but really I haven’t even so much as seen a tick in more than a month now.

As far as community goes, Justin has begun work on a tipi he plans on trying overwinter in.  He had originally planned on making a type of yurt but has scaled back his plans as winter looms.  He’s cleared out a space in the main community field and has already collected the majority of poles he needs from the surrounding woods.  He’ll use the billboard tarps to make the covering.  He’s also discovered a vein of paint rock, basically a type of mineral ocher that can be used as a paint, such as on a lime plaster to make a type of fresco.

Patrick has downgraded his plans as well and is going to make a simplified geodesic dome assuming he has time.  He’s also cleared out a space in the central community field.  He’s had some transportation issues that have been slowing him down, along with other projects he already has in the works.

Dakota and Emily left last week for a 2 week trip to visit Emily’s friends and family in Columbus, OH, but they’ll be back this next week.  Dakota will probably be leaving a week or so after they get back, but Emily plans on staying until the weather heads south.

A new work exchanger, Joanie, should be arriving this coming weekend for several weeks to help out.  Also, Jessica, who’s actually from Fulton has been camping out in her van for a few days.  She’ll be leaving for California in a few weeks, but is hanging out until then.

The weather has been getting progressively nicer.   It’s not as hot or humid, and there have been plenty of blue skies filling up the battery banks.  It’s actually been kind of nice needing to use a blanket on some nights.

I know I’m missing a lot of different things that have happened, but I’m going to make it a priority to post once a month. So stay tuned, and check out the flickr feed for more pics.

The Big Thaw

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

It’s finally happened.  The weather has warmed to the point it’s no longer miserable to be outside.  In fact, it’s down right pleasant and judging by the chorus of crickets and peepers, the wildlife would agree.

The change in temperature has been swift, but I remember being struck by how quickly the chirps and hum of nature disappeared last fall.  One day it was there, and the next it wasn’t.  Two days ago the woods were completely silent at night except for the occasional owl hoot, and yesterday it was as if everyone got the memo.

As the days have gotten nicer they’ve also begun to pass much more swiftly.  That tends to happen when you’re constantly busy, web work in the morning and projects in the afternoon.  I have to slow myself down at times because it’s easy to become overwhelmed with the sheer scope of everything.  I’ve taken to making to-do lists every other night just to keep that next step in perspective.

I’m aiming to start setting up Tarpopolis again at the beginning of April.  Once I empty the house out then I can start working on the interior roofing again, and after the last frost is past the plastering can start.

Until then I’m focusing my energy on the garden.  I built a trellis in the garden and cheated a little by buying some bagged garden soil to plant the sugar snap peas in.  I’ve also got a lot more seeds in the mini-greenhouse and coldframe although I’m a little worried I may have to restart some of them since I think I might have cooked them by not paying attention and opening them on a sunny day.

Due to some ridiculous beaurocratic wrangling with the DMV I wont’ be able to get a plate for the truck until early April.  Which severely hampers my rotted manure collecting operations among a host of other things I need the truck for.  I do have a plan on how I can still use it, however, it’s not exactly legal so I won’t post the specifics here.  Big brother may be watching.

I’ve got several new sources for manure which I plan on taking advantage of.  I’ll be adding a 4th vegetable garden bed as well as a 2nd perennial bed and then I’d like to add at least a small layer of manure around the perimeter of the main beds where I intend to plant berries and fruit trees in a couple weeks.  All in all I’m probably looking at 8 full loads of manure and another 2 or 3 of free mulch from Columbia for the paths.  It’ll be a good workout and warm up for the coming construction season.

A couple weekends ago Justin and Melainia came out and we burned a bunch of the brush piles that had been built up over the last year or so.  I wanted to make bio-char out of them by putting them out before they’d turned to ash.  The charcoal holds a lot of the nutrients in the ground so that they don’t wash away.  Unfortunately I didn’t have any water so we just let it burn where I’ll be adding the new vegetable bed.  The ash will still be good source of potassium for the plants.

One point of excitement was when we all 3 came back with bunches of brush to find flames leaping from the humanure pile which was maybe 20 feet away from the fire.  It was amazing how quickly the pallets caught on fire as well, and putting the whole thing out wasn’t easy with the aforementioned lack of water.  It was tempting to stomp on it, but it would be the equivalent of stomping out a giant flaming bag of poop on your doorstep.  Justin made this excellent graphic which is certainly t-shirt worthy should the opportunity arise.

I was considering planting standard size fruit trees, but there really isn’t enough space in the garden for that.  Instead I’m going to plant a lot of semi-dwarf and dwarf trees and have a big variety of different kinds of fruit.  I’m hoping that these trees will serve as sort of the genetic stock for the eventual food forest in the ecovillage center.

Typically you don’t want to start a fruit tree from seed because you don’t know what kind of fruit it will have, for instance an apple pollinated by a crab apple probably won’t have very tasty fruit.  However, if you start some of the trees from seed and then graft a branch from one of the tried and true varieties that I’ll have growing in the garden here then you’ve got something you know will be tasty.   Of course, any trees grown like that will be full-size since size is determined by the roots and they won’t have the dwarf root stock, but that’s what would be more appropriate for the ecovillage anyway.  Standards produce a lot more fruit and do so for many more years than dwarfs and semi-dwarfs.

I’m also waiting on the truck plate to pick up the pipe I need to raise the wind generator.  I’m hoping I can get that next week and get it up and running soon.  I did manage to fix my gas generator which hadn’t wanted to start since I got back so I at least have some power until then without having to go recharge my batteries at my friend’s place every several days.

I also picked up some trash along the road with some help from a friend last weekend.  I noticed that people had still been parking at the driveway to the old cabin and littering it with more beer cans and bottles since I cleaned it up last year and posted the “No Trespassing” signs.  Clearly they didn’t get the message so I lugged some of the 30 or so old tires that someone graciously dumped in the old root cellar and placed them as a barricade across the driveway entrance.

There are still another 30 or more tires in a ditch just down the road.  I plan on using some of those in the garden to grow potatoes in, and saving the ones that are in decent shape for other uses down the line.   A lot of them are really too far gone to do anything with and I may end up hauling them to a special tire recycling place not too far from here.  I also posted a homemade “No Dumping” sign in the hope that it might make some sort of difference as far as future tires are concerned.

My current struggle of the moment is getting water in the camper.  It appears that simply opening the main drain valve didn’t empty all the water out of the pipes and at some point the water froze and burst the water supply line in two different places.  Neither spot is very easy to get at, but I’ve only had to cut minor holes so far.  I’m on my 3rd attempt at patching them and each time I’ve gotten closer.  In fact the last time they held for a couple hours, enough for me to take my first hot shower in the camper, but then one burst and the second started leaking.  I think I’m finally on the right track now though and I should have it taken care of in the next day or two.

I’m also looking to get 3 or 4 laying hens and keeping them around this time.  I considered guineas again as well, but I wouldn’t be able to actually have them out and tick hunting until late July again.  They also don’t have the benefit of easily collected eggs and aren’t going to handle the winters as well.  The chickens have stinkier poop, but I think if I only let them free range around the campground and construction site every other day or so then it won’t be too big of an issue I’m hoping.  In the future I’d like to get guineas again since they have a wider tick-hunting range and they’re just kind of cool, but I’ll save that for another time.

So that’s where I’m at.  I’ll probably start having visitors out on the weekend of March 27 weather permitting if anyone’s interested.

The Rise of Tarpopolis

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

The Big Board

Once people began arriving out on the land things began to pick up and time for blog writing quickly vanished.  Liz got here about 2 weeks ago, my dad and Charlotte just left after spending a week here and bringing lots of tools and goodies as well as helping out a lot, building a solar oven, mulching, etc.  We’ve also met a great couple that lives right in Fulton, Melainia and Justin.  They’ve got a composting toilet in their house, keep chickens, and have a garden.  They both work at MU and Justin is in plant science and has an almost encyclopedic knowledge of plants.

There have been a number of large developments.  First, the driveway has now been graveled.  We still need another load which we’ll spot place on the trouble spots and use for some other projects as well as using it for the rubble trench foundation of the straw bale building.  No more stuck cars!  I just wish the gravel came from a dry creek bed instead of a quarry, but beggars can’t be choosers.

The composting toilet is now basically complete.  I would still like to add a hand-washing station on the side and I’m going to paint the front white so it matches the vinyl wrapped around it.  It seems to be working great, no smell or flies.  I’ve emptied the buckets into a simple pallet compost bin near the garden and it doesn’t even resemble… poop.  Just some brown sawdust textured material.

The Composting Toilet

Thanks to dad and Daniel the paths are quickly becoming mulched and are now mostly mud free.  Although we are going to have to dig some french drains, or ditches filled with gravel to keep them open, around the bigger communal tarps to divert some of the water that runs down and soaks the ground and makes things muddy.  We also need to patch some holes in the tarps.  There’s still a lot of brush to be mulched, especially for the garden, but we’ll get there.

There are now 3 tent platforms, Daniel moved into the 6-man tent my dad and Charlotte left for us and put his mattress in it.  Then there’s another platform that hasn’t been nailed together yet, and needs a tarp, but it’ll be used for visitors who camp out.  I also hung up a giant 15’x40’ billboard vinyl that now houses our nice kitchen setup and new screened-in picnic table.   I’ve taken to calling our little settlement Tarpopolis as the tarps spread through the forest.

Tao and the Rhode Island Reds

Liz built a chicken tractor and as of today we now have 4 Rhode Island Reds, 3 hens and 1 rooster to help expand the clan.  That brings our current population to 7 full-time residents.  We also picked up 6 fertilized guinea hen eggs, which we’re going to attempt to have the chickens hatch.

We really want the guineas because they eat a lot of ticks and range far and wide.  The problem is that adult guineas tend to leave and return home, normally you want them from babies and train them to come home to a coop at night for a feeding.  Another cool thing about them is that they can fly and so you can build an open-top fenced in area where they can fly into and be safe at night.

So we’re going to get the hens to hatch the guinea eggs we’re going to wait for the hens to lay a few of their own eggs and then switch them out with the guinea eggs because they take a week longer to hatch and then a week later we’ll put those eggs back.  At least I believe that’s the plan. So, if all goes well, the tick population is in for a massive decline and it couldn’t happen any sooner.

Wonder Wash and Eco-friendly detergent

The solar shower is the next big thing on the list, and I’ll be heading out to get some pieces I need and working on that tomorrow.  Clothes washing was another big thing that we didn’t have answer for until Melainia and Justin offered to let us use their little hand crank “Wonder Wash” machine that does a small load by turning a crank.  We haven’t tried it yet, but I think it’s a good temporary solution.

After the shower gets done we’ll be getting the garden going.  It seems like a million little jobs creep up on you and makes getting the main projects completed take a lot longer.  It’s all good as long as we can get started on the actual straw bale structure soon, hopefully in the next week we’ll be breaking ground.

So that’s it from here.  If anyone wants to come out we’re giving tours every Saturday at 2pm and we had our first meetup group meeting today which had a total of 6 people at it.  I think she’s planning on having the next meeting on May 23, but I’m not sure on that.

Slow but Steady

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

Liz should be getting here tomorrow evening sometime.  I’ve been missing her even with the video chatting at night, not to mention I’m starting to get a little lonely.  It wouldn’t be so bad if I could go into town, but the truck is stuck in the mud.  I was hoping that would be over by now, but the gravel people still haven’t come and the truck is only 2-wheel drive.  I spent 45 minutes getting it out earlier, moved 10 feet and got stuck again so I decided to just wait for the ground to dry out.

Truck in the mud

The truck itself is really nice.  I can’t thank my step-dad Gary enough for trading with me.  I’ve got a list of things I need to get with it and the trailer, but it’ll have to wait at least until tomorrow, maybe the next day even.  My life has never revolved so much around the weather before, and although it can be a little frustrating, it seems natural and right.

For instance, I knew it was going to rain for a couple days so I threw out some cover crop in the area where the garden will be.  Mainly I put the cover crop seed down where I didn’t think we get to making garden beds this year.  I went out there today and I could already clearly see the stuff shooting up.  Pretty impressive, especially since there are quite a few native grasses, herbs, and flowers already taking over.  I’m still a little concerned that the cover crop won’t be able to compete, but we’ll see.

Composting toilet frame with bark

I had planned on going into town and picking up a bunch of pallets and stuff for the composting toilet today, but the truck was still stuck.  So instead I did what I could on the composting toilet, which wasn’t too bad.  I sunk the remaining 3 cedar posts and got the pallet which will be the sub-floor raised, leveled, and nailed in.  I also stripped the cedar bark off the posts, which I probably should have done before hand, but it didn’t seem to want to come off then.  Once I finally got it going it was like pulling string cheese apart.

I’m pretty proud of the little stand I’ve got so far.  It’s sturdy and I think it looks nice.  I’m going to try to find some sort of recycled wood to make the walls out of, but I’m going to buy some more plywood to make the actual toilet part out of.  We’re gonna be pooping in style in no time.

Debarked composting toilet frame

The other thing I did today was take down a couple trees out in the garden area that needed to come out because they were seriously blocking southern exposure.  I also widened the access way so that a truck can get back in there now, although it’ll need some gravel on it too.

There’s a ton of brush everywhere, big piles of it along the driveway, in the garden, and on the building site.  It’s really a 2-person task making mulch.  It would really help to have one person preparing the wood so that it would fit into the chipper and the other person feeding it in.  There’s a lot of it that needs to be done, and I don’t think we’ll need to mulch all of it.  There’s a good bit that’s too big to be mulched and too crooked or small to be used for anything else so we’ll have a good ol’ fashioned bonfire here at some point.  Although I do plan on leaving a few small piles of brush here and there as wildlife habitat, especially around the garden.

Things are definitely taking longer than I expected, even with anticipating that it would take longer than I expected.  We’re probably not going to really get started on the straw bale building until the middle of May.  That’ll be alright though, we should have a nice base camp by then and that still gives a month of flex time on the construction.

Day 3

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

It’s day 3 and I’m finally spending the night in a tent.  The car was fine the first night but the last 2 were pretty uncomfortable.  I wanted to wait until I had a tent platform built, which I had done by yesterday evening but then got caught up video chatting with Liz until it was dark and then I didn’t feel like setting it up with a headlamp.

I’ve already started to fall into a groove.  I go to sleep early, like around 10 and get up with the sun around 6-6:30.  Nothing is open so I can’t make calls or go get supplies, and I don’t want to break the still of the early morning with a generator or chainsaw so I’ve been clearing brush in a few spots I’d like to have people camp.  It’s probably the only time I’ve ever felt like George Bush.

Then I’ve been running around like crazy getting things from the storage unit, the hardware store, and picking up free pallets, and billboard vinyl wraps, and sawdust.  I’d read and heard that these things were easy to get but hadn’t really thought they would be.  I called a custom cabinet place nearby and they had bags and bags of sawdust, so I went over and grabbed 2 40lb bags for the composting toilet.

Tent on pallet platform

The pallets are everywhere once you start looking.  They’re hiding out behind lumber yards by the hundreds.  I bought a couple pieces of plywood and screwed them down to some pallets, and poof, a tent platform.  I also put a water sealant on it so it’ll hopefully last longer and didn’t nail the pieces together so each piece of plywood is on top of 2 pallets and can be easily dragged individually by one person if they need to be moved to a different camping spot.  And, I screwed the plywood on so I could easily take the plywood off and use it for something else if I needed to.

It’s really nice inside the tent.  I don’t have to worry about things falling over.  I feel dry and warm, and the floor is nice and smooth, no twigs or roots poking me in the back.  I’m looking around on craigslist for all kinds of things, but one of them is a twin and queen mattress.  I’ll put the queen in Liz and I’s tent and when she gets here, and just get the twin in the small guess tent for whoever.  Now that’s camping in style.

I also drove down toward the Lake of the Ozarks today to pick up some old vinyl billboard wraps.  It was a little farther than I expected, but I at least got to see some of Jefferson City and the touristy Osage Beach area.  I haven’t even looked at what all the vinyl wraps say yet.  They’re pretty massive and the bigger ones are hard to lift.  The one I did open had SUVs on it.  Who knew they were good for something?

Vinyl billboard wrap

I’m planning on putting them up over the tent platforms so everything stays nice and dry.  I’ll probably have to cut the bigger ones.  They’re like 16′x40′ and super thick.  It’s funny you can even see the photoshop .psd filename on the outer edges that are normally hidden from when they printed it on some kind of massive billboard printer.  I’m going to try to find somewhere closer that I can get them from, and also I’d like to see if they have any of the plywood panels from the older type billboards.  The place I went to today had some I saw over in a pile but they looked like they were in pretty rough shape having been left outside uncovered.

I got stuck in the mud a couple days ago, but managed to rock myself out.  I called the gravel people to come out and they said I needed to clear out the driveway so that their was 12′ of clearance both horizontally and vertically for the dump truck to dump the gravel.  So that’ll be another half day or so of brush clearing.  It’ll be nice not driving through all the mud and ruts when it’s done though.

Tomorrow I’m going in to Columbia to see about this 8 hp wood chipper I found on craigslist.  If it goes well I’ll be able to mulch that brush and use it for the garden and the paths around the campground.  If there’s room I’ll probably pick up another 55 gallon drum or two while I’m in Columbia.  There’s a recycling place there that sells them for $6.

Composting toilet initial stages

My other big project is getting the composting toilet built.  I’ve already sunk one of the 4 cedar posts that’ll hold it up off the ground and form the frame for the walls.  It’s quite a task, but enjoyable work.  I find building stuff in general, especially something as environmentally friendly as a nice composting toilet out of recycled materials very rewarding.

The journalism students came out on my first day and interviewed me and I gave them a tour of the property.  They were here for hours and they even came back to re-shoot some stuff the next day.  It went well and the story is supposed to run in the Missourian some time next week.  I’ll post a link to it when it comes out.

Showing them around made the need to clear up the tour route very obvious.  I’ll try to get to that somewhere between getting the garden going and starting on the straw bale place.  I’ve pretty much decided to give one tour a week on Saturdays at 2pm.  It’s quite a walk and takes awhile so I don’t want to be doing it all the time.

The creek was higher than I’d ever seen it when we went walking around and it was beautiful.  I don’t think I’ve ever been out here during Spring as an adult.  I’ve always come during the heart of summer, but there are quite a few flowers, both on the ground and on the trees.  You can also see a long way off without all the leaves on the trees.