Green Recycling Pets

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Some people may use worms or chickens to help with composting and reducing waste.

We use gerbils.

Lester and Earl are getting really efficient at chewing up thin cardboard boxes and turning them into a nice easy to compost paper product that is very green and makes lovely compost!

It’s quite amazing to see how fast they go through the stuff. I put in 7 boxes on Wednesday and today, on Saturday they have totally reduced 3 of them. 4 left to go!


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Earl, the black one, he’s very busy, but very unfocused. He works on this corner and that corner and digs a while in the fluff and then tries to move this box here and that box there and then goes back to chewing. He’s funny to watch, tons of energy, but very little focus on his effort. Still, he does manage to get things done.


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Lester, on the other hand, the grey one, he’s focused and will sit and chew for hours on one area, slowly and carefully… stopping every few moments to look it over and then chew some more. He doesn’t care to move fluff, in fact, I don’t see him as much as he hides away and just stays his course… working dilligently. He can chew up a whole paper tube in like 10 minutes!

They are great little pets, don’t need litter or much at all. No toys, etc., just thin carboard boxes and a paper towel or tissue or two. (They love to shred those and make the cutest little snuggly nests for nap time.) They don’t even eat much, a bag of gerbil food will last a good long time. I give them a handful of the stuff every couple days. They bury most of it, and delight in digging around and finding a good seed or little hard chewy thing and running back to their nest to sit and eat it. Being desert critters, I only have to fill their water bottle once a week or so. Easy-peasy little pets. I give them each a peanut in a shell a week and they live for those bonus times. Pretty neat little desk buddies.

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Finally Planting my Garden!

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After rain, sickness, cold, heat and Opry, we finally had time this morning to start actually planting in the raised beds! I can’t believe it took this long, but in reality, it’s only two weeks from the all safe time in our region. Just seems like it took forever this time. The first week it was rain rain rain and more rain. And then the second week, I was feeling puny for 5 days and then it was really hot and we had an Opry and well, excuses, excuses!

That picture above is a fully planted bed of bush beans and sugar snap peas! Beautiful!


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We got up and at ’em pretty early for us… 9 am… (hey after an Opry, that’s doing pretty good!) and dug up the bean and pea beds and loosened the dirt a bit and planted all the seeds. And then we began to sort out all our seedlings in the cold frames. We planted 10 tomatoes in the one crib bed, and then also planted all our pickle seedlings… three varieties! They filled up another bed nicely.


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Oh we also planted two rows of radish tape as well. We got out our tomato cages and I find that I need a few more. Oh, we also planted four squash seedings that were getting pretty crazy! We sorted out all our pepper and remaining tomato seedlings… and straightened out the wires of the cages we have, too.

The cold frame is now empty and I plan to get a couple bags of compost and fill it up for some more plants to live in during the season. And I need to get broccoli starts because ours didn’t make it. They got tooo waterlogged and then just drown. I didn’t realize they were in standing water, they were packed so tightly in their box! I have learned some seed starting wisdom from this year and that mainly is… start in large enough peat pots and make sure EVERYTHING has drainage holes!!!


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You live, you learn!

We still have a bunch of tomatoes to plant, and peppers too. And some sunflowers, corn and more onions. Another full day and we’ll be ready and done. It feels good to get it almost done. It started to rain and we were getting tuckered out, so we came in and had lunch and started working on Maggie’s homeschool plan for her next year, starting in July. We usually take a month off for summer and then start back up at a nice comfortable climb. That way when we want a day off, we can take it, as we’ll already have 60 days in before most the kids even start.

Gave the hounds a good bath as well… Gypsy is hanging in there, her skin issues are really giving her a run for her money. Poor thing looks dreadful and without her thick coat, she’s just having a rough time keeping herself warm. She loves to be covered up and babied over…


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Well, that’s the report for the weekend… the band did arrive in the nick of time and we had a great show, enjoyed the folks from Carolina Road greatly and Copus Hill did an awesome job as well. I’ll have a little video and such later on. Got a gig tomorrow, and that will be fun. Plan to just take the rest of the weekend easy and enjoy it!!! Hope everyone is doing the same!!!

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Love a Great Deal…

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Was shopping for the food for the Opry backstage and with all the excitement of the broken bus and such I didn’t have as much time, so I dashed into the local Kroger’s to get a few deli items. And lo and behold… outside in their odd little assortment of plants and such was some wilty and dry fruit bushes! Raspberry, blackberry and blueberries! Normally priced at $12.99… marked down to…… $2.00 each!

Wow. Well, I picked out 4 of the best ones… two blueberry and two raspberry. I considered the blackberries, but to be honest, I hate the thorns on blackberry bushes. They can be quite evil. Back in the old days, I had a patch and they just got out of hand. So I just stuck with the blueberry and raspberry.

Brought them home, got them in the shade and Jessy gave them a LONG cool soak of water, and within a few hours they were bright and perky. I just love getting perennials when the stores don’t want to take care of them anymore. It’s such a stinkin’ good deal.

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