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Old 11-11-2010, 11:50 AM posted to rec.gardens
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On 11/10/10 3:27 PM, in article
, "Higgs
Boson" wrote:

On Nov 10, 3:55*am, Cheryl Isaak wrote:
On 11/9/10 8:53 AM, in article ,

"echinosum" wrote:

Higgs Boson;904722 Wrote:
So, if you're into coffee mulching, would *you pls share your
experience.
A useful property of coffee ground mulch is that it is anti-gastropod.
So my coffee grounds go around my Lapageria rosea, which is otherwise
the favourite food in the garden for the local snails.


Let's hear i for anti-gastropods! I lost some baby beets to the Bad G
(I think)
so will strew my Friday grounds out there & hope for the best.

So it would be a good thing for my hostas too!

I have been using it as a general mulch in the garden when I can find it at
Charbucks - I'm not shy, I'll just walk in and nab it!


Hah! "Charbucks" - Love it. I tried them when they first came to
town years
(decades?) ago, but never got used to the burned taste.

Tx, Cheryl

Anytime - supposedly some of my "local" places will do it too. I'll ask next
spring.

I've heard it works as a sand/sub for icy driving, but I haven't tried it
yet!


No icy driving here. Just awful congestion, getting worse & worse.

HB

Not sure where you are off the top of my head, but I'm in the frozen north.
Shortly, I'll put out the driveway markers and such. All the garden
ornaments are in or on the deck. (got this great brass colored whirling
sunflower and it looks great in a pot the deck.

C

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Old 11-11-2010, 03:05 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Cheryl Isaak wrote:
On 11/10/10 3:27 PM, in article
,
"Higgs
Boson" wrote:

On Nov 10, 3:55 am, Cheryl Isaak wrote:
On 11/9/10 8:53 AM, in article ,

"echinosum" wrote:

Higgs Boson;904722 Wrote:
So, if you're into coffee mulching, would you pls share your
experience.
A useful property of coffee ground mulch is that it is
anti-gastropod.
So my coffee grounds go around my Lapageria rosea, which is
otherwise
the favourite food in the garden for the local snails.


Let's hear i for anti-gastropods! I lost some baby beets to the Bad
G
(I think)
so will strew my Friday grounds out there & hope for the best.

So it would be a good thing for my hostas too!

I have been using it as a general mulch in the garden when I can
find it at
Charbucks - I'm not shy, I'll just walk in and nab it!


Hah! "Charbucks" - Love it. I tried them when they first came to
town years
(decades?) ago, but never got used to the burned taste.

Tx, Cheryl

Anytime - supposedly some of my "local" places will do it too. I'll
ask next
spring.

I've heard it works as a sand/sub for icy driving, but I haven't
tried it
yet!


No icy driving here. Just awful congestion, getting worse & worse.

HB

Not sure where you are off the top of my head, but I'm in the frozen
north.
Shortly, I'll put out the driveway markers and such. All the garden
ornaments are in or on the deck. (got this great brass colored
whirling
sunflower and it looks great in a pot the deck.

C


For those in the south... Drive way markers, I put mine out last week.
These are useful to help find your driveway when then the snow comes
around. Especially those that live in the country. Get off the driveway
entrance and the car gets stuck in the drainage ditches. I remove them
for summer because they get in the way for lawn mowing.

I put my coffee grounds in the compost.

Sorry for the post, if it is too simplistic

--
Enjoy Life... Dan L (Garden in zone 5a Michigan)
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Old 11-11-2010, 06:01 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Coffee grounds

On Nov 11, 3:50*am, Cheryl Isaak wrote:
On 11/10/10 3:27 PM, in article
, "Higgs



Boson" wrote:
On Nov 10, 3:55 am, Cheryl Isaak wrote:
On 11/9/10 8:53 AM, in article ,


"echinosum" wrote:


Higgs Boson;904722 Wrote:
So, if you're into coffee mulching, would you pls share your
experience.
A useful property of coffee ground mulch is that it is anti-gastropod..
So my coffee grounds go around my Lapageria rosea, which is otherwise
the favourite food in the garden for the local snails.


Let's hear i for anti-gastropods! *I lost some baby beets to the Bad G
(I think)
so will strew my Friday grounds out there & hope for the best.


So it would be a good thing for my hostas too!


I have been using it as a general mulch in the garden when I can find it at
Charbucks - I'm not shy, I'll just walk in and nab it!


Hah! *"Charbucks" - Love it. *I tried them when they first came to
town years
(decades?) ago, but never got used to the burned taste.


Tx, Cheryl


Anytime - supposedly some of my "local" places will do it too. I'll ask next
spring.

I've heard it works as a sand/sub for icy driving, but I haven't tried it
yet!


No icy driving here. *Just awful congestion, getting worse & worse.


HB


Not sure where you are off the top of my head, but I'm in the frozen north.
Shortly, I'll put out the driveway markers and such. All the garden
ornaments are in or on the deck. (got this great brass colored whirling
sunflower and it looks great in a pot the deck.

C


I'm in So. Calif coastal. We have (or had, until global warming*) no
real "winter". Daylight get shorter, thanks in part to *&^%^%$$
Daylight Savings ( which everybody hates and nobody seems to make
Congress get rid of it). Temps at the beach rarely get below 40's at
night.
Winter sunsets over the ocean are magically beautiful. I can grow
food all years; just vary the cops by season.

That said, I really would like some snow, but I have to travel to the
Far North and Far South to enjoy the white stuff.

*Normal, stable weather patterns are so ****ed up the last year or
two! We had 96 degrees last week, and now it's down to 609-70s.

Any climate change skeptics still left out there -- and this is a
smart enough group that I doubt if you are fooled by govt and
corporate spin -- should read "CENSORING SCIENCE" by Mark Bowen. Even
for moi, who doesn't believe much of Washington/corporate spin, this
was a shocker. Centering around the career of JIM HANSEN, one of the
greatest scientists of this era, "Censoring Science" uses original
sources to document how the Bush Admin, and before him, going back to
Reagan, partially skipping Clinton, ACTIVELY censored/suppressed
reports produced by honest scientists they tried, and often succeeded,
in intimidating at NASA, NOAA, and other agencies concerned with Earth
Science.

Over 30 years ago, Jim Hansen sounded the alarm about anthropogenic
causes of global warming. Now, we may be at the "tipping point";
phrase he coined to denote the point at which the damage cannot be
reversed. Even if it could have been halted, it would have taken
centuries to restore Earth's balance/

One wonders how these corporate/government criminals manage to ignore
that their children and grandchildren will be living in the degraded
world they helped create...

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Old 11-11-2010, 10:55 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Posts: 2,438
Default Coffee grounds

In article
,
Higgs Boson wrote:

On Nov 11, 3:50*am, Cheryl Isaak wrote:
On 11/10/10 3:27 PM, in article
, "Higgs



Boson" wrote:
On Nov 10, 3:55 am, Cheryl Isaak wrote:
On 11/9/10 8:53 AM, in article ,


"echinosum" wrote:


Higgs Boson;904722 Wrote:
So, if you're into coffee mulching, would you pls share your
experience.
A useful property of coffee ground mulch is that it is anti-gastropod.
So my coffee grounds go around my Lapageria rosea, which is otherwise
the favourite food in the garden for the local snails.


Let's hear i for anti-gastropods! *I lost some baby beets to the Bad G
(I think)
so will strew my Friday grounds out there & hope for the best.


So it would be a good thing for my hostas too!


I have been using it as a general mulch in the garden when I can find it
at
Charbucks - I'm not shy, I'll just walk in and nab it!


Hah! *"Charbucks" - Love it. *I tried them when they first came to
town years
(decades?) ago, but never got used to the burned taste.


Tx, Cheryl


Anytime - supposedly some of my "local" places will do it too. I'll ask
next
spring.

I've heard it works as a sand/sub for icy driving, but I haven't tried
it
yet!


No icy driving here. *Just awful congestion, getting worse & worse.


HB


Not sure where you are off the top of my head, but I'm in the frozen north.
Shortly, I'll put out the driveway markers and such. All the garden
ornaments are in or on the deck. (got this great brass colored whirling
sunflower and it looks great in a pot the deck.

C


I'm in So. Calif coastal. We have (or had, until global warming*) no
real "winter". Daylight get shorter, thanks in part to *&^%^%$$
Daylight Savings ( which everybody hates and nobody seems to make
Congress get rid of it). Temps at the beach rarely get below 40's at
night.
Winter sunsets over the ocean are magically beautiful. I can grow
food all years; just vary the cops by season.


How do you vary the cops? Here the cops are always the same. If they
aren't shooting unarmed black men, they are busting the heads of war
protesters. In Denver, they even brag about getting up early to beat the
crowds. Although, that may be better than turning "Xe Services LLC"
(Blackwater) loose, like they did in New Orleans.

That said, I really would like some snow, but I have to travel to the
Far North and Far South to enjoy the white stuff.


Poor dear, enjoy the white stuff do you, and it's soooooo far away.
Until a way is found to send others excess to you, you may want to stick
out a thumb and . . .

1.
Head southeast on Lincoln Blvd toward Broadway St
0.5*mi

2.
Turn left at the 1st cross street onto Olympic Blvd (signs for Santa
Monica Fwy/Los Angeles)
463*ft

3.
Merge onto I-10 E via the ramp to Los Angeles
15.6*mi

4.
Take exit 16B on the left for CA-60 E/Pomona/I-5 S toward Santa Ana
0.3*mi

5.
Merge onto CA-60 E
51.4*mi

6.
Take exit 52B for Main St
0.1*mi

7.
Turn right at Main St
0.7*mi

8.
Turn left at 3rd St
1.7*mi

9.
Turn right to merge onto I-215 S
18.6*mi

10.
Take exit 15 for CA-74 E toward Hemet
0.3*mi

11.
Slight right at CA-74 E
31.6*mi

12.
Slight left at CA-243 N
3.9*mi

13.
Slight right at S Circle Dr
194*ft

Idyllwild, CA

125 miles,
2 hours 22 minutes.

or if that is too far, you can get to Arrowhead Lake in 1 and 3/4 hr.,
but I'll let you Google that one.

Nice thing about Idyllwild is that it is just above Palm Springs, and
you can make the run back by Hadley's Dried Fruit Stand.


*Normal, stable weather patterns are so ****ed up the last year or
two! We had 96 degrees last week, and now it's down to 609-70s.

Any climate change skeptics still left out there -- and this is a
smart enough group that I doubt if you are fooled by govt and
corporate spin -- should read "CENSORING SCIENCE" by Mark Bowen.

The Republican War on Science by Chris Mooney,
http://www.amazon.com/Republican-War...dp/0465046762/
ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1289512917&sr=1-1

Even
for moi,

meme pour toit?

who doesn't believe much of Washington/corporate spin, this
was a shocker. Centering around the career of JIM HANSEN, one of the
greatest scientists of this era, "Censoring Science" uses original
sources to document how the Bush Admin, and before him, going back to
Reagan, partially skipping Clinton, ACTIVELY censored/suppressed
reports produced by honest scientists they tried, and often succeeded,
in intimidating at NASA, NOAA, and other agencies concerned with Earth
Science.

Over 30 years ago, Jim Hansen sounded the alarm about anthropogenic
causes of global warming. Now, we may be at the "tipping point";

You seem to be looking in the rearview mirror.

Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet by Bill McKibben
http://www.amazon.com/Eaarth-Making-...805090568/ref=
sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1289515418&sr=1-1

Ch. 4
LIGHTLY, CAREFULLY, GRACEFULLY
p.154

Every climate model we've
got shows that "by the end of the century an average July day will
almost certainly be hotter than the hottest heat waves we experi-
ence now," according to a team of American researchers. And
those hottest heat waves decimate our fields, in Italy and France,
for example, the 2003 heat wave that killed tens of thousands
of people also cut corn yields by a third. "It simply becomes too
hot for growing plants," says Rosamond Naylor, the director of
the Program for Food Security and the Environment at Stan-
ford. "The heat damages the crop's ability to produce enough
yield."11 A 2009 study found that a million square kilometers of
Africa might soon be too hot to grow crops. (That's an area
larger than the United States plants in its eight largest field crops
combined.) "Maize will basically no longer be possible" to culti-
vate across wide swaths, the study found; there will simply be
too many hot days. . .

2100 the average temperature in the growing season will be hot-
ter than "any temperatures recorded there to date." Past a cer-
tain point, corn won't fertilize, rice won't grow.13 And people
can't work, at least not as hard. A new study from the Australian
researcher Tord Kjellstrom found that by 2030 Indian laborers
would be 30 percent less productive, simply because of increased
heat. As one Bengali farmer put it, "Working under the open sky
during summer has become nearly impossible‹for farmers and
their cattle alike."14 . . .

Droughts have returned to the United States, too, even though
people have stopped wasting so much water in their homes. The
federal government says that thirty-six states face water shortages
in the next five years,18 which is bad news for farming, since 70
percent of the water we use goes for irrigation, and irrigated fields
supply as much as 40 percent of the world's food. By 2007 half of
Australia's farmland was in a declared drought, and a farmer
was committing suicide every four days.19 In California, in the


156 € EAARTH

spring of 2009, groups of farmworkers, many wearing surgical
masks against the blowing dust, marched for four days to
demand the federal government somehow supply them with
more water‹the year's drought had already cost the state 23,700
jobs and $477 million in revenue.20 Farmers are already letting
orchard trees die for lack of water to keep them alive; in the Cen-
tral Valley unemployment grew 9.4 percent in a year through
July 2009. "There's no water, so there's not much work," Kiki
Torres told a reporter.21

As we melt those glaciers and snowfields in the continental
interiors, things will only get worse. In the first major speech he
gave after being named secretary of energy, the Nobel laureate
Steven Chu told an audience in his native California: "I don't
think the American public has gripped in its gut what could hap-
pen." If we don't dramatically slow global warming, he said, the
rapid melt of the Sierra snowpack means "we're looking at a sce-
nario where there's no more agriculture in California," adding, "I
don't actually see how they can keep their cities going," either.

phrase he coined to denote the point at which the damage cannot be
reversed. Even if it could have been halted, it would have taken
centuries to restore Earth's balance/

One wonders how these corporate/government criminals manage to ignore
that their children and grandchildren will be living in the degraded
world they helped create...


Egregiously OFF TOPIC
--
- Billy
"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the
merger of state and corporate power." - Benito Mussolini.
http://www.democracynow.org/2010/7/2/maude
http://english.aljazeera.net/video/m...515308172.html
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Old 11-11-2010, 11:41 PM posted to rec.gardens
Bud Bud is offline
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Coffee frounds are great for alkaline soil. I put a lot around my
hydrangeas. I'm getting more redish blossoms.
--
Bud


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Old 12-11-2010, 03:16 PM posted to rec.gardens
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On Nov 11, 3:41*pm, Bud wrote:
Coffee frounds are great for alkaline soil. I put a lot around my
hydrangeas. I'm getting more redish blossoms.
--
Bud


Bud, you are getting reddish blossoms on your hydrangeas because the
soil IS more alkaline. Acidic soil is what is required to produce blue
hydrangea flowers. The UCG's are not going to have much of an impact
on existing soil pH - they are only just slightly acidic (most of the
acid is extracted with the liquid coffee from the grounds during
brewing) and it would take a huge amount of them to effect any
significant change. Generally, when an acidic based material is used
as a mulch - like the coffee grounds or pine straw - there is no
change to soil pH except a slight lowering at the soil surface.
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Old 12-11-2010, 03:36 PM posted to rec.gardens
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gardengal wrote:
On Nov 11, 3:41 pm, Bud wrote:
Coffee frounds are great for alkaline soil. I put a lot around my
hydrangeas. I'm getting more redish blossoms.
--
Bud


Bud, you are getting reddish blossoms on your hydrangeas because the
soil IS more alkaline. Acidic soil is what is required to produce blue
hydrangea flowers. The UCG's are not going to have much of an impact
on existing soil pH - they are only just slightly acidic (most of the
acid is extracted with the liquid coffee from the grounds during
brewing) and it would take a huge amount of them to effect any
significant change. Generally, when an acidic based material is used
as a mulch - like the coffee grounds or pine straw - there is no
change to soil pH except a slight lowering at the soil surface.


I was wondering about that myself. Unless he wanted red blossoms.
For blue hydrangeas blue spray paint works well also
Ok, I do not that, but I do know a local gardener that does paint the
blossoms.
Looks cool from a distance.

--
Enjoy Life... Dan L (Garden in zone 5a Michigan)
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Old 13-11-2010, 10:42 PM posted to rec.gardens
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Posts: 3,036
Default Coffee grounds

Dan L wrote:
gardengal wrote:
On Nov 11, 3:41 pm, Bud wrote:
Coffee frounds are great for alkaline soil. I put a lot around my
hydrangeas. I'm getting more redish blossoms.
--
Bud


Bud, you are getting reddish blossoms on your hydrangeas because the
soil IS more alkaline. Acidic soil is what is required to produce
blue hydrangea flowers. The UCG's are not going to have much of an
impact on existing soil pH - they are only just slightly acidic
(most of the acid is extracted with the liquid coffee from the
grounds during brewing) and it would take a huge amount of them to
effect any significant change. Generally, when an acidic based
material is used as a mulch - like the coffee grounds or pine straw
- there is no change to soil pH except a slight lowering at the soil
surface.


I was wondering about that myself. Unless he wanted red blossoms.
For blue hydrangeas blue spray paint works well also
Ok, I do not that, but I do know a local gardener that does paint the
blossoms.
Looks cool from a distance.


Many years ago my wife came home with a wonderful blue and white striped
carnation that she had bought at the railway station on the way home. In
the day when carnations were $2 a dozen she had paid $1 for one stem. It
was may sad duty to tell her it was a white carnation that had been stood in
blue ink for a while and it had sucked some up through its water transport
system. But it was very pretty.

David

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