I have 8 years experience planting healthy organic gardens. I use zero chemicals. Here is a list of what services I offer. Thanks for stopping by :)
xeriscape, drought tolerant and food forest design
Build raised gardens
Living soil treatment (sheet composting)
Compost set up
Grass removal
Plant drought tolerant, natives, succulents, cactus, fruits, vegetables, trees
Trimming (deadheading)
Weed removal
Mulching
Soil Amending
animal proofing
Organic Fairy Garden Mother
Monday, February 6, 2017
Saturday, January 14, 2017
Ed's organic drought tolerant landscape garden
Thank you for stopping by to check out my blog...The rain gave me some time to get all my photos together and update my blog. My most recent project was with Ed and Carmen from Simi valley, Ca.
First thing first. Instead of removing all the grass, I use a method called sheet mulching. Sheet mulching (same as lasagna gardening) covers the grass with layers of cardboard providing a dark moist environment to attract the earthworms to show up and begin to eat, make babies and leave castings. Activating the soil food web. This step is the most important step in my gardens I build.
Why is it so important? Important because we are balancing the ecosystem. Worm castings for example provide a balance of good and bad fungus and bacteria. When this happens the good bug comes and eat the bad bugs. Creating healthy soil for healthy plants, healthy water retention and healthy environment.
Once I finished sheet mulching the area. I begin laying out the gardens. As you can see here, the little grey/green grasses are called dimondia. A cover crop and likes to spread, very tough AKA cement grass and in the dandelion family. Flowers yellow.
When I build a garden, I use the same method but I kick it up a notch and call it sheet composting (lasagna gardening). I add additional layers of organic material such as, manure, leaves, grass, seaweed and contents from your composter. Most my clients compost or end up composting after I build there gardens. My clients go through a learning curve and they become much more confident gardeners.
We built a garden wall along the outside perimeter to give us the ability to have a long meandering garden along the front. I put layers of horse manure, alternating with mulch.
After last layer of mulch on top of manure. I added an organic planting mix for the dimondia to get established.
After 2 months from the sheet composting treatment you will have brand new living soil. Providing a heathy ecosystem and healthy water retention for your plants to thrive.
Worms live all over the planet. You build it they will come :)
We added a nice finishing touch. Brick, dimondia and a bench.
Hope you got garden inspiration from this post. If you want organic and drought tolerant gardens. Email me: planettarian@gmail.com
Sunday, September 20, 2015
wall gardens
I build wall gardens out of material I find and save from going in the dump. I take something old and turn into a new productive garden. You can plant succulents or edibles in the wall but it needs to root in before it sits upright on a wall.
About Marie (the fairy garden mother)
Marie
McClain
Sustainability
and Garden Specialist
805.990.0381
www.OrganicFairyGardenMother.com
About Marie
|
· My background is graphic design but my passion has always been nature and gardening. When I was in high school I studied horticulture, floraculture and got certified in floral design. I have been following this passion for sustainable gardening for 8 years. It all started when my kids were babies and I wanted to grow healthy organic food. I learned how to compost and build brand new soil by using layers of organic material. I also up-cycle material to build raised garden beds and wall gardens.
|
Current Projects
|
·
I work
as the garden specialist and
volunteer as the garden leader
at Bridges Charter School. I ignited the garden program three years
ago and we now have ongoing productive gardens built by students and parent
volunteers. As a result, the students’
community snacks are fruits and vegetables grown by them in their own gardens.
·
The home
school garden program that I teach planted a native butterfly garden for
a beatification project. I helped work
on the grant that funded the project (from the City of Thousand Oaks) I am in
the process of planting more native / drought tolerant gardens and restoring
the natural habitat in our out-door classroom and in our gardens by the
playground.
·
I am
also in discussions with Yerba Buena Elementary School about starting
up their sustainable garden program.
|
Process
|
·
I
bridge the gap from composting to organic gardening. I have several
successful clients who are now using sustainable practices and building
successful gardens as a result. I am passionate about teaching
sustainability, organic gardening and native/drought tolerant landscapes. I coach organic gardening and composting to
individuals, schools and facilities.
·
I
demonstrate how to take organic material then turn it into a healthy
productive organic garden with the end result being the best soil in the
world. To accomplish this, I use a method called sheet composting. Once your compost is full I harvest all the
compost and layer it with other organic material e.g., dried leaves, mulch
and manure. After two months all the layers decompose into healthy living
soil. I have the children do scavenger hunts for this process.
|
Some of the sustainability benefits
|
·
Statistics
show that 40% of the trash that ends up in land-fills can be composted. Establishing sustainable practices
throughout your facility by composting and building gardens is a win-win for
everyone.
·
Building
brand new soil will be low maintenance without all of the pre-existing weed
seeds.
·
The
soil retains water for a longer period of time making it more drought
tolerant.
·
The
living organisms in the soil decompose the layers and create a balanced ecosystem
to attract the good bugs that eat the bad bugs.
·
The
soil is rich in nutrients and can be used for more than one growing season.
·
You
will grow food.
·
You will
harvest the compost into the garden beds making composting clean and
efficient.
|
I welcome
new schools, clients and opportunities to teach in our community. Please
contact me and/or let me know how I can apply for garden/sustainability
opportunities in the district.
Thank you for taking the time.
Best Regards,
Marie, The Organic Fairy Gardenmother (a name lovingly given to me by a teacher)
Monday, July 27, 2015
Jodi's Garden
Jodi heard through the grape vine that I love to build gardens. Then she asked me to build her three 4x4 raised gardens. I built them by up-cycling pallets. She wanted the rustic look. I filled her raised garden with a method called sheet composting AKA lasagna gardening. Layers of organic material!
After Jodi started to learn how the layering worked, and how all this material will create new soil after 2 months, She was inspired to start composting, So I built her a composter.
3 months later. Jodi updated me on her tomatoes. OMG! the tomatoes went crazy huge. The layers in this bed are sea weed, wood chips, aged compost. Looks like the tomatoes like it. LOL!
My most recent update from Jodi is the zucchini! The zucchini are HUGE but tender and sweet when you eat it. She is so thrilled to have this beautiful, bountiful food to grace her table. She measured to show me how large they really are. 17" inches long!
After Jodi started to learn how the layering worked, and how all this material will create new soil after 2 months, She was inspired to start composting, So I built her a composter.
3 months later. Jodi updated me on her tomatoes. OMG! the tomatoes went crazy huge. The layers in this bed are sea weed, wood chips, aged compost. Looks like the tomatoes like it. LOL!
My most recent update from Jodi is the zucchini! The zucchini are HUGE but tender and sweet when you eat it. She is so thrilled to have this beautiful, bountiful food to grace her table. She measured to show me how large they really are. 17" inches long!
Friday, June 12, 2015
My latest raised garden. I made the raised box out of up-cycled pallets. I filled the garden bed using the layering method explained in the garden fairy scavenger hunt. The excelent advantage of using this method is that you can plant closer together. I use the square-foot planting method utilizing companion planting. Plants have friends and like to hang out together. I enjoyed working with this client. She was supper excited to go on the garden fairy scavenger hunt with me. She is an empowered gardener now.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Turn your compost into an organic garden
In this picture I have been layering my compost with peat moss
and attracting the native
earth worms for 4 years. The layers of organic material
I use are peat moss, compost, leaves, wood ashes etc. I have also used layers of
worm castings, bat guano and manure etc. The best part of this layering
process is I attract the native earthworms that live just 6 inches below
the earth by providing a dark moist environment for them to come up to
the
surface and start eating, pooping, breeding and tilling. Worm castings
are the third best compost in the world and are so great for your
garden.
Worm castings are so great because the castings are full of beneficial
bacteria, fungus and other microbial organisms for your plants to
thrive in a balanced eco system which will attract the good bugs to eat
the
bad bugs. There are many other benefits to this style of gardening AKA
lasagna gardening or also known as sheet composting. The benefits
include:
retains water for a much longer period of time. Worms come to you. Very little weeding. No tilling. Your plants thrive.
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