Thursday, May 20, 2021

Hummingbird Food Recipe

Hummingbird Food Recipe


Hummingbird Food Ratio is 4 parts water to 1 part sugar. Mix well, fill your feeder and place in an outdoor location.

Thursday, May 13, 2021

Diatomaceous Earth

Diatomaceaous Earth

An organic method of insect control for use in house plants, or any indoor and outdoor gardening. Diatomaceaous Earth can be used to kill bed bugs, cockroaches, crickets, fleas, ticks, spiders and many other pests. According to the NPIC there are thousands of non-pesticide products that contain diatomaceous earth.

What is Diatomaceaous Earth?

    Diatomaceaous Earth is made up of fossilized aquatic organisms called diatoms. Diatom's skeletons are made of Silica. Diatoms build up in the sediment of rivers streams, lakes and oceans, where they are then mined to create Diatomaceaous Earth.

Avoid breathing in Diatomaceaous Earth dust, and keep out of reach of children and pets.

Little Lakeview Conservatory LLC uses organic methods when at all possible. 

Some other methods used for pest control:

  • Neem Oil
  • Companion Gardening, using plants that coexist well together and ward off pests that would normally be attracted to it's companion plant. 
  • Some plants themselves contain natural pesticides. That can be harvested for use.
  • Maintenance, actively removing seen pests from plants.
  • Some minerals act as natural pesticides.
To attempt to avoid killing bees in your garden, it is best to use Diatomaceous Earth beneath the blossoms of the plants that you are treating.Little Lakeview Conservatory LLC also provides a "Bee Bath" in our garden, in addition to our natural creek that runs through our property to the Lake. A Bee Bath is a Bird Bath, but with rocks we've gathered to help prevent the Bees from possible drowning. Bee's are our favorite little pollinators!  

Additional Resources:

https://www.almanac.com/what-diatomaceous-earth

https://www.farmersalmanac.com/what-is-diatomaceous-earth-27832

http://npic.orst.edu/factsheets/degen.html

https://gardenerspath.com/how-to/disease-and-pests/diatomaceous-earth/

https://www.planetnatural.com/diatomaceous-earth-bees/

https://www.beelab.umn.edu/bees/pollination

All DIY projects shown on www.LittleLakeviewConservatory.com are purely "at your own risk". As with any DIY project, unfamiliarity with the tools and process can be dangerous. Posts should be construed as theoretical advice only. 
If you are at all uncomfortable or inexperienced working on these projects (especially but not limited to electronics and mechanical), please reconsider doing the job yourself. It is very possible on any DIY project to damage your cottage, void your property insurance, create a hazardous condition or harm or even kill yourself or others.

Little Lakeview Conservatory LLC will not be held responsible for any injury due to any featured DIY project.


Little Lakeview Conservatory, LLC was est. in 2019 to provide sustainable plants in NH and to share information to help people create self sustainability in their own homes.

Please feel free to contact us at LittleLakeviewConservatory@gmail.com be added to our email list or with any questions, requests and comments.

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Spring Drink Recipes

 Spring Drink Recipes

Fresh Herbs, Flowers, Sunshine! Spring favorites come together with refreshing homemade drinks. 

Here are a few of our favorite basic recipes:

Homemade Sweet tea:

    Ingredients:
  • Water
  • Tea bags with homegrown or store bought tea to taste (4-6 bags)
  • Sugar to taste (about one cup) 
  • Ice (optional to add in your glass, do not put ice in the brew)
    What you will need:
  • A jar to contain the mixture
  • A spoon to stir the mixture
  • A glass to pour the mixture into and drink from 
    Place all ingredients except for the ice into your jar. Set in sun. Wait a few hours. Stir. Pour the mixture into a glass (optionally with ice). Enjoy!


Kombucha:

    Ingredients:
  • Tea (1 gallon) -See Homemade Sweet Tea recipe for tea with sugar
  • Sugar (1 cup)
  • SCOBY
  • Additional Herbs or Fruit pieces (to taste) optional after the first fermentation
    What you will need:
  • A glass Jar
  • Cheese cloth or paper towels
  • A rubber band 
  • A spoon
  • A glass

    Have a space set up that is dark, warm (70 degrees) and isolated to store your mixture. Combine Tea and Sugar or Sweet Tea with your SCOBY in your glass container of choice. Let sit in dark isolated area for 1-4 weeks. Secondary fermentation for flavor and carbonation. Pour into glass. Enjoy!


Mint Julep:

    Ingredients:
  • Mint leaves (4-6)
  • Sugar (2 tsp. or to taste) or Simple Syrup (to taste)
  • Bourbon Whiskey (2 ounce)
  • Ice
    What you will need:
  • A glass
  • A muddler
  • A spoon
  • A glass
    Place most of your mint in your glass. Add sugar. Muddle the mint and sugar mixture. Fill glass with ice. Pour bourbon whiskey over the ice. Use a sprig of your mint to garnish. Enjoy!


Homemade Lemonade:

    Ingredients:
  • Lemons (A dozen) or Lemon Juice (1 cup)
  • Sugar (1 cup or to taste)
  • Water (1 gallon)
  • Ice (to taste)
  • Fruit (Optional for flavor varieties)
    What you will need:
  • A jug/jar/pitcher for your mixture
  • A knife and a juicer if you\"re using fresh lemons
  • A spoon
  • A glass
    Prepare your choice of Lemon. Add lemon juice to your container of choice. Add Sugar. Add water. Mix with spoon. Pour in glass with/without ice. Adding slices of lemons, strawberries or blueberries if you would like. Enjoy!


 New York (Sweet and) Sour:

    Ingredients:
  • Bourbon Whiskey (2 ounce)
  • Homemade Lemonade
  • Red wine (1/2 ounce)
  • Ice
    What you will need:
  • A glass
  • A spoon
  • A shaker (optional)
    Traditionally a New York Sour would include egg whites, lemon juice, sugar and whiskey mixed in a shaker and poured over ice, with Dry red wine floating at the top of the drink. I prefer a sweeter drink. Mix and match ingredients to your own taste.    

    Pour Bourbon Whiskey into glass. Add Homemade Lemonade. Add ice. Stir. Use spoon upside down to pour the wine gently over drink to float. Enjoy!


Lilac Cordial:

    Ingredients:
  • Lilac Flowers
  • Water (4 cups)
  • Sugar (4 cups)
  • Lemon juice (1 tsp) or citric acid to taste
  • Blueberries (1 cup optional for color)
    What you will need:
  • Container for mixture, Mason Jars
  • A large pot (for boiling) 
  • A mesh strainer/mesh sleeve
  • A spoon
  • A glass 
    Rinse off clean, pesticide free, petals from Lilac flowers. Combine water and sugar in a large pot. Boil until the sugar has dissolved, while stirring mixture with a spoon intermittently. Let cool slightly not to crack glass jars. Add in Lemon juice and Pour mixture over lilac flowers (add blueberries for color optionally), in your Mason jars or containers of choice. Seal for a week, shaking once a day. Strain flowers out of mixture at end of that week using mesh strainer/sleeve. Store in clean sealed jars or freeze. 

    Add mixture to water or various drinks for flavor. Enjoy!  


Drink responsibly and legally at your own risk!

All DIY projects shown on www.LittleLakeviewConservatory.com are purely "at your own risk". As with any DIY project, unfamiliarity with the tools and process can be dangerous. Posts should be construed as theoretical advice only. 
If you are at all uncomfortable or inexperienced working on these projects (especially but not limited to electronics and mechanical), please reconsider doing the job yourself. It is very possible on any DIY project to damage your cottage, void your property insurance, create a hazardous condition or harm or even kill yourself or others.

Little Lakeview Conservatory LLC will not be held responsible for any injury due to any featured DIY project.


Little Lakeview Conservatory, LLC was est. in 2019 to provide sustainable plants in NH and to share information to help people create self sustainability in their own homes.

Please feel free to contact us at LittleLakeviewConservatory@gmail.com be added to our email list or with any questions, requests and comments.

Little Lakeview Conservatory, LLC

Grow a little!™

  


Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Composting

Composting


Composting is a great way to keep down waste while reusing your food scraps and green wastes to create new nutrient rich soil. 

Some ways to compost:
  • Dedicate a shady area outdoors to use as a Composting pile
  • Rotating compost areas outdoors
  • Barrel or Container Composting outdoors
  • Vermicomposter, for breeding worms
  • Indoor or Kitchen Composting in a container
  • Keyhole compost gardening, permaculture (permanent agriculture) 
  • Lasagna layering gardening

Little Lakeview Conservatory LLC uses all of these methods to reduce, reuse and recycle our green waste.

Outdoor Composting:

Our outdoor area is located away from our business and family home. Here larger amounts of compost and green waste that we would not otherwise want decomposing closer to used spaces due to possible insects and wildlife animals that are attracted to it, are placed.

    Some of the materials included in this mixture:
  • Coal or charcoal ash
  • Dairy products and eggs
  • Some plants
  • Fats, grease, lard or oils
  • Meat and Fish Scraps
  • Farm animal wastes
Semi annually we rotate this composting pile into a more matured pile in a secondary area. This process gives us nutrient rich soil that we can then use the following year for raised gardens and so on.

Barrel or Container Compost:
    Avoiding the first list of ingredients that we might otherwise compost in our larger outdoor area we add green materials into a large Barrel container that is regularly rotated located near our raised beds. This makes for quick clean up of garden cuttings. 

Outdoor Compost Collection Bucket:
    To save time, we use a collection bucket for quick collection that is carried to the larger composting pile.

    Also avoided for use in any composting situation:
  • Animal waste (although some animals, such as our rabbits, are wonderful at making us fertilizer that we can use)
  • Black Walnut Tree leaves or twigs 
  • Any green waste that may have chemical pesticides on/in it
Vermicomposter:

    Vermicomposting is great for breeding worms for gardening or to use as bait for fishing. The EPA has a great link (located in our Additional Resources) with instructions for how to build one of these composting systems for yourself. 

Indoor or Kitchen Composting:
    
    If maintained properly, a kitchen composting system for collecting specific items is great for producing compost tea to fertilize your gardens. 

    Avoid the following materials in this mixture:
  • Coal, charcoal ash
  • Dairy products or eggs (although grinding a mix of egg shells up is a great way to add calcium to gardens growing plants that require it, such as tomatoes)
  • Any diseased plants
  • Fats, grease, lard or oil
  • Meat or Fish scraps
  • Animal waste
  • Black Walnut Tree leaves or twigs 
  • Any green waste that may have chemical pesticides on/in it
Keyhole Compost Gardening:

    If you have a large enough tall raised garden bed, placing a composting box with drainage holes can provide ongoing fertilization for your raised bed garden. 

    Again avoid the following:
  • Coal, charcoal ash
  • Dairy products or eggs (although grinding a mix of egg shells up is a great way to add calcium to gardens growing plants that require it, such as tomatoes)
  • Any diseased plants
  • Fats, grease, lard or oil
  • Meat or Fish scraps
  • Animal waste
  • Black Walnut Tree leaves or twigs 
  • Any green waste that may have chemical pesticides on/in it
Lasagna Layering Garden:

    We have used this method in our raised Kale and Lettuce gardens. The layers of green wastes helps fill the raised beds and provides fertilizer for the plants as is decomposes beneath the plants.

    Layers placed in the Spaghetti Garden within your raised garden frame:
  • Cardboard
  • Twigs, Leaves and Yard cuttings
  • Manure or Compost
  • Additional Yard cuttings and used coffee grounds
  • Additional Leaves 
    Leave these as is if your building this in the fall, to decompose over the winter. Or cover with dirt if you are building this in the spring for your gardening use.


Additional Resources:


All DIY projects shown on LittleLakeviewConservatory.com are purely "at your own risk". As with any DIY project, unfamiliarity with the tools and process can be dangerous. Posts should be construed as theoretical advice only. 
If you are at all uncomfortable or inexperienced working on these projects (especially but not limited to electronics and mechanical), please reconsider doing the job yourself. It is very possible on any DIY project to damage your cottage, void your property insurance, create a hazardous condition or harm or even kill yourself or others.

Little Lakeview Conservatory LLC will not be held responsible for any injury due to any featured DIY project.


Little Lakeview Conservatory, LLC was est. in 2019 to provide sustainable plants in NH and to share information to help people create self sustainability in their own homes.

Please feel free to contact us at LittleLakeviewConservatory@gmail.com be added to our email list or with any questions, requests and comments.

Little Lakeview Conservatory, LLC

Grow a little!™



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