Archive for the ‘Outdoor Living’ Category
Yamasaki Nursery on TV!
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November 2007 CLICK HERE to watch Owner, Brad Roeder, talk with KCRA 3 Reporter, Leticia Ordaz, regarding creating a defensible space for fire season! |
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June 2009 CLICK HERE to watch Retail Manger, Jeff Arnold, discuss the benefits of having Bamboo as a part of your landscape with Fox 40 LIVE Reporter, Joe Orlando! |
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June 2009 Good Day Sacramento’s Reporter, Courtney Demsey spent time in Auburn to create a “Mom & Pop commercial” with Owners, Brad & Keri Roeder, and Retail Manager, Jeff Arnold. Two parts to this one – be sure to watch both! |
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Summer Wildfire Protection!
After a wet and cold December you may not even be thinking about summer, but now is the time to start thinking about Summer wildfire protection. Preventative measures now will pay off this coming summer.
First start off by surveying your property, ask yourself “do I have sufficient defensible space?” You should have 10′-15′ of defensible space around any structure. Defensible means clear of any dry grass or debris. Look at your landscape are your plant selections “fire smart”. Conifers and Eucalyptus often have high amounts of resins, meaning they are extremely flamable. Do you have allot of dry or dead vegetation near structures if so now’s the time to prune and clean that up.
Secondly look at your property lines. A safe fire barrier is 30′ of defensible space. Clean up debris, prune trees, if needed apply a good pre emergent weed killer. You want a solid 10′ between the crowns of trees to prevent the fire from jumping from tree to tree.
Another big mistake in many landscapes is the use of bark near structures. Remember bark is highly flammable and hard to control if on fire, a reality we experienced here during the 49 fire in August. Look at options, STEPABLES is a ground cover line perfect for area with foot traffic where you want weed or erosion control. Make sure to keep these plants healthy by feeding them a great fertilizer like Fox Farm Tiger Bloom Liquid Fertilizer… serious magic in a bottle!
A little effort now could save your home in the future. There are NO absolute “fire retardant” plants. But making a smart choice with your landscape and regular up keep will provide that much needed defensible space in those hot hot summer days.
Need help with wildfire prevention? Don’t be shy… reach out and contact us anytime!
Vermicomposting Made Easy!
I just read about this on another garden blog. “Recently a new law in San Francisco took affect, enacting the strictest trash ordinance in the country. Everyone either has to compost at home, or get a separate bin to put their compostables in for curbside pickup, or be fined with fines starting at $100 for individuals and $500 for businesses”.
Organic green waste represents a huge percentage of what is dumped into our already stressed landfills. This law is not only now in place in San Francisco but neighboring Oakland and Alameda as well. It’s only a matter of time before we see some form of this law in Northern California. Weeks ago I posted a blog on worm composting which I reposted below. Worm composting is a awesome alternative to standard composting. Let the worms eat your garbage! Check out my previous blog below…………….
Organic gardening has a new tool. “Vermiculture” is the technique of using worms to eat and compost your garbage. Worm composting is using worms to recycle food scraps and other organic material into a valuable soil amendment called vermicompost, or worm compost or in the case of our composter you harvest the effluent or tea..
In many communities across the Nation Vermicomposting has become the norm. Here locally the City of Oakland has developed and implemented a program which supports and encourages vermicomposting to reduce food waste. Reduce waste, create nutritious organic compost and be earth friendly at the same time!
Worms eat food scraps, which become compost as they pass through the worm’s body. Compost exits the worm through its’ tail end. This compost can then be used to grow plants. To understand why vermicompost is good for plants, remember that the worms are eating nutrient-rich fruit and vegetable scraps, and turning them into nutrient-rich compost.
For one pound per day of food waste, you’ll need two pounds of worms (roughly 2,000). If you are unable to get this many worms at the start, reduce the amount of food waste until the population increases. And the population will increase. Redworms mature sexually in 60-90 days and can then produce cocoons which take 21 days to hatch baby worms. Once they start breeding they can deposit two to three cocoons per week with two baby worms in each cocoon. The limits on their reproduction include availability of food and room to move and breed. So worm populations don’t usually exceed the size of the container.
We have a working composter here at the nursery, we harvest one gallon of effluent weekly which in turn becomes four gallons of rich organic fertilizer. We add a small amount of organic liquid fertilizer such as Fox Farm’s Big Bloom to our effluent and with a hose end sprayer fertilize the entire nursery.
The advantage to our composter is that it is hand free plus, odor is kept at a minimum allowing it to be used successfully inside. Stop by and say hi to our worms!
Yamasaki Nursery carries the latest and state of the art worm composter. Call us for more info.
530.885.3433 Ask for Jeff
Welcome to our NEW Yamasaki Nursery BLOG!
Welcome to our NEW Blog!! We look forward to hearing from you and keeping you up-to-date with the happenings at Yamasaki Nursery!









