CHAPTER FIVE
Methods and Variations
A note to the internet reader: In the the print-on-paper edition, this chapter and the
next one on vermicomposting are full of illustrations showing composting structures and
accessories. These do not reproduce well on-line and are not included.
Growing the majority of my family's food absorbs all of the energy I care to put into
gardening. So my yard is neat but shaggy. Motivated by what I consider total rationality,
my lawn is cut only when it threatens to overwhelm the lawnmower, and the lawn is not
irrigated, so it browns off and stops growing in summer.
I don't grow flowers because I live on a river in a beautiful countryside setting
surrounded by low mountains. Nothing I created could begin to compete with what nature
freely offers my eye. One untidy bed of ornamentals by the front door are my bow to
conventionality, but these fit the entrances northeast aspect by being Oregon woods
natives like ferns, salal, Oregon grape and an almost wild rhododendron--all these species
thrive without irrigation.
When I give lectures, I am confronted by the amazing gardening variations that humans
are capable of. Some folks' raised vegetable beds are crude low mounds. Then, I am shown
photographs of squared, paralleled vertical-walled raised beds, uniformly wrapped in cedar
planks. Some gardens are planted in fairly straight rows, some are laid-out in carefully
calculated interplanted hexagonal successions and some are a wild scattering of
catch-as-catch-can. Some people don't eat many kinds of vegetables yet grow large stands
of corn and beans for canning or freezing.
Others grow small patches of a great many species, creating a year-round gourmet
produce stand for their personal enjoyment. Some gardeners grow English-style floral
displays occupying every square inch of their yards and offering a constant succession of
color and texture.
This chapter presents some of the many different ways people handle the disposal of
yard and kitchen wastes. Compost making, like gardening, reflects variations in
temperament. You probably weren't surprised at my casual landscaping because you already
read about my unkempt compost heap. So I am similarly not surprised to discover backyard
composting methods as neat as a German village, as aesthetic as a Japanese garden, as
scientific as an engineer would design and as ugly as . . .
Containers and Other Similar Methods
In my days of youthful indiscretions I thought I could improve life on Earth by
civilizing high school youth through engendering in them an understanding of history. I
confess I almost completely failed and gave up teaching after a few years. However, I
personally learned a great deal about history and the telling of history. I read many old
journals, diaries, and travel accounts. From some of these documents I gained little while
other accounts introduced me to unique individuals who assisted me in understanding their
era.
It seems that what differentiates good from bad reporting is how frank and honest the
reporter is about their own personal opinions, prejudices, and outlooks. The more open and
direct the reporter, the better the reader can discount inevitable distortions and get a
picture of what might really have been there. The more the reporter attempts to be
"objective" by hiding their viewpoints, the less valuable their information.