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        <title>Gardening - Bringing Adventurers Together - christibdce&apos;s Blog - Tehachapi News</title>
        <link>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913</link>
        <description>I am going to be re-doing my tiny backyard.&amp;nbsp; Currently in shambles, the small space will hopefully soon have a lovely bit of grass and a small veggie garden.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ve purchase the Gardener&#039;s Bible, which will help me figure out what to plant.&amp;nbsp; I just have one question:&amp;nbsp; 
Which &amp;quot;zone&amp;quot; are we considered to be in here in Tehachapi? </description>
        <itunes:summary>I am going to be re-doing my tiny backyard.&amp;nbsp; Currently in shambles, the small space will hopefully soon have a lovely bit of grass and a small veggie garden.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ve purchase the Gardener&#039;s Bible, which will help me figure out what to plant.&amp;nbsp; I just have one question:&amp;nbsp; 
Which &amp;quot;zone&amp;quot; are we considered to be in here in Tehachapi? </itunes:summary>
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                    <item>
                <title>Mar 28,  2008 at 09:03 AM : &amp;nbsp;According to...</title>
                <description>&amp;nbsp;According to the local Rosarians&amp;nbsp;I spoke to&amp;nbsp;at a Mourning Cloak Ranch plant sale...Maps may indicate Zone 8-9, but they said we should follow Zone 7 rules.&amp;nbsp;
Are you sure you want/need a &amp;quot;grassy&amp;quot; area?&amp;nbsp; Even a small amount of lawn leaves a large eco-footprint.&amp;nbsp; Try imagining an area with natural plants, perennials, lots of blossoms to attract birds, bees, and butterflies...all natural friends and pollinators of your veggie garden!&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Check out http://organicgardening.com/&amp;nbsp;for solutions/ideas for beginning a new garden area.
In Peace &amp;amp; Love of Gardening,
Annette</description>
                <link>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_217520</link>
                <guid>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_217520</guid>
                <itunes:summary>&amp;nbsp;According to the local Rosarians&amp;nbsp;I spoke to&amp;nbsp;at a Mourning Cloak Ranch plant sale...Maps may indicate Zone 8-9, but they said we should follow Zone 7 rules.&amp;nbsp;
Are you sure you want/need a &amp;quot;grassy&amp;quot; area?&amp;nbsp; Even a small amount of lawn leaves a large eco-footprint.&amp;nbsp; Try imagining an area with natural plants, perennials, lots of blossoms to attract birds, bees, and butterflies...all natural friends and pollinators of your veggie garden!&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Check out http://organicgardening.com/&amp;nbsp;for solutions/ideas for beginning a new garden area.
In Peace &amp;amp; Love of Gardening,
Annette</itunes:summary>     
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                    <item>
                <title>Mar 28,  2008 at 09:03 AM : Thanks for the info!...</title>
                <description>Thanks for the info!
And yes, I AM sure that I want a grassy area.&amp;nbsp; The whole point of re-doing the backyard is to add outdoor living space to my small place: an open grassy place to relax, eat, play with my niece when she visits, etc.&amp;nbsp; I am happy to inform you that I will not be trashing the grass clippings, though.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ll be leaving them where they lie as fertilizer (I have info on how to do that).&amp;nbsp; I think that will do a lot to minimize my eco footprint.
ETA:&amp;nbsp; Oh, I forgot to mention that I will also be using a push reel mower.&amp;nbsp; No gas, electricity, nothing.
&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;</description>
                <link>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_217523</link>
                <guid>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_217523</guid>
                <itunes:summary>Thanks for the info!
And yes, I AM sure that I want a grassy area.&amp;nbsp; The whole point of re-doing the backyard is to add outdoor living space to my small place: an open grassy place to relax, eat, play with my niece when she visits, etc.&amp;nbsp; I am happy to inform you that I will not be trashing the grass clippings, though.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ll be leaving them where they lie as fertilizer (I have info on how to do that).&amp;nbsp; I think that will do a lot to minimize my eco footprint.
ETA:&amp;nbsp; Oh, I forgot to mention that I will also be using a push reel mower.&amp;nbsp; No gas, electricity, nothing.
&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;</itunes:summary>     
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                    <item>
                <title>Mar 28,  2008 at 09:03 AM : &amp;nbsp;The grass...</title>
                <description>&amp;nbsp;The grass clippings can be worth their weight in gold!&amp;nbsp; They&#039;re great for heating up a compost pile, mulch in your veggie/flower beds.&amp;nbsp; Don&#039;t throw away leaves, they&amp;nbsp; have the same benefits as grass clippings plus if you have a great abundance or access to them (from neighbors and such) they are great for over-winterizing your more tender perennials.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
Bulbs of all sorts do very well here...If you plant tulips, also plant daffodils as a sort of gaurd!&amp;nbsp; Gophers and ground squirrels love the tulips but hate the daffs.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; I posted a few pictures of my garden in my profile.&amp;nbsp; Once you&#039;ve caught the &amp;quot;Gardening Bug&amp;quot; it&#039;s hard to keep it to yourself!&amp;nbsp; Garden On!</description>
                <link>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_217537</link>
                <guid>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_217537</guid>
                <itunes:summary>&amp;nbsp;The grass clippings can be worth their weight in gold!&amp;nbsp; They&#039;re great for heating up a compost pile, mulch in your veggie/flower beds.&amp;nbsp; Don&#039;t throw away leaves, they&amp;nbsp; have the same benefits as grass clippings plus if you have a great abundance or access to them (from neighbors and such) they are great for over-winterizing your more tender perennials.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
Bulbs of all sorts do very well here...If you plant tulips, also plant daffodils as a sort of gaurd!&amp;nbsp; Gophers and ground squirrels love the tulips but hate the daffs.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; I posted a few pictures of my garden in my profile.&amp;nbsp; Once you&#039;ve caught the &amp;quot;Gardening Bug&amp;quot; it&#039;s hard to keep it to yourself!&amp;nbsp; Garden On!</itunes:summary>     
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                    <item>
                <title>Mar 28,  2008 at 09:03 AM : &amp;nbsp;Yeah, I know...</title>
                <description>&amp;nbsp;Yeah, I know what you mean.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;m already excited and I haven&#039;t even started yet! I love tulips and daffodils, so for sure I&#039;m hoping to put some of those in.
And guess what?&amp;nbsp; There are some strawberry plants that have found their way into the planter right by my front door.&amp;nbsp; So all I have to do is transplant a couple and I have ready-made, free, well-established strawberry plants!&amp;nbsp; So exciting!
I got one of those sound-based gopher repellers.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;m hoping it works, because I&#039;d hate to have to resort to any more physically-based (poison, etc) pest control.&amp;nbsp; And my backyard is TINY, so one will be enough if it works.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; That&#039;s kind of nice; it cuts down on cost : O)</description>
                <link>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_217544</link>
                <guid>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_217544</guid>
                <itunes:summary>&amp;nbsp;Yeah, I know what you mean.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;m already excited and I haven&#039;t even started yet! I love tulips and daffodils, so for sure I&#039;m hoping to put some of those in.
And guess what?&amp;nbsp; There are some strawberry plants that have found their way into the planter right by my front door.&amp;nbsp; So all I have to do is transplant a couple and I have ready-made, free, well-established strawberry plants!&amp;nbsp; So exciting!
I got one of those sound-based gopher repellers.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;m hoping it works, because I&#039;d hate to have to resort to any more physically-based (poison, etc) pest control.&amp;nbsp; And my backyard is TINY, so one will be enough if it works.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; That&#039;s kind of nice; it cuts down on cost : O)</itunes:summary>     
            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>Apr 4,  2008 at 02:04 PM : &amp;nbsp;Ok, so the...</title>
                <description>&amp;nbsp;Ok, so the sound-based gopher repeller has MOSTLY worked.&amp;nbsp; But I followed another suggestion of putting cat feces (with 2 cats, that&#039;s no problem!) down the holes when new mounds show up.&amp;nbsp; The critters don&#039;t like the smell because a) it stinks and b) cats are their predators.&amp;nbsp; Supposedly, it works EVERY time.&amp;nbsp; : O)
&amp;nbsp;</description>
                <link>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_220996</link>
                <guid>http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/Blog/christibdce/23913/#c_220996</guid>
                <itunes:summary>&amp;nbsp;Ok, so the sound-based gopher repeller has MOSTLY worked.&amp;nbsp; But I followed another suggestion of putting cat feces (with 2 cats, that&#039;s no problem!) down the holes when new mounds show up.&amp;nbsp; The critters don&#039;t like the smell because a) it stinks and b) cats are their predators.&amp;nbsp; Supposedly, it works EVERY time.&amp;nbsp; : O)
&amp;nbsp;</itunes:summary>     
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