The Bee’s Knees - News You Can Use
New Year and New Gardens
Welcome to another trip around the sun for those of us that consider January 1 the start of a new year. Maybe you are one of many who already celebrated turning the page on the Winter solstice a couple of weeks ago.
It is the year of the Rabbit in the Chinese new year starting on January 21 (January 22 in China). A time of peace, calm and healing!
No matter what new year you celebrate a new year is symbolic of many new beginnings, a refresh, another chance, another chapter.
Giving & Receiving
Whether you celebrate Christmas, Yule, Winter Solstice, Hanukkah, or Saturnalia* take a moment to bring awareness to how you receive what is given to you. After all, much of the focus lies on the recipient as each gift giver is seeking just the perfect thing.
Notice of Changes - 2023
Upcoming changes in pricing and services. Time to update your contracts for 2023
Presence over Presents
As many of us may be spending time with family and friends over the next several weeks I invite you to arrive fully present, with good intentions and no expectations on the outcome.
Fall Garden Cleanup - Not the Leaves!
Take time to stop and look at the yellow, brown, red, and golden leaves up in the trees and scattered on the ground. Have you ever wondered what is going on inside the leaves and the trees at this time?
Welcome back Autumn
Keeping the Salish Sea clean and healthy for everyone is the responsibility of everyone.
Everyone can take at least one simple action to join. This may be picking up after your dog on walks and in your yard, washing your vehicles (and bikes) on a lawn to help capture soap and debris or at a car wash where the dirty water full of heavy metals and pollutants go to a proper drain and not directly into Puget Sound.
Introduction to Permaculture
Permaculture is the application of a set of ethics & principles to care for the whole Earth and all of its inhabitants. Originally from the term 'permanent agriculture', now has expanded for applications to all landscape scales and other fields.
Heart of Summer - Heart of Gardening 💚🌻
I have been able to turn to the gardens I am growing personally and those I am designing for others as inspiration and my guide to what is next.
Pollinator Week!
Whether you are looking to grow more flowers, harvest more veggies or pick fresh herbs from your garden - the best garden tool is a healthy population of beneficial insects and pollinators.
Creating habitats for birds, bees, butterflies and other insects is such a rewarding experience for any level gardener.
No-Mow May
Consider joining the movement of No Mow May by skipping your weekly chore & sit back to enjoy the yard not work in it.
What can the Moon Teach You?
With those intermittent flashes of sun on my face, and hours to myself among the plants to observe and think, I have a refreshed eagerness regenerating my spirits to get back to the roots of what Eco-Restore wants to create in the world and in your gardens.
Enjoy the Late Winter Garden, and Get Ready for Spring!
If you are one to #Leave the Leaves over winter (yay) you can start cleaning them up.
New Beginnings- New Paths to Follow
Cooler temperatures usually means it is time to be indoors (or playing outside), working less in the gardens. However there are a few things you can do now for a great harvest this spring.
Settling In - Giving Thanks and Full Moons
~ Garden clean up - Find a couple of nice sunny days to complete the checklist of putting the garden to bed. You might still need…
Preparing the Garden for Rest
Now is a great time to put the garden beds to rest and regenerate before another year of growth and abundance. While there may be some edible plants, flowers and herbs still going strong; fall is when many feel they can get ahead of tasks in the landscape.
Gardening for Good
As the peak season of blooms and harvest begins to wind down it is a great time to think about what to leave behind.
Time for Gratitude, Harvest, and Planting
Sow outdoors throughout August: beet family (Amaranthaceae) - spinach, Swiss Chard; mustard family (Brassicaceae) - collards, kale, turnips for greens; sunflower family (Compositae) lettuce, escarole, endive
Intentions & Planting New Seeds
Since time immemorial our ancestors have lived, told time, fell in love, passed down stories and tended the gardens by the light of the moon. I would like to offer the opportunity for you all to learn more and engage with our only true and beloved satellite while digging in the soil and while walking other paths of your lives.
Time for Renewal & Growth
What a busy time again, I can't believe it has been a month since I wrote you all. I hope everyone is doing well and starting to feel the sun on your face and breathing the air of spring renewal.