Yeah, I know, I know... Martha Stewart... But I've found some pretty solid #gardening ideas off her website!

5 Ways to Use #AppleCores in Your #Garden to Boost Plant Growth

Apple cores could be just the thing your garden needs to help it thrive.

By Samantha Johnson
Published on July 19, 2025

"It's easy to disregard and discard something as commonplace as the remains of an apple, but wait! Before you nonchalantly toss it in the trash, consider another use for your apple cores: in the garden. Apple cores just might be your new secret weapon in your quest to boost plant growth and raise healthy plants that thrive. We spoke to gardening experts to share the best ways to incorporate apple cores into your garden."

Read more:
https://www.marthastewart.com/how-to-use-apple-cores-in-garden-11772092?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us

#SolarPunkSunday #Composting #TrenchComposting #NoWaste #FertilizerTea #AppleCiderVinegar #DIY

Carbon Sequestration through Trench Composting

Get this: you can generate lignite (low-grade coal) in your garden?? Fast! IF you get the composting setup right.

The first half of the video is very detailed, nuts & bolts of soil and chemistry. The actual images of the site and how they did it starts at about 50min.

Soil science is the study of some of the most complex systems imaginable, and sadly still badly neglected-- especially considering how crucial it is to the foundations of our biosphere and survival. Much of this presentation is over my head, and it's tough for me to wade through all the "um, uh, uh"ing, but... wow!

I'll try to summarize:

There's a distinctive layer of black stuff under the soil of the Amazon, and people tend to assume it was built up from fires in years past (biochar is becoming a popular analogue), but researcher Scott Goode says it's created through much the same process that forms coal under peat bogs. That can take millions of years, but under the right conditions it can happen MUCH faster-- and all driven by biological action.

The idea here is you're trying to mimic the layers of soil activity under an old-growth forest, inside a trench 2' deep and 1.5' wide that's anaerobic at the bottom. Doing this in your own yard, Goode calls a "Climate Victory Garden". The trenches bracket your growbeds, and you don't stir or turn them-- you just have to keep filling them from the top, and once it gets going it's got quite an appetite.

Important note: while healthy soils can hold large amounts of carbon (80% of a forest's carbon is underground, only 20% is in the vegetation you can actually see), that carbon only stays put while the web of organisms using it stays healthy. Lignite on the other hand is a mineral that pretty much isn't going anywhere unless it catches on fire. This project demonstrates how to get BOTH the living system AND build long-term carbon storage at the same time.

One bit I really appreciate, about 1h16min in he is asked, "So what about the carbon market, what are they paying for?"

His reply starts with: "Really similar to the biofuels market, it's essentially a scam!"

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=G8JyU96WT5U&t=6m48s

#SoilScience
#CarbonSequestration
#TrenchComposting
#Hugelkultur
#FoodForest
#Permaculture
#RegenerativeAgriculture
#ClimateVictoryGarden
#OSULandStewards

Carbon Sequestration through Trench Composting 8-23-2022

YouTube