03-24-2012, 05:12 PM
The children's night light piece is beautiful, Pickle!
So, here's where I am with the 3 pieces I ordered. I used pendulum to determine where to place them on my lot which is narrow but deep (about 1 acre). The placement allows me to stand in my kitchen garden (where I often stand to do a brief meditation each day) and be lined up with all three pieces. My instructions were to enlist the help of local Divas to make my yard green, retain rain water effectively so I don't have to drag out the sprinkler, and to clear the veggie garden patch of unwanted weeds. I placed them on the 8th.
Now my yard is a sea of green clover! You might think "oh no" at first, but I should explain that I was actually considering planting clover instead of grass. To my eyes it is lovely. And interestingly, the clover stops at my property line. My kitchen garden is thriving! And herbs that usually die off over the winter are already producing enough to harvest, particularly basil & parsley.
The veggie garden, however, is filled with weeds, but it is a single crop of something I haven't seen before. I haven't researched it yet (today was my first day outside) but I have a feeling it will turn out to be something that I can plough under without it interfering in veggie growth.
I'll keep you posted.
So, here's where I am with the 3 pieces I ordered. I used pendulum to determine where to place them on my lot which is narrow but deep (about 1 acre). The placement allows me to stand in my kitchen garden (where I often stand to do a brief meditation each day) and be lined up with all three pieces. My instructions were to enlist the help of local Divas to make my yard green, retain rain water effectively so I don't have to drag out the sprinkler, and to clear the veggie garden patch of unwanted weeds. I placed them on the 8th.
Now my yard is a sea of green clover! You might think "oh no" at first, but I should explain that I was actually considering planting clover instead of grass. To my eyes it is lovely. And interestingly, the clover stops at my property line. My kitchen garden is thriving! And herbs that usually die off over the winter are already producing enough to harvest, particularly basil & parsley.
The veggie garden, however, is filled with weeds, but it is a single crop of something I haven't seen before. I haven't researched it yet (today was my first day outside) but I have a feeling it will turn out to be something that I can plough under without it interfering in veggie growth.
I'll keep you posted.