January 2, 2006

recycling

The greatest invention of my gardening life so far has been The Green Bin. It is, simply, the city yard waste recycling bin, a giant green plastic (recycled) thing on wheels that gets picked up every single week of the year. Before The Green Bin I had to find a place to stash waist-high piles of pruned rose canes, sawed off lemon tree trunks, grape canes, buckets of weeds, fallen palm fronds, stacks of banana tree leaves, and other flotsam.

For many years the only way to get rid of these piles was to hire a guy with a truck who would charge an amazingly large amount to take my garden leavings to a dump. Then the city handed out small brown bins on wheels for yard waste that would be picked up every other week. I used to calculate how many bins it would take (in weeks) to disappear the piles. Often it took an entire winter to reduce the a summer's worth. Then one day The (Giant) Green Bin arrived with it's promise of weekly disposal. It was enough to reduce a gardener to tears of joy.

There are still piles of dead vegetable matter around my yard, however. Some are left during the winter months to shelter the salamanders who emerge in the wet months and can usually be found under terra cotta pots and among the piles of grape canes left on the driveway. Some small piles without branches are waiting for room in the compost bin. I never have enough suitable "brown matter" for the compost and have to import my father's raked birch and magnolia leaves, hauling them in the trunk from my parents' house in big plastic bags. They sit in the garage until another soggy winter turn of the compost pile requires a dry layer.

One of the joys of gardening (if what I do can be called that) is a long, meditative afternoon transforming a huge pile of branches and canes into fodder for the green bin. This requires doning appropriate gear (long leather gloves, shoes and socks, sturdy pants, long sleeves, a bandana, and sometimes, safety goggles) and standing by the green bin with my No. 6 Felcos and clipping dangerously barbed rose canes and thorny lemon branches into one-foot sections and tossing them into the bin. Sometimes the long-handled pruners are required for fatter branches. And sometimes I have to get the saw.

As I clip, I muse. My thoughts wander among the mundane and the profound bits of life as the occasional bird drops by, usually the hummingbird, sometimes a wren. The squirrel finds me unusually accommodating as he grubs in my flower pots. Clouds pass overhead. The freeway hums and subsides in it's daily cycle. The towering Royal Palm across the street rustles in a breeze that never touches me. Plans and lists come and go in my head. And bit by bit the bin fills, the light fades and another round of recycling is complete.

the green bin

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Posted by briggs at January 2, 2006 3:32 PM
Comments

I know exactly how you feel. My mother's
garden has plenty of dead, fallen leaves. She has designated me to take care of the dirt and pile that arises whenever we make some changes in the garden. It is such a good that the green bin has been provided for. Furthermore, I love it when me and my mom do some
gardening . She tells me stories of how things used to be. She's such a great storyteller, by the way. It seems as if I'm back in the past just by hearing what my mom has to say.

Posted by: Charie on January 13, 2006 1:11 AM
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