Tuesday, February 17, 2015

You Have to Love What You Do; to Drive 200 Miles for Poo.

Today's garden shop adventure is pretty exciting stuff. Ever since the vermicompost clinic out at The Elk Grove Community Garden last summer, I've been wanting to carry this black gold in the store. (Can you now hear the Beverly Hillbilly jingle in your head?)

Last Fall I also took a 10 week course in everything to do with green gardening and once again, vermicompost was up there on the top of the list of must haves.

So that leads me to today, when Vic and I drove to Petaluma to meet up with Dave from Mass Wiggle. Dave gave us the million dollar tour of his worm composting facility. "Largest worm facility west of the Mississippi" touts Dave.The tour really was fascinating, how they take cow manure, rice hulls and tree chips and turn that into premium compost. This mixture is turned 5 times over the course of 30 days, and then it's fed to Dave's worms. Dave's 200 million worms live in specially designed 3 story condos in an old converted dairy barn! 

Another month or so of feeding the worms and harvesting their (ahem) poo and then it's on through the various conveyor belts and tumbling drums until finally out falls the most beautiful stuff I've ever seen. (Poetic license used here). The end result looks and feels like finely ground coffee. There isn't any odor and it is packed full of healthy microbes.

So we "loaded up the truck" and crawled through traffic back to Elk Grove carrying our 1100 lb load of premium, ready for your garden, vermicompost. We'll have it bagged up and ready for sale by the weekend so you can get it in your garden. Your plants and vegetables will thank you. Like I said, we love what we do, and we do it for YOU!




Sunday, February 15, 2015

Fitting The Pieces Together Like Mosaic

There's a lot going on around the garden store. It's not quite Spring, but the recent warm weather has everyone thinking it is. The customer traffic this weekend was awesome, with loads of shoppers out looking for water features and pottery. We spent the better part of January getting the new yard design implemented, and now it's a matter of getting all the product here faster than anticipated. Who knew it would be almost 80 in Mid February?!

A thousand pieces to the retail puzzle. What will the shopper want to buy? How many should I order? When should I have it arrive in the store? How should it be displayed? How do I entice my customers to come shop? What incentives should I offer? How do I encourage new customers into the store? Will the store be beautiful and continue to inspire people?

This morning I taught a group of wonderful people the basics of tile mosaic in one of our workshops.  We were working with broken ceramic dishes as our tiles and this was an introductory class. The pieces were inherently uneven do to the plate structure. Different thicknesses and shifts from flat to curves were challenging. While the goal was to keep the tiles positioned 1/4 inch apart, many ended up with gaps closer to 1/2 inch or more. Eight people all working on their projects together but at varying speeds. It was inspiring how each person created a beautiful mosaic stone dispute the number of variables and obstacles presented her.

Back to the garden store. I am aware that I'm my own harshest critic. This weekend I had new customers who stood in the store and could barely contain their excitement at all The Secret Garden has to offer. Like watching a child in the proverbial candy store! I guess all the pieces of the puzzle do come together to create the colorful mosaic offering that is our store.

What's your favorite part of The Secret Garden mosaic? Have you picked up something special recently for yourself or a friend? Or maybe just stopped in to browse and have a comment about something you saw? I'd love to hear about it!