June 27, 2013 | #61 | |
Tomatovillian™
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June 27, 2013 | #62 |
Tomatovillian™
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Okay..gotcha..I already see how the cuc attaches around the cage or stems of mato plants. Think I'll try the chard. Maybe try melon or squash with the cucs ..they probably will get along.. this bed never did very well for matoe due to too much shade and less the prefered daily sun hrs.. I have big boys a few rutgers and cherries and super beefs in sunnier beds abot 40 total .. so I guess I could experiment with this bed ty all the same..john
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June 27, 2013 | #63 | |
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Nothing wrong with chard. I love it. Just too hot right now in OK to start it. (hit 100 today) I'll probably add some later for fall when it cools off a bit. Your climate might be fine right now?
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Scott AKA The Redbaron "Permaculture is a philosophy of working with, rather than against nature; of protracted & thoughtful observation rather than protracted & thoughtless labour; & of looking at plants & animals in all their functions, rather than treating any area as a single-product system." Bill Mollison co-founder of permaculture |
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June 27, 2013 | #64 |
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On heavy clay, I would start with about 18 inches of softwood
bark or wood chips and add high nitrogen materials as necessary to keep the plants happy during the first growing season. Then adding 6 inches of faster composting, more nutritious materials each fall on top would probably work fine. The research below suggests that many crops produce a dense network of fine feeder roots near the surface, so the 6 inches of compostable material on top in fall may work better than I expect, even on heavy clay soils, with the caveat that they are mulched each summer with a foot or more of mowed cover crop or similar to keep soil temperatures at the surface down ("GM/cc" in this document seems to mean "green manure/cover crop"): http://www.agroforestry.net/overstory/overstory20.html (I do not know how many of the links from that document still work, but one could web search for the names of projects and organizations mentioned therein to find reorganized document collections, etc.) (Follow up on specific green manure crops for tropical climates from the same author: http://www.agroforestry.net/overstory/overstory29.html ) If one's "mowed winter cover crop" does not add up to a foot of summer cover, one could add more traditional compostable materials found in more temperate climates to make up the difference (leaves, grass clippings, wheat straw, etc). Down south, the shredded kudzu mulch was an interesting idea, because the supply is virtually unlimited. Might want to experiment on a small area first to be sure it can't sprout from a tiny piece of shredded kudzu.
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June 27, 2013 | #65 | |
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June 28, 2013 | #66 |
Tomatovillian™
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Seed Ambassadors has this winter garden chart for the
Willamette Valley in central Oregon. It would be a little warmer in winter there than New England is, but you still might find some of their recommendations useful (and, especially, when to plant different kinds of fall and winter crops; .pdf file, so you probably need a computer rather than a phone to read this list): http://seedambassadors.org/wp-conten...en-Chart-4.pdf
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-- alias Last edited by dice; June 28, 2013 at 11:18 AM. Reason: .pdf note; clarity |
June 28, 2013 | #67 |
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Referring back to my post about building compost directly on the garden soil rather than in a compost pile, here is an interesting story about that technique. His compost layer is only 6 inches deep, which others on here think is too little. Thoughts?
""How To Grow World Record Tomatoes" is a book written by Charles Wilber. He describes how to make Kudzu compost, grow cover crops, and other good gardening practices. He grew 20 ft tall Better Boy tomato plants, 15 ft tall Silver Queen corn, huge radishes, Peaches the size of grapefruits, and lots of other stuff with that compost. The Mother Earth News magazine wrote a few articles about him about 25 years ago. His compost recipe, which includes colloidal clay, is included in the book: 3 inches of "hay", coursely ground (mixture of dried Kudzu and Sudex) 2 inches of cow manure or 1 inch of chicken manure Quarter-inch of garden soil Hardwood ashes or granite dust (light sprinkling) Colloidal clay (light sprinkling) NEVER let it get rained on!! Keep it covered with a tarp. Heavy rains will leach all the nutrients out of the compost." And here is another one that I like in theory: The Interbay Mulch is the use of a layer of burlap placed over the top of various organic material that you pile up on top of soil. Organic matter decomposes much faster on top of the soil than it does if tilled in as long as it is covered and kept moist and dark. The byproducts of this process enrich and feed the soil under it in some very interesting ways. http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/c.../message/11957 I like the burlap idea. Last edited by ScottinAtlanta; June 28, 2013 at 06:31 AM. |
June 28, 2013 | #68 | |
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The new bed is slow to come on-line, but that was expected. I was surprised to see so many worms in the new bed so soon.
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Russel USDA: Zone 6a, Sunset Zone 41 - 15 miles NW of Indianapolis, IN I had a problem with slugs. I tried using beer but it didn't work, until I gave it to the slugs. |
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June 28, 2013 | #69 | |
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I believe the issues with soil testing are when and how to sample, and also what to do with the results when you get them. Initially, I thought the hard part of soil testing was to actually take and submit the samples. Wrong! It is interpreting the results and then re-mediating your soil in a manor consistent with your cultural practices. Fast forward to your soil test results. You have x amounts of various minerals, now what do you do? At a minimum, I would suggest reading The Intelligent Gardener before you do anything. Working backwards from the lab results will help you even select a lab. If you have never done a soil test, your results may surprise you.
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Russel USDA: Zone 6a, Sunset Zone 41 - 15 miles NW of Indianapolis, IN I had a problem with slugs. I tried using beer but it didn't work, until I gave it to the slugs. |
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June 28, 2013 | #70 | |
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6 inches of compost is great, but remember it can take several feet of material to get 6 inches of compost. Depending on the material and the bioactivity of the soil, you might not have anything left by the time it comes to plant, if you start with only 6 inches. Some fluffy materials like grass clippings I can pile over my head and have them less than 6 inches in a few weeks. They last a bit longer as a mulch. But you get the idea. The guy you quoted saying never let the rain hit it. "NEVER let it get rained on!! Keep it covered with a tarp. Heavy rains will leach all the nutrients out of the compost" That's one way. Personally I like the idea of enriching my soil. Leaching some of the nutrients to feed the soil biology is the whole point in my opinion. It's the way your bad soil becomes great soil, the mixing of the compost with the soil. Of course it makes the process take longer, but in the end I believe it is worth it. I tried burlap for the first time this year. Good stuff. I was impressed. But not so good as a weed barrier.
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Scott AKA The Redbaron "Permaculture is a philosophy of working with, rather than against nature; of protracted & thoughtful observation rather than protracted & thoughtless labour; & of looking at plants & animals in all their functions, rather than treating any area as a single-product system." Bill Mollison co-founder of permaculture |
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June 28, 2013 | #71 |
Tomatovillian™
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It takes time for most minerals to become fully incorporated into your soil. It can be up to three years for your amendments to come into balance. That said, it's unlikely for you to see a much of a difference in a few months. You might be able to measure a small difference using a refractometer if you had taken readings in the past for comparison and grow the same variety.
As to detectable results, the issues would be; is the soil deficient in the amendment(s) added, and if so, has there been time for the amendment to assimilate? Biology (and water) is necessary for dust to work. The issue with the time lag is very important if you test often. There is a possibility of over-shoot if you test before the amendments can be assimilated, which may cause you to over apply them. Fully balanced and amended soil would not show any positive difference with rock dust of any flavor. One assumption to avoid is that if I add x to my soil and say it makes a difference (and it may), that you can add the exact same amendment and get the same results. The possible exception might be containers with a soil-less medium. Consider all the variables at work here, %OM, CEC, pH, soil structure and parent material, existing nutrient levels, crops grown, cultural practices, etc. If it sounds complicated, well, it is until you understand what going on. My recommendation would be to do a soil test this fall after reading up a bit more on soil testing. Do the reading part first. You will be glad you did. A trip to the library is not expensive. Consider this: You probably added compost at some time. Did you see a detectable improvement? Compost is incorporated much faster in your soil than dust. Everyone seems to agree that adding compost is good thing. Russel
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Russel USDA: Zone 6a, Sunset Zone 41 - 15 miles NW of Indianapolis, IN I had a problem with slugs. I tried using beer but it didn't work, until I gave it to the slugs. |
June 28, 2013 | #72 | |
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Russel
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Russel USDA: Zone 6a, Sunset Zone 41 - 15 miles NW of Indianapolis, IN I had a problem with slugs. I tried using beer but it didn't work, until I gave it to the slugs. |
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June 28, 2013 | #73 | |
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Glenn Last edited by COMPOSTER; June 28, 2013 at 10:28 PM. |
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June 28, 2013 | #74 |
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The tarp might be reccomended to prevent the materials from becoming so saturated with water that they become anorobic and also from preventing the nutrients leaching out of the materials before they compost.
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June 29, 2013 | #75 |
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Up here in the maritime Pacific Northwest, we have a lot of winter
rain. Nutrients that are mobile in the soil, like nitrogen, potassium, and, to a lesser extent, calcium (probably others that I have not researched, too), can leach down below the root zone. But we also have verticillium in places, and compostable materials like manures, leaf molds, grass clippings, wood chips, shredded arborist debris, and so on are often best allowed to leach nutrients into the soil over the winter to feed competing organisms. Depends on whether your topsoil is sitting on sandy soils (river valleys, fast nutrient leaching) or clay subsoil (higher elevations, where nutrients leach through the subsoil more slowly and the topsoil layer is thinner) which way is best for a particular garden or field. In places with tropical rainfall (hard rains of whatever duration that drop a lot of precipitation in a short time), leaching of nutrients below the typical root zone of crops is perhaps even more of a problem than it is up here, and maybe that can happen with any kind of subsoil under the topsoil. In the Amazon and other tropical rainforests, when they clear cut land for timber, the soil can become a "wet desert", where the nutrients in the top layer of soil are leached out very quickly. Without prompt planting of new trees, such land can take a century to recover on its own from the logging operation, because annual rainfall washes away nutrients faster than casual accumulations of organic matter from weeds and undergrowth can restore it. Hence the tarp, perhaps.
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-- alias Last edited by dice; June 29, 2013 at 10:15 AM. Reason: readability |
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