August 21, 2014 | #31 |
Tomatovillian™
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By the way, another way to build organic matter in the soil is to do hugelkultur. That works great for the new beds. Does not work too well for existing (traditional) beds that are in use around the year.
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August 21, 2014 | #32 | |
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Tania.. Now you can thank them for their contribution instead of thinking of them as another chore (as it is for me) but they really are easy keepers. You don't need to groom them, vet them, coddle them... nothing. feed, water, and harvest their poop. Just keep the wind off of them.
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August 21, 2014 | #33 |
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Grass. Primarily the grass that grows between the rows and becomes next years beds. But also grass clippings from the yard to a lesser extent. Most people don't realise that the trick to long term deep carbon sequestration is the roots of living perennial grasses and forbs. They pump lots of carbon deep in the soil in the form of exudates that feed mycorrhizal fungi, which in turn feeds all the rest of the soil biology.[1] The waste product of all that biological activity is humus. Because the soil is never broken by the plow or tiller, that carbon sticks there.....up to thousands of years potentially.[2] Tilling in organic matter does help, but it takes a whole lot more and the plowing releases almost as much as is added. The exudates no till method is better from this POV and VERY economical.
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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 Last edited by Redbaron; August 21, 2014 at 06:11 PM. |
August 21, 2014 | #34 | |
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August 22, 2014 | #35 | |
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Basically if you want to increase carbon in the soil you need to remove it from the short term carbon cycle and put it in the long term...sequestered in the soil. Every time you either break the ground or till the soil....ie expose sequestered carbon to excess oxygen, it oxidizes, produces CO2, and enters the short term carbon cycle ie atmosphere ---->Photosynthesis---->Plant biomass----->Decay----->humus---->oxidation---->atmosphere again and the cycle repeats with you having to work very hard for minimal returns. In this respect Composter is absolutely correct. However, there is a long term carbon cycle to the soil as well. It requires no tillage and no bare soil. The soil must be always covered and preferably with living photosynthesis active plants as long as climate allows. That means including winter adapted plants where possible. In this deep carbon cycle it is slightly different. You still have the short term carbon cycle as above atmosphere ---->Photosynthesis---->Plant biomass----->Decay----->humus---->oxidation ---->atmosphere again But you also have a significant % that follows this cycle deeper in the soil Rhizosphere zone where there is less oxygen: atmosphere ---->Photosynthesis ---->Plant biomass----->Decay----->humus---->sequestered up to 1,000s of years or more in stable form in the soil, never returning to the atmosphere. This way it is possible to use biomimicry to let the biological activity work for you instead of fighting against biological forces. This is one of the primary philosophical and practical keys to permaculture.
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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 Last edited by Redbaron; August 22, 2014 at 12:47 AM. |
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August 22, 2014 | #36 | |
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Plants feed on nitrate provided by the micro organisms. Some nitrate will also be leached out of the soil by rain. Some will get further decomposed by bacteria into gases like nitrogen (N2) and nitrous oxide (N2O), which will go into the atmosphere. So not all the N will return back to soil by putting plants back, as some loss naturally occurs. Same for Carbon. As fungi breathe, they release CO2. I am probably oversimplifying this. I am no soil expert, this is the way I understand the process. Tatiana
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August 22, 2014 | #37 |
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Scott, that makes lots of sense. Your post explains why no tillage and cover helps. Thank you!
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August 22, 2014 | #38 | |
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One important thing to note is the general idea behind tillage is that when you release CO2 either by oxidation or biological decay, any of the other nutrients attached either chemically or simply adsorbed on the surface, become released. (you correctly called it mineralisation) So tillage does (and always has) improved crop growth. But it is "mining" the soil, not sustainable. Once the majority of the plant nutrients are released because the carbon is now released in the form of CO2, you have limited fertility and that must be replaced with high inputs, either with chemical fertilizers or organic fertilisers like manure. So this explains why a prairie ecosystem can remain continuously fertile for eons, but a plowed field doesn't.
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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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August 22, 2014 | #39 |
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I'm a huge propenent of buiding soil organic matter through composting and mulching. I'm enthusiastic but sceptical about no till. I think that most of us will have a difficult time sufficiently building organic matter in annualy planted garden beds without some form of tilling/cultivating. I believe that composted animal manures with straw or wood shaving bedding worked into the top 2 or 3 inches of soil is an excellent way to build organic matter. It does act act as a fertilizer but the materials that are higher in lignans should increase the organic matter.
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August 22, 2014 | #40 |
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Glenn,
I was also skeptical about no till in the past (I did not understand how it would be possible!) But once we switched and learned the 'new way', I am loving it. There is no way back! I love our 'cover and do not disturb' the soil gardening practices. The only beds are are still dug are potatoes, but this is going to be fixed in 2015 by planting them under straw. I am still undecided about composting. We do compost a lot. Hey, we compost wood chips too! But I keep thinking that bringing these organic materials directly into the garden beds would be much more beneficial in terms of creating more organic matter, and less work moving it around. We just have not figured out yet a practical way to do it in our garden. But I am sure we will soon! Tatiana
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August 22, 2014 | #41 | ||
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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 Last edited by Redbaron; August 22, 2014 at 11:56 AM. |
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August 22, 2014 | #42 | |
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My thought process on working the compost into the top 2 or 3 inches is that this will prevent the compost from being 100% exposed to the air and it will retain more fertility. Also, and this is probably very flawed logic, it we be that much closer to the root zone of the plants. Glenn |
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August 22, 2014 | #43 |
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I have a little story to tell about my tomatoes relating to soil building.
Last winter was the first winter with two indoor dogs. With the dogs being quite short legged, wintertime with snow was not fun for them. We cleared a small path near the sidewalk for the dogs to "do their business" at. Once it started warming up, we took them to other places in the yard. Spring rains came and with them and the snow melt, none of the dog poo was visible on the ground at all. When I planted the tomatoes this year, they go near the walkway since we have a very small area for growing. There was no smell or anything at all. I took a shovel and dug one shovel worth of dirt out, put the tomato plant in and planted it. They have grass between plants and all around the base. I also tried putting half a cup of dog food in the bottom of the hole as this is something my grandpa used to do. I thought I would give it a try. Fast forward a bit. My tomatoes GREW and GREW. They started destroying the 42" cages like they were made of wet cardboard. Every time it rained, the whole plant would be plastered to the ground. Well, after fighting my tomatoes desires to lay down and take a nap after every small rain, I ended up getting 5' concrete reinforcement mesh and making my own 5' tall cages. These were staked down with cheap electric fence poles. They cost about $7 each, counting the two electric fence post stakes. Nothing I have seen commercially available comes close to the strength or size. I have one tomato that grew up to 8.5 feet tall, then the vines fell over, draping down the cage. It has continued to grow while draping down. I know it could have been over 10 ft tall easily if I had a taller cage. Long story short, the tomatoes in the easier to get places, where the dogs went to the bathroom more, grew taller there. Same light conditions and such, but where our dogs did most of their business, there are monstrous plants. My plants in the backyard are junk. The neighbors did horrible this year. It was a horrible year for tomatoes here but the ones I am telling about did great. Huge plants, and huge yields. I would guess the stems are between the size of a nickel and a quarter at the ground. I have never had luck with tomatoes like this. It probably sounds a bit gross, using the areas my dogs used the bathroom to grow tomatoes, but after seeing the results, I plan on doing this every year. I also plan on planting about 1/3 less plants, since the bigger plants yield much more tomatoes. |
August 22, 2014 | #44 | |
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Remember the thread is " Most 'economical' method of building up soil?" Believe me This is economical. First off the mulched part uses 1/3 less because I am not mulching the whole garden, just the rows of tomatoes and peppers. No fertiliser cost, no pesticide cost, no herbicide cost. 1/3rd the mulch cost. (maybe free if you find a source of free mulch). Paper is generally free, but if not you can buy long rolls very cheap. All you have to do is have some rich compost soil to fill in after each transplant and inoculate it with mycorrhizal fungi spores. Nature does the rest. Even in hot Oklahoma, I maybe water 2-3 times in a whole season. (+ when I transplant) The most I ever had to water even with a severe drought was 5 times all season. My water is free. I simply didn't want to over water. Next year, move the row over 2 feet. Grass will come right back on last years row. (I learned that this year) I still use covers. I grow a cover crop mixture through the winter after the tomatoes die. Besides that all you need to do is mow. Couldn't be easier. Even cheap and easy enough for a lazy cheapskate like me. This way I get the most from both the long and short carbon cycles, and the soil improves astonishingly fast. Now I have to say this though. Even though my soil was poor and hard as a rock through mismanagement years ago before I even lived in Oklahoma, the substrate is LitB. That's prime perfect farmland when it has enough carbon in it. So I don't know if it will work everywhere in every case. That's why I am always asking people, like I did Tania, to please try a row or two and post their results, good or bad.
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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 Last edited by Redbaron; August 22, 2014 at 07:19 PM. |
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August 22, 2014 | #45 | |
Tomatovillian™
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I hear you loud and clear. I love the way you sound so enthusiastic about covering the soil and no till. I really hope it works for me. As you know from the thread on mulching with wood chips I'm currently experimenting with 6 actively gardened beds that are no till and covered with ramial wood chips and 2 that are covered and not being garden. From Scott's and your testimony I'm sure no till works. So far I'm having mixed results. I just need to see a little better results for myself and I will be converted. I like the way Scott talks about carbon sequestration. Makes me feel like we could be at the cutting edge of environmentalism. Glenn |
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