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A garden is only as good as the ground that it's planted in. Discussion forum for the many ways to improve the soil where we plant our gardens.

 
 
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Old June 2, 2013   #28
halleone
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Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Walla Walla, Washington
Posts: 360
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ArcherB View Post
Last year, I amended and worked one of my two beds and thought I'd try the "no till" method in the other. In the bed that was amended, I add about a yard of composted rabbit manure and a year's worth of compost (grass clippings and kitchen scraps mostly) and worked it all down about six inches. In the other bed, I did nothing but pull weeds. Both beds received about six inches of the Christmas tree mulch. I received about 125 lbs of tomatoes from the bed that was worked and about 20 lbs from the bed that was not. Also keep in mind that the "no-till" bed is on the north side of my yard which is surrounded by a wooden fence. That means that early in the season, the "worked bed" is in shadow as it's on the south side next to a wooden fence. Usually, the North bed does much better.

Sadly, I experienced a similar result in my garden. Last Fall I put down a heavy mulch of newspaper, dried leaves, and grass clippings on top of my 20 beds, as opposed to my usual practice of turning them under, as no-till suggests. It was a waste of good leaves and time. They basically just blew away over Winter with our high winds, I had to pick up newspaper bits from all over the yard, and my soil is no better for it. My soil is heavy clay and needs all the help it can get. This Fall I will go back to digging the leaves into the soil as before. Lesson learned.
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