it doesnt matter where you live in the world
if you garden
its all about the soil
how much nutrients are in the soil
providing all the soil needs
to grow healthy plants
now at my garden plot
thats all veggies
now this is what my plot looked like at the beginning
when i took over
it had sat there for sometime uncared for
it is near the area where the kids classes are taught
there had been a lot of traffic over part of it
over the months before i got to it
the soil when you dig into it is sandy clayey like
if you dig very far
its like aspphalt
in fact i used the rock bar
never thought i would use that again after selling mine
when we moved from texas
to loosen the soil enough so i can dig deeper into the ground
now i moved to sb one day and planted my garden the next day
so
in a hurry
i added several inches of compost to the soil
added a good organic fertilzer that had all these goodies in it
including good bugs like fungi and bacteria
knowing that there didnt appear to be much soil structure
to the soil
no real evidence of rich soil like i had in texas
it was grey looking
like my hair
now according to long term gardeners here
there is a lot of nutrition and minerals in the soil
just not as much nitrogen in the soil
so
i added nitrogen
hand watered the garden
i was quite surprised how well my garden looked
but
i knew i needed to work on the soil to improve it
my goal
is
like in texas
i only use my hands to garden with
no tools like shovels rakes etc
i knew i had work to be done
so as i end the summer garden
i decided to get ready for a fall winter garden
it lasts a long long time
remember it doesnt ever freeze here
i cant wait
so the first thing i did was pull up anything that
wasnt doing its job
i kept my peppers my eggplant my squash one tomato
my green beans my purple hull peas
out went three struggling tomatoes swiss chard kale
a real struggling basil
thank you jf for giving those peas to me
the rest got removed
so i decided
im going to do my beds like i did in texas
its dry here
much drier than texas
sb gets 1/3 of the water that autin does
my bed is 10 ft wide
so i took a 1 foot swath down the middle
dug it to the depth of two shovel depths
about a foot and half
filled it with mulch left near the garden by local landscapers
to provide more depth to the soil
making it a more of a raised bed
what this does is provide me a path to walk on while im gardening
leaving me 4 ft on either side to plant my garden
instead of walking and packing down the garden soil
i am walking on layers of mulch
which over the next year will gradually decompose into
compost
the life blood of the garden
as this path composts down ill add more mulch
next spring or summer ill dig it out and put it onto
the garden as compost
this 1 ft swath will also add a 1.5 ft deep trench
to act as a water sink when it rains
it also will stay moist down deep
allowing moisture to osmose over into my garden bed
allowing eventually roots like tomatoes peppers
eggplants broccoli kale etc to run deep down
underground to this swath
sucking up the moisture during dry times
this is a method i learned from listening to a lecture
from a dry land organic gardener in austin
who uses only rainwater in his garden
he uses very little water
but
produces an abundance of veggies that he
sells via his farm
so
even though i have access to all the water i want to use here
i pretend i am in texas
conserving every drop i can
i only hand water my stuff
i dont use drip or sprinklers
it makes me use less water
it makes me put my shadow in the garden
a must for being a successful gardener
here is part of this weeks harvest
remember i try to plant only what we will eat
and try not to have to put things up very often
like canning or freezing
now we have
started freezing our peppers
made some of our own pesto
next time
how i am preparing the rest of the beds for the winter garden
it doesnt matter where you live
this method of improving your soil
works
the organicgreen doctor
"it makes me put my shadow in the garden
ReplyDeletea must for being a successful gardener"
Still working on this wise advice...
Grateful
its the secret for successful gardening
ReplyDeletetogd