It All Starts With Building Healthy Soil
Using Compost to Build Great Soil
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| Finished aged compost to add to garden beds |
In our extremely sandy soil, the compost acts like a sponge that holds onto water and helps keep soil from drying out so quickly. In a garden with denser clay soil, adding compost aides in keeping soil loose and non-compacting so it will drain better.
Compost also provides plant roots with more air space which is actually vital to plants. Whether you make it or buy it, be sure your compost well aged, and completely broken down for the best availability of nutrients. Renee's Garden offers a good Compost Guide if you want to learn how to make your own low-cost, nutrient- rich compost.
Fertilizing Regularly Is An Important Part
of Organic Practice
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| Organic Fertilizers: left to right - Liquid Kelp, Sustane grainular, Earth Worm Castings, Fish Emulsion |
Organic fertilizers provide vital nutrients and help plants to build strong tissue, making them more pest resistant. Synthetic fertilizers, although they work very quickly to promote quick growth, encourage fast development of very soft plant tissue that becomes a magnet to pests like aphids and mites which can easily penetrate the plant tissue to feed on it. Knowing the fertilizer requirements for different crops is important to avoid over or under-fertilizing and so that the crops can be rotated properly.
We use a granular, certified organic fertilizer called Sustane.(Fertilizer brands are regional, so inquire at a good independent garden center for what is available in your area or look online). This granular fertilizer breaks down slowly in the soil to feed plants over a long period of time. Organic fertilizer in liquid form is faster acting than granular fertilizer. For heavy feeding crops (see your packet back), we also supplement the slow release granular fertilizer with a liquid kelp/ fish emulsion mixture (1 tablespoon each liquid fish emulsion and liquid kelp per gallon of water) as either a foliar spray or soil drench to give plants of any age a quick boost.
Crop Rotation Controls Disease
and Maximizes Nutrients
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| Nitrogen fixing Rhizobia nodules on Fava Beans |
Crop Rotation is a very important practice which helps to avoid depleting the soil of nutrients and a build up of soil pathogens. Some vegetables are heavy feeders and deplete the soil more than others. For example, heavy feeding varieties like tomatoes, corn or squash should be followed by lighter feeding leafy varieties like lettuces and or root crops such as carrots. Then we follow that second crop with a with soil- building legume crop like beans or peas were a fall cover crop like bell or fava beans.
Legumes actually enrich the soil because their roots have nodules containing nitrogen fixing Rhizobia bacteria that convert the nitrogen from the air and make it available for the plant to use as food. These nodules are very noticeable when you pull up a plant by the roots and look carefully. After our legume crop is cut and harvested, the remaining roots are left in the ground or composted so the root nodules will break down and release all the valuable fixed nitrogen for following crops. For example, Nightshade family vegetables are susceptible to soil pathogens like verticillium and fusarium, so it is helpful to rotate their place in the garden each season. Rotating varieties of the Mustard family helps us avoid build up of soil dwelling cabbage maggots and other mustard family pests. We keep a simple chart of our garden bed plantings each season so that we can easily keep track of what the next rotation should be.
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| Garden map for planning crop rotations |
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| Turning in cover crop |
The cover crop also takes up extra nutrients in the soil that would otherwise be leached out by driving rain. In spring, the cover crops can be dug back into the soil, thus releasing the captured nutrients. In our trial garden, we do this mainly with Pacific Gold mustard which is low growing and easy to dig back into the soil. It also has a more powerful effect against soil diseases when allowed to decompose directly in the soil. Other cover crops like legumes which grow much larger, we prefer to pull out and compost the cover crop plants. They will break down in the compost heap much faster this way, so their nutrients are ready to be added back into the garden beds as part of the compost added when we prepare for planting spring.









7 comments:
Great article Lindsey. We look forward to putting some of the methods you wrote about into use in our garden.
Very helpful. Especially appreciate the specific tips, such as Pacific goldenrod as a cover crop. Thank you!
-- Judith in Ben Lomond
Interesting blog on organic pest control ...
.Thanks for sharing such information....
Keep going.
These information are very useful to us. Will be sharing these upon your permission. Thanks!
Hi... that was great stuff.. I really like reading on this subject Could you tell me more on that... I love to explore.
What is the size scale of rotation and planting that you recommend? Would you need to rotate if you mixed crops completely, for example, in 2012 plant a squash next to a tomato next to a kale next to a legume? In 2013, in exactly the same spots, what if you just moved everybody over by one?
Thanks,
-TPC
Hi. good questions. A good guide for a garden design/layout can be found on our website on this page: http://www.reneesgarden.com/hm-gardnr/resource/designs.htm That will give you some good guidelines for succession planting and rotation.
-Sue the webmaster
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