M
Mr_Yan
Guest
Yesterday I spread another truck load of mulch then went up to my community garden for some work. While there I mulched my raised bed. Pulled weeds from the in ground bed. After the weeds were gone I spread eight tractor buckets of mulch on my in front bed. I over seeded the whole area with white clover the planted the rest of it. There's already sugar pie pumpkins and butternut squash planted up there. Now I seeded or transplanted from soil blocks:
rutabaga
collard greens
beets
dwarf sunflowers
kohlrabi
I also loaded another yard of mulch into my car.
I'm a little worried about my use of mulch because the beds get tilled each spring and this could lead to a nitrogen shortage. this mulch looks reasonably broken down and composted right now. I spread the cover thinking it will help bring nitrogen into the system when tilled. I also planted the rows far enough apart to run the lawn mower between them. According to permiculture ideas cutting the tops of nitrogen fixers cause them to shed some root mass and allow the plant matter (both tops and roots) to release the nitrogen as they break down.
after all that work I went to a friend's house and helped him replace gutters. ten hours of hard work and I was beat.
rutabaga
collard greens
beets
dwarf sunflowers
kohlrabi
I also loaded another yard of mulch into my car.
I'm a little worried about my use of mulch because the beds get tilled each spring and this could lead to a nitrogen shortage. this mulch looks reasonably broken down and composted right now. I spread the cover thinking it will help bring nitrogen into the system when tilled. I also planted the rows far enough apart to run the lawn mower between them. According to permiculture ideas cutting the tops of nitrogen fixers cause them to shed some root mass and allow the plant matter (both tops and roots) to release the nitrogen as they break down.
after all that work I went to a friend's house and helped him replace gutters. ten hours of hard work and I was beat.