I don't dig either - just to remove deep rooted weeds or harvest. Here's an interesting link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1OShZZUt0k
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Yes, it's good isn't it?Originally posted by taff View PostIt's been a bit better since i started leaving everything to compost where it fell before the winter... I chop down the comfrey and nettels ... to lay on top of the beds
ftp://ftp-fc.sc.egov.usda.gov/ID/tec...revolution.pdf
I grow my own "straw" ... I leave plants to stand over winter (I don't pull them up and compost them), then in spring I chop them up with secateurs, and leave the choppings on the soil. All plants, veggies & flowersOriginally posted by Jackbb View Postdo you place a layer of straw on top of the home made compost? Is any old straw ok to use?
No, I disagree. Some of my mulches are only millimetres deep: it's better than nothingOriginally posted by BertieFox View PostIf you are thinking of covering your soil with one or two inches of mulch, forget it
Do you include living mulches? I allow low flowers to self-seed around the veg plot, only pulling them up as I need the space. Then they are chopped & droppedOriginally posted by BertieFox View PostI have always found the obtaining of sufficient mulch the biggest problem
I do this with all 5 of my gardens
Good point, but what you had wasn't straw, it was hay. Straw is just the stalks of a plant, without the seed headsOriginally posted by kathycam View PostMake sure the straw doesn't have seeds in it!
Chop & drop, that's the way to go. So much easier, so much more effective. I've noticed a huge improvement in my soil just in the last 12 months of "one straw" (read Fukuoka’s book One Straw Revolution, also Sepp Holzer)Originally posted by Feral007 View PostI'm not doing compost in heaps, but on the beds themselves.All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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