Re: The advantages of mulch on a vegetable garden.
Posted: Sat Jul 23, 2011 5:41 am
Hi Tony,
Moles are not my favourite animal at present they have got into my bean bed and from 160 plants they have been reduce to 25. They undermined the beans and in the process tore the roots from the plants. They started to wither then last week we had a really violent rain storm and this left most of the damaged beans dangling having collapsed the mole runs underneath.
To Clay; Before I moved here I was some 30 odd years ago I lived in Hertfordshire (which is almost as famous for clay as Bedfordshire) for 16 years and was faced with really heavy clay. I double dug and incorporated as much manure as I could get hold of and also used many cubic yards of sharp sand which used often enough tends to prevent the clay reforming. When that has been done the clay starts to break down and when I moved here that soil was beautifully friable and exceedingly fertile.
In the intervening years I grew Carrots and Parsnips by putting a four pronged garden fork into the ground and as you go do a circular movement and really elaborating the movement until the fork is right home into the soil and doing this down the complete row that you wish to grow.. I then used to fill the holes with multi-purpose compost (Peat) and used a broom handle to push the compost in. I then, ever being the optimist I used to sow just one seed. I used to water thoroughly before sowing the seed and the MP would drop then put the seed in top and add more MP and water again. I did the same with Carrots and Parsnips and had some really spectacular results. Carrots and Parsnips certainly as long as the fork tyne and some a lot longer.
Now this sounds like a lot of faffing about but certainly it takes a little time, but not that much, and the end results justify the means.
JB.
Moles are not my favourite animal at present they have got into my bean bed and from 160 plants they have been reduce to 25. They undermined the beans and in the process tore the roots from the plants. They started to wither then last week we had a really violent rain storm and this left most of the damaged beans dangling having collapsed the mole runs underneath.
To Clay; Before I moved here I was some 30 odd years ago I lived in Hertfordshire (which is almost as famous for clay as Bedfordshire) for 16 years and was faced with really heavy clay. I double dug and incorporated as much manure as I could get hold of and also used many cubic yards of sharp sand which used often enough tends to prevent the clay reforming. When that has been done the clay starts to break down and when I moved here that soil was beautifully friable and exceedingly fertile.
In the intervening years I grew Carrots and Parsnips by putting a four pronged garden fork into the ground and as you go do a circular movement and really elaborating the movement until the fork is right home into the soil and doing this down the complete row that you wish to grow.. I then used to fill the holes with multi-purpose compost (Peat) and used a broom handle to push the compost in. I then, ever being the optimist I used to sow just one seed. I used to water thoroughly before sowing the seed and the MP would drop then put the seed in top and add more MP and water again. I did the same with Carrots and Parsnips and had some really spectacular results. Carrots and Parsnips certainly as long as the fork tyne and some a lot longer.
Now this sounds like a lot of faffing about but certainly it takes a little time, but not that much, and the end results justify the means.
JB.