Sincerely,
Ralph
Sometimes the answer is nothing
wayne fajkus wrote:I would question the need for cardboard. Thats generally used to smother out a problem like bermuda grass.
/Hi Wayne,
Boy you hit the nail on the head. Ya gotta love Bermida grass, the virtual unkillable WEED. The Bermuda grass seeds are everywhere. Probably some survived in the manure as it is a major part off the diet of these cows.
Considering this is a new bed, any weed that comes up can be steadily pulled through the loose soil. Its also ergonomically easy to do it. I don't see a need at all.
/Only the back 60% off the bed is new. It has been expanded and the expanded portion has a base of logs, surrounded by dirt.
I would also NOT plant comfrey in there.
/I was not specific about the whole area nor the comfrey. The whole area of which this bed is the bottom left 500 sf, is roughly 5,000sf. It is going to have a substantial fence with electric also around the perimeter. There will be three large raised bed areas, similar to this one, and a lot of area which is at grade. I was planning on planting comfrey and flowers around the walkways and corners. Thus I would use the comfrey for chop and drop in the less disturbed, read amended with organic material, areas.
You mentioned it but didnt say where you are planting it.
Raised beds get filled up quick with plants. No reason to add chop and drop to a bed that is already close to 100% organic matter.
/Amen
If anything i think you left out soil.
The soul you see around the logs is what we dug out less the rocks. Here in the heart of the Ozarks, we have more than our blessing of rocks. I used up all my dirt covering the hugel logs as I did not want it turn into a buried compost pile. I am ordering a load of topsoil as we don't have any. All we have is rocks, rocks, and more rocks.
I'd rather see you skip the woodchips and add 4 " of soil in there and do your best to mix it in that top layer.
/another great catch, Wayne. I am going to mix in some more soil on top, once it gets dropped of.
If you do this, i would use hay instead of chips as the mulch. Easier to plant in, decomposes quicker.
/I am getting some hay delivered as I am going to put a Ruth Stout style potato bed in the at grade area of the garden plot, but I got so much free wood chips (around 100 yds, now decomposed to about 60% of that) back in August that I feel compelled to use them. They are already beginning to decompose nicely. Perhaps I will later the hay and wood chips over the top of the beds.
Actually i would use hay over chips either way. Thats just me though.
You are 99.9% there. Plant it out and enjoy the harvest!
Sincerely,
Ralph
"Study books and observe nature; if they do not agree, throw away the books." ~ William A. Albrecht
Some places need to be wild
Sincerely,
Ralph
Some places need to be wild
I'm just a poor boy, I need no sympathy, because I'm easy come, easy go, little high, little low, little ad
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