Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
At my age, Happy Hour is a nap.
Eric said, "So my question is how much vinegar do I use? Will one application do the trick (I bet not)? Can I use regular vinegar for kitchen use or should I buy specially prepared vinegar? And is there any harm in using vinegar? It doesn’t seem like it should hurt given the OMRI listing, but I have never used it before.
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Some places need to be wild
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Not all grasses are created equal!Eric Hanson wrote:In this case, 99% of the weeds are grasses. Their root masses are so thick that pulling them removes a significant quantity of my hard-fought bedding. Just leaving it in place overwhelms the garden, so I need to kill them somehow, even if that is through smothering.
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Eric Hanson wrote:I guess I should be more clear when I used the word “weeds.”
In this case, 99% of the weeds are grasses. Their root masses are so thick that pulling them removes a significant quantity of my hard-fought bedding. Just leaving it in place overwhelms the garden, so I need to kill them somehow, even if that is through smothering.
Eric
Nothing ruins a neighborhood like paved roads and water lines.
"The best fertilizer is the gardener's shadow"
Anonymous Agrarian Blog
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Douglas Alpenstock wrote:Side note: For those with a good, hard-freezing winter, grasses are much, much easier to remove first thing in spring. All the tiny feeder roots, which are like barbed holdfasts, die off/decompose and you can yoink the whole root and rhizome out.
Some places need to be wild
A build too cool to miss:Mike's GreenhouseA great example:Joseph's Garden
All the soil info you'll ever need:
Redhawk's excellent soil-building series
L. Johnson wrote:
Douglas Alpenstock wrote:Side note: For those with a good, hard-freezing winter, grasses are much, much easier to remove first thing in spring. All the tiny feeder roots, which are like barbed holdfasts, die off/decompose and you can yoink the whole root and rhizome out.
I have never heard that before. By hard-freezing do you mean like the soil freezes hard? If that's the case here is probably not so... in fact probably no place I've ever lived.
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
"The world is changed by your example, not your opinion." ~ Paulo Coelho
Eric Hanson wrote:Trace,
That part about newspaper is definitely worth knowing. I mention cardboard because my bedding is really wood chips which by themselves will poke through the newspaper too easily, especially when it gets wet. But maybe I can lay down a carboard layer, followed by a newspaper layer to "seal", topped by straw or more wood chips.
Excellent thought Trace!
Eric
A build too cool to miss:Mike's GreenhouseA great example:Joseph's Garden
All the soil info you'll ever need:
Redhawk's excellent soil-building series
Eric Hanson wrote:Robin,
I will keep that in mind. How much straw did you use?
Some places need to be wild
It is an experimental device that will make my mind that most powerful force on earth! More powerful than this tiny ad!
the permaculture bootcamp in winter (plus half-assed holidays)
https://permies.com/t/149839/permaculture-projects/permaculture-bootcamp-winter-assed-holidays
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