Tyler based on that picture you posted frogs are not my solution. Man do you have some sow bugs!
Maybe I am better off than I think I am. As I say, if something volunteers it is generally left alone and that is
where I trying to get with some things just letting it happen. At this point though I have 1 tomato
volunteer in the
whole garden and it came up in a bed where it was not planted last year. I only had one tomato variety that was
a potato leaf and this one is a potato leaf. So I know what it is. This year I have 15 heirloom tomato varieties
I have tediously started from seed and they are going gang busters.
I bordered my bed that will grow beans with a row of swiss chard and it came up just fine. I used to be able
to start marigolds by sprinkling a few seeds where I wanted them but not around here. So it seems to depend
on what I am trying to grow and which bed.
My soil is the same bright red clay that George Lee is digging in on his
thread. I am couple of years ahead of
where he is on this
project and have put in hugelculture beds and mixed the clay with sand and compost and
manure. My methods have been a bit inconsistent from bed to bed and frankly I am hoping over time the earth
worms will make it all better. I am leaving crop residues in the beds and
roots in the soil to rot and am keeping
it mulched in. There was a giant jump in plant health as soon as I covered the soil. The clay content helps hold
moisture but if left exposed it is the stuff they make fine bricks out of.
Once I get them going they take off pretty good.