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
Jonathan Ezell wrote:removing an upper retaining wall section would seem adequate, but if your hugel beds had hydraulic pipes underneath you could pump grow medium in from below as needed and call it permaculture liquefaction fracking.
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
Visit Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
How permies.com works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
Visit Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
How permies.com works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
“We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.” — Abraham Lincoln
Where there is Liberty, there is Christ!
Thomas Tipton wrote:Isn't bio-char the same thing as char-coal?
If not, what is the difference?
One more thing. Might it be a good idea to add a bit of my firewood ash that I saved from the fireplace?
One other point I would add to the intentionality of making biochar is the production method, and specifically the pyrolysis temperature. Biochar is produced at temperatures between 400 and 750 degrees C. If the temperature is too low, the volatile hydrocarbons are not fully driven off. This is great for charcoal intended as fuel for heating and cooking, as it will be easier to light and produce more heat. But it sucks for biochar, because the pore structure will be poor to nonexistent (clogged up with tars), and much of the carbon content will remain in a form that degrades over time. Also, the graphene complexes that provide molecular attachment points for nutrient ions don't start forming until you get above 400 degrees.
If the treatment temperature gets higher than 750-800 degrees, the graphene structures start to fuse together and collapse into sheets, losing the attachment points around the edges. The micropores disappear as well, so this material won't provide the soil benefits of biochar...the aeration, water retention, and microbial habitat functionality is diminished or lost entirely.
This is a big part of why I have chosen to use the IBI terminology. I don't want to give the impression that you can take low-grade charcoal full of tars and gunk (or something at the other end of the scale that's practically graphite), soak it in compost tea or whatever, and suddenly have something that will do your soil a whole lot of good for the long haul...because it won't work. This is not to say that "accidental" biochar is worthless...most of it is good, because the temperatures reached in a wood fire are conveniently in the sweet spot for decent pyrolysis.
Where there is Liberty, there is Christ!
Christopher Weeks wrote:I think Jay's suggestion of growing annuals the first year while the underwood collapses is good, but I also wonder how much compost you could layer in on top of the strawberry bed each year without harming production. They expand pretty vigorously and I'm wondering if e.g. an inch of compost just put on top and let them figure out how to grow through and carry on would be OK.
I've always read that strawberries like to have their crowns above the soil level. That said, I've also read that they're really only productive for about 3 years and then they taper off. So if you lead the runners into individual small pots as replacement plants, and just let the surface drop gradually for the 3 years, you could consider just pulling up the old plants, topping up the bed, and putting in the babies. I've done a version of that, but struggled with the weeding, and had them get overwhelmed, as I think I need to plant the babies in the fall in my ecosystem, and then not totally ignore them... sigh... there's always so many things on my ToDo list!Christopher Weeks wrote:... I also wonder how much compost you could layer in on top of the strawberry bed each year without harming production. They expand pretty vigorously and I'm wondering if e.g. an inch of compost just put on top and let them figure out how to grow through and carry on would be OK.
“We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.” — Abraham Lincoln
The time is always right to do what is right. -Martin Luther King Jr. / tiny ad
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