Thanks for the reply. Regarding mulch, I want soooo badly to use mulch. But here are my issues. Some of my seeds aren't up. If I mulch now, won't it impede germination? Also, what kind of mulch would you suggest? We've used straw in the past, but if we used it on our plot,
Stephanie, I know you got a late start, so don't get discouraged about this. Soil preparation takes time, so remember that everything you do this year will help you next year. I have almost stopped thinking about crops, and I think mainly about soil amendment. I maintain the mulch at 6" all spring/summer/fall. If the soil is prepared, you can put just about anything in it.
I have had the best results with mowed weeds or grass that comes out of the mower basket. Small particles start to get moldy quickly, even dry, brown ones. I've had the piles get hot overnight. That's what the plant roots want.
This is where you want to "grow your own." I mow the paths and pile that up on the rows. Offer to mow other people's paths where you are. Ask neighbors to give you bags of what they mow, or piles that you bag up. Collect bags of dead leaves whenever you find them, in the fall on city streets, by the side of the road. You can't know for sure that what you get from the city or neighbors doesn't have spray on it, but when the mulch composts, it breaks down. Drive around with big garbage bags, a shovel and a broom.
If you do use straw or rotted straw, run over it with a mower first to make the particles small.
Nobody said this endeavor was not time consuming or glamorous
Wood chips absorb water and nitrogen until they break down, so your annual plants won't benefit from fresh bark chips as much as they would from organic mulch or year-old+ bark chips.
I plant right in the mulch. I pull the mulch aside a little, put a handful of compost or potting soil, tuck the seed into that, water it, put a very fine layer of cut weeds over that. Watch them every day if it's not raining.
If you have room at your house, it might be a little less nerve wracking to plant seeds in flats (free from a plant nursery) and transplant them into the mulch. Then the transplants will be big enough to avoid chewing bugs, and you can see right at home whether the seeds are good or not. I think we all end up with iffy seeds, and if you are going to sell crops you can't afford to miss a week because your seeds didn't germinate. Birds and
mice will happily kick through your seeds out in that community garden, and eat them, or expose them to the sun.
This is a
permaculture method, so check out YouTube:
https://youtu.be/a1Wz_dnFO5I (don't worry about the language, you will get it from watching the pictures)
https://youtu.be/qVTcotHSj2U (Emilia Hazelip, planting in deep mulch)
https://youtu.be/XWHSzGDItBA (sheet mulching)
also search
lasagna gardening using layers of soil amendments.
And if you really want to do this using
Permaculture, you will also need all the other support plants mixed in, beneficial flowers, herbs and nitrogen fixers. You can dig down and fill back in (Hugelkulture), or you can build up.
You're not just growing for fun anymore when you do cash crops. You are growing with a weekly deadline and with the need to keep the customers happy. They spread the word, and are your best source of advertising in a tough world where lots of people are selling vegetables. It all looks great spread out on the table to sell. But the path getting to that point is a serious amount of work.