I'm in the process of sheet mulching about 18 m2 / 180 sq.ft. of a sloping SW-facing field with softish clay soil that seems not to have been cultivated in a very long time, just covered in grasses and weeds (now whacked). My climate is fairly mild (8b-ish), and generally wet-ish and humid-ish.
This may be the only season I ever use this particular piece of
land, and it is, ehem, getting late in the season, so I need to keep things very simple and cheap. This is also a very busy time in my day job, so if I can KISS and not run around too much, I'll be very happy. But I do want to avoid using the rototiller if at all possible, I try to be earthworm- and mycelium-network-friendly.
There is no (affordable) prepared
compost I have access to for this job. I am using Toby Hemenway's bulletproof sheet mulch from
Gaia's Garden pp. 87-9 as a general guide, but I will need to skimp on nearly everything, against his advice of
course.
For the impatient, my burning question is:
Can I keep the purdy-darn fresh cow manure I'll be using from frying my plants? I was thinking of mixing it with maybe equal parts by volume of fresh pine sawdust, which would hopefully suck the excess nitrogen out of it, cool it off and keep my plants from getting cooked... Am I crazy?
More details for patient people...
Here's what I have easy and cheap or free access to:
Cow manure: Well-shredded and dried but pretty-darn-fresh (delivered for about $60 for 1.5 m3 or 2 cu.yds.), seems to be mixed with some shredded
straw or grass or something
Fresh pine sawdust (free, as long as I go get it in a big bag in my little Toyota sedan that I'll need to vacuum afterwards!)
Biochar: about 200 L (maybe 0.3 cu.yd.) left over from a previous
project
Worm castings: I have about 50 kg/120 lbs and I might be willing to use half of it on this
Newspaper (having problems
scrounging enough up, but trying to lay down 3 sheets overlapping a bit over everything as a kind of wimpy weed barrier)
Cardboard boxes (a bit more work but do-able, I could probably scrounge up as much as needed)
Maybe 1 cu.yd. or less of fresh grass clippings, drying as we speak
About half that amount of semi-composted grass clippings
3 bales of straw, 2 old and starting to rot and one well shredded and dry
More straw could be purchased fairly cheap but I prefer free stuff if poss.
Any ideas how best to tame my hot, steaming pile of fresh manure?
And any other advice for this low-budget sheet mulching exercise is appreciated.
I'll be planting out the tomatoes, peppers, corn, crookneck squash and butter beans that are now crowding my balcony. And buckwheat just for fun.