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Bigpineguy Retired
10-25-2009, 01:29 PM
How to plant a no-dig garden



If you are up for starting a new garden, vegetable or ornamental, but can't stand the thought of all that digging, you're in luck.
You can start a new bed anywhere in your landscape without lifting a shovel. No-dig gardening is easy, and it works.
Assuming you have a scrap of lawn where you want your garden bed to be, the basic idea is to smother the old and bring in the new.
Use a hose, or sprinkle flour from the kitchen to define your new bed. Lay out your basic idea of where you want your bed to be, but don't be stingy — garden beds look better the bigger they are. And think S-curves to soften the edges of a boxy back yard and add style.
Cover the new bed area with cardboard or a 2- to 3-inch layer of newspaper (black and white only) to prevent the grass from poking through.
Follow your first layer with layers of straw (from feed and tack stores), compost, leaves and grass clippings.
Keep the mulch layers moist by hitting them with the hose occasionally. All of the materials will not only choke out the lawn grass beneath them, but decompose over time, enriching the soil with humus.
You can tell when your materials are decomposing because starting out at a high of 4 to 6 inches, the materials will drop and become more or less level with the surrounding landscape.
In a perfect world, earthworms will pull your organic matter below the soil surface.
You can speed up decomposition by applying



organic fertilizers such as fish emulsion, seaweed extracts, cow and chicken manures to the piles. For ornamental gardens, plan to plant your shrubs and trees directly into the mulched area.
Simply dig your planting holes through the mulch and don't disturb the surrounding bed. Leaving the surrounding soil mulched will help your plants settle in.
Vegetable gardeners might want to wait until spring — while adding more compost, grass clippings, leaves and organic fertilizers. You can dig under the entire bunch before planting a summer garden, or not.
The alternative is to include 3 to 4 inches of rich topsoil in the spring, and plant your seedlings in that.
The sturdy roots of most vegetables will find their own way into the soil and surrounding areas will remain mulched to prevent weeds, retain moisture and keep your vegetables clean.

goonie
10-31-2009, 02:20 AM
How to plant a no-dig garden



If you are up for starting a new garden, vegetable or ornamental, but can't stand the thought of all that digging, you're in luck.
You can start a new bed anywhere in your landscape without lifting a shovel. No-dig gardening is easy, and it works.
Assuming you have a scrap of lawn where you want your garden bed to be, the basic idea is to smother the old and bring in the new.
Use a hose, or sprinkle flour from the kitchen to define your new bed. Lay out your basic idea of where you want your bed to be, but don't be stingy — garden beds look better the bigger they are. And think S-curves to soften the edges of a boxy back yard and add style.
Cover the new bed area with cardboard or a 2- to 3-inch layer of newspaper (black and white only) to prevent the grass from poking through.
Follow your first layer with layers of straw (from feed and tack stores), compost, leaves and grass clippings.
Keep the mulch layers moist by hitting them with the hose occasionally. All of the materials will not only choke out the lawn grass beneath them, but decompose over time, enriching the soil with humus.
You can tell when your materials are decomposing because starting out at a high of 4 to 6 inches, the materials will drop and become more or less level with the surrounding landscape.
In a perfect world, earthworms will pull your organic matter below the soil surface.
You can speed up decomposition by applying



organic fertilizers such as fish emulsion, seaweed extracts, cow and chicken manures to the piles. For ornamental gardens, plan to plant your shrubs and trees directly into the mulched area.
Simply dig your planting holes through the mulch and don't disturb the surrounding bed. Leaving the surrounding soil mulched will help your plants settle in.
Vegetable gardeners might want to wait until spring — while adding more compost, grass clippings, leaves and organic fertilizers. You can dig under the entire bunch before planting a summer garden, or not.
The alternative is to include 3 to 4 inches of rich topsoil in the spring, and plant your seedlings in that.
The sturdy roots of most vegetables will find their own way into the soil and surrounding areas will remain mulched to prevent weeds, retain moisture and keep your vegetables clean.
Great post I am a gardener also and it is nice to see someone passing along some great useful information.this is an excellent way to start a garden and a lot fewer weeds to contend with than with dug gardens