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#21 07/05/2011 7:02 pm

Boogity
Member
Registered: 01/18/2010
Posts: 742

Re: No Till Gardening

OK you guys you have convinced me to try it again in a small area of my garden.  But I'm warning you . . . if it doesn't work I'm gonna . . . I'm gonna . . . I'm gonna . . . let's see . . . I'm gonna be glad I gave it another try.  Fooled ya didn't I.

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#22 07/05/2011 7:11 pm

Wannabefree
Little Miss Sunshine
Registered: 09/27/2010
Posts: 11869
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Re: No Till Gardening

I'm about to try it too because I can't get my hands on a darn working tiller barnie and I have LOTS left to plant!!!

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#23 07/05/2011 7:23 pm

big brown horse
Hoof In Mouth
From: Puget Sound, WA
Registered: 04/23/2009
Posts: 8311
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Re: No Till Gardening

Wannabefree wrote:

I'm about to try it too because I can't get my hands on a darn working tiller barnie and I have LOTS left to plant!!!

LOL I traded the tiller that came with the house for my first sheep 3 years ago. tongue


(I forgot to mention that I tuck household compost under the leaves and straw mulch where ever I feel like it will fit.)

Last edited by big brown horse (07/05/2011 7:26 pm)

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#24 02/14/2012 9:35 am

Wannabefree
Little Miss Sunshine
Registered: 09/27/2010
Posts: 11869
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Re: No Till Gardening

Well I finally got a tiller because our soil is so dense and packed down(HEAVY clay). I am incorporating all of the mulches into the soil for the next couple years and will be doing lasagna gardening hopefully by year 3. I want to improve the soil in the garden and get it well established first. Besides I don't have 8 inches of mulch to cover my large veggie garden, so I am doing it slowly over the course of several years instead of all at one time. So far I have bedding, straw, hay crumbs that broke down to fine dust, rabbit poo, goat poo, and goat bedding thinly broadcast over my big garden spot. I also have shredded newspaper and leaves to toss on after tilling the other in, to keep weeds down. I'll call my version "pizza gardening," because it's pretty much the same concept but just a lot thinner lol

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#25 02/14/2012 9:56 am

Denim Deb
More Precious than Rubies
Registered: 10/21/2010
Posts: 10297
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Re: No Till Gardening

Hope it works for you.  I don't have that problem here.  Our soil is pretty sandy.  But, just because of all the organic matter that I've put into the garden over the years, I can see a big difference between it and the dirt next to the garden.


Proverbs 31:10-31.
Romans 1:16 For I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ; for it is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Gentile.
John 3:36 He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life.

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#26 08/14/2012 1:36 pm

sbrook_325
Member
Registered: 06/13/2012
Posts: 13
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Re: No Till Gardening

Hello all
I saw a method for no till gardening in a mother earth  book that has worked good for me. I bought bags of topsoil, punctured lots of holes in one side, flipped that side on bottom for drainage. Cut out top of bag, and planted 4 plants per bag. Used landscaper fabric and mulch everywhere else. Ran drip/micro  irrigation on a timer. I have been pretty happy with the results. At the start of each growing season, I take last seasons bags and dump the soil into a raised bed, add some fresh manure and a little sand, and use the soil again. Makes lots of tomatoes and cucumbers.

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