Gardening has always been something we always wanted to do
and be good at. We've had spurts of
motivation over the years to start a garden, run into trouble and usually give
up for the season. Without a doubt,
growing at least some of our own food is becoming a requirement for us so we
can eat healthier and spend less money on food.
We are really recommitting to learning organic gardening and
permeculture to make this work.
Last year we made 4 beds.
We used the old 4 ft. x 4 ft. raised beds, layering top soil, compost
and mulch. This last spring we
transplanted some vegetable plants from a local hardware store. We had one bed with all tomatoes of different
varieties, a bed with all peppers of different varieties and one bed actually
didn't have anything in it. It was a
weak and lazy attempt if I am going to be honest. We didn't water or weed. The tomatoes grew like crazy in the humidity
but were swarmed with bugs to pint where you couldn't even see the tomato
beneath the bugs. The peppers were the
only thing we got and we got pounds and pounds from July to October, We had so
many that we tried to freeze and keep what we didn't eat or give away to the
neighbors.
So, in the spirit of trying again and learning from our
laziness and mistakes, we are going to try again. We are keeping the 4 beds as they are now
about a year old. We will put a layer of
compost and much and try again.
We are also making a new bed next to the other 4 beds which
is roughly 10 ft. x 4 ft. After watching
some videos on hugelkultur, we decided to use some our endless supply of dead wood
lying around and give this method a try.
Since we know we are lazy, we are hoping that this method will greatly
reduce the need for watering. I spent
the last couple of days pulling dead branches and logs around and collecting
them in the location where we wanted to put it.
I was going to dig a trench to place the logs in, but since the location
is in a small valley on our lot, you can see that just after a few hours of
rain, there are deep puddles of standing water.
Consequently, we put the logs above the ground and will pile manure, top
soil and compost on the log pile. The
bed should be about 3 to 4 ft. at its peak.
Lets face it, no digging had something to do with my decision as
well. As we piled up the wood, we
pictured this uncontained messy pile that would be too wide for us to get to
without having to climb it, so we laid out a boundary of concrete blocks we had
sitting around that had no use.
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