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-   -   Raised Beds Soil (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=39515)

AlittleSalt January 29, 2016 06:55 PM

Raised Beds Soil
 
5 Attachment(s)
This is the soil building recipe I am using for our new raised beds:

Sandy loam soil
Oak leaves - mulch mowed
10-10-10 Fertilizer
Homemade compost - sifted - 5 wheelbarrows
Water

I tilled all the dry ingredients together and watered the beds to get the leaf decomposition started. In March, we will turn over the soil so the leaves are buried better. This is how we built the soil in our main garden back in 2010.

Worth1 January 29, 2016 06:58 PM

That will work like a champ.:yes:
Pretty much what I am going to do in the Octopus garden.
The soil that is there is a clay sandy loam mix.

Worth

Descornex March 3, 2016 10:39 PM

Are the oak leaves acidic? Nothing seems to grow where they are in my beds.

AlittleSalt March 3, 2016 11:00 PM

Green oak leaves are acidic. Dried oak leaves are more neutral than anything else. They can even be slightly alkaline in certain conditions. A link [URL]http://extension.oregonstate.edu/question-of-the-week/oak-mulch[/URL]

After years of adding dried oak leaves, the soil PH levels in our gardens are exactly the same. Adding oak leaves is just adding organic matter and some trace elements. It is building your soil organically.

The way I look at this process is I am helping nature do what it does best.

PureHarvest March 4, 2016 08:25 AM

You all should really watch this video about leaves and composting

(Everything You Know About Composting is Wrong: Mike McGrath at TEDxPhoenixville):

[URL="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9OhxKlrWwc"]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9OhxKlrWwc[/URL]

Dutch March 4, 2016 10:34 AM

[QUOTE=PureHarvest;537859]You all should really watch this video about leaves and composting

(Everything You Know About Composting is Wrong: Mike McGrath at TEDxPhoenixville):

[URL]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9OhxKlrWwc[/URL][/QUOTE]

Thank you "PureHarvest" for posting the link in support of composting leaves. The title of the video is somewhat misleading, but I think that's just part of the humor of this video. I dig it! And thanks again!:)
Dutch

AlittleSalt March 4, 2016 10:43 AM

2 Attachment(s)
PureHarvest, that video is like a vintage beloved song. It only gets better with time.

The perfect use for those bent lawnmower blades. Since I started mulching oak leaves - I haven't winterized a lawnmower. I use it too often. I change the blade in spring when the new grass/weeds start growing.

When you mulch/mow leaves and dig or till them into your garden - the soil becomes spongy feeling. You can't walk on it without leaving foot/shoe prints. Water soaks in faster and easier = less water needed. It also warms up faster.

In the second picture, I'm holding some garden soil. At the far left is my thumb. I don't know of a better way to turn dirt into friable soil.

PureHarvest March 4, 2016 11:18 AM

Good stuff guys.

The best broccoli I ever grew was nothing more than my soil, Tree-tone, and about 10" (initially) of leaves that were in bags that I picked up off the road in a neighborhood I was delivering mulch to.
They had about 30 drum-liner sized bags waiting to get picked up by the town. I had just dumped the bulk order, so I had an empty truck just begging to be loaded for the back haul. I took em all. Sometimes you can be in the right place at the right time.

Farmette March 4, 2016 04:32 PM

Thanks for the interesting link, Pure Harvest. His point about keeping leaves and kitchen waste separate is very helpful.

Descornex March 4, 2016 10:06 PM

My personal experience with oak leaves is that they pack and layer and thus block moisture and prevent my seedings from coming up. I did not shred them but used them whole as a mulch.


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