Even though the soil was still a bit too wet, today we went ahead and prepared our first bed. Our process for spring bed preparation is as follows (this is for NEW beds - or in our case, an established bed that has not been properly prepared for many years):
- First, weed entire bed.
- Make sure soil is dry enough to work by collecting a handful and squeezing into a ball. The ball should crumble and come apart easily under pressure. If it will not form a ball at all, it is too dry. If it stays together and compresses under pressure without breaking up, it is too wet.
- Using a 12" digging fork, break up soil by plunging fork all the way down and pulling back, moving back 4" each time, across the entire bed.
- For a clay soil, like in most of Bellingham, broadcast about 50 lbs per 1000 sq ft lime and work in deeply. Also work in 1-2 gal per 100 sq ft complete organic fertilizer (around 5-5-1).
- Add 1/4-1/2" well rotted compost and incorporate into the top 3-6".
After this was completed in plot C10, we transplanted all our perennial herbs from elsewhere in the garden. These included:
- 2 x Arp Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis 'Arp')
- 2 x Grappenhall Lavender (Lavandula x intermedia)
- Greek Oregano (Origanum vulgare cv. hirtum)
- Hot and Spicy Oregano (Origanum vulgare cv. hot and spicy)
- Sweet Marjoram (Origanum majorana)
- Garden sage (Salvia officianalis)
- Tri-color sage (Salvia officianalis cv. Tri-color)
- Purple Sage (Salvia dorii)
- English Thyme (Thymus vulgaris)
We also moved over two Alpine Strawberries and one Pineapple Strawberry (Fragaria ananassa), a very sweet (and pine-appley) yellow fruited variety.
- Sowed 5 row ft Bloomsdale Spinach under plastic tunnel cloche
Today Emily transplanted lots of flowers that I held over the winter in pots or around the garden plot. Included were a few varieties each of German Iris, Coneflower (Echinacea), and Blanket flower (Gaillardia).
I also am attempting propagation by softwood cuttings. I took 6 cuttings each from two establish lavender plants. Provence lavender (Lavandula intermedia "Provence") and Blue Start Spanish Lavender (Lavandula stoeches "Blue Star"). These will receive bottom heat for a few months until evidence of root growth.
3 comments:
Well, here's what I do to prepare my garden plot.
1. Haul tractor bucket loads of composted sheep manure from the sheep sheds and dump on the garden.
2. Spread with the Kubota.
3. Rototill like crazy with the tiller.
4. Stand back and watch the weeds germinate.
New Hippie vs. Old Man Hippie
Ty's Dad
Dang, I bet that took you about an hour. Emily and I were there for a long time, and only got about 1/4th of our beds done.
Expecting another bumper crop of sunflowers this year?
Of course I'll have a massive sunflower bed. Even if I just let the seeds the birds knocked down germinate I would have a forest. Just to remind you how great they were, check the tractor photo I added near the bottom of my blog.
http://woodlandcreekfarm.blogspot.com/
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