Very nice!
(but I think you should have dug that by hand)
Very nice!
(but I think you should have dug that by hand)
My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom
Mmmmmmm, backhoe.
Sheesh, if her soil is as clay as mine was when I started, she'd still be digging out the third shovel full.
Plow attachment for the lawn tractor. Lots of shaking out sod by hand.
First year I pulled out the six-inch rocks.
Second year I pulled out the four-inch rocks.
Third year I pulled out some of the two-inch rocks.
Fourth year I grew beautiful carrots.(And I'm still pulling out two-inch rocks.
)
PS. Seeds.
Last edited by OakLeaf; 06-25-2009 at 04:38 PM.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Oooh yeah, I meant to post this...
Red Russian Kale from my two favorite non-local seed sources:
http://rareseeds.com/seeds/Kale/Russ...or-Ragged-Jack
http://www.seedsavers.org/Details.aspx?itemNo=625(OG)
My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom
No- that area on the right was a decades-old old heavy 5" thick poured concrete parking area next to the house, it was cracked, heaving, and uneven and thus very hard to snowplow or shovel. Very ugly as well. My DH is so clever that he figured out why not, while we have the backhoe here and the fill freshly removed from the new garden spot,- well he had the excavator backhoe that cement out and haul it away and then use our own fill there and just seed it over with new grass. We have parking enough elsewhere. It was a brilliant and efficient move!
I thought you were going to do it? Don't you remember offering??
At 55, I decided I didn't want to spend the next few years hauling rocks and killing myself. I can kill myself weeding it instead for the next 30 years, and at least eat well while I'm doing it.
Thanks for the kale seed links, guys- I'll def look into it.
Ok now I hear thunder in the distance again...dire weather warnings of thunderstorms and hail again tonight. It was a miracle the sunny window we had today when they dug and worked.
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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I thought you'd have to dig out about 12 inches to get rid of the grass? Are you going to have raised sides?
Karen
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insidious ungovernable cardboard
I could certainly use the workout! I'm actually committed to double-digging another section of our garden this weekend. Upper body workouts to go with my biking for the lower body!
We are lucky that we have super rich soil already on our property, but that super rich soil means super strong and persistant weeds. Because we get so much rain for 3/4's of the year, it also gets VERY compacted...like cement if we don't loosen/aerate it in the spring. I've been slowly double-digging different sections of our row garden with the hopes that eventually, it'll all get done and with attendence, won't need 'doing' ever again!
My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom
GLC- yes you are lucky to have rich soil there! But.....double digging....{{{shudder}}}![]()
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I'm very glad to not do that.
Here are the pictures from our new topsoil (all 26 cubic yards of it) that has been brought in and put in the garden area:
http://strumelia.blogspot.com/2009/0...oil-is-in.html
I'm so excited!!
Next we start laying out the bermed beds and paths, while leaving the perimeter naked for the fence people to do their work in a couple of weeks.
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
That's an ambitious garden! Grow some zinnias too - my grandmother did, just for color. In my mind, a vegetable gardens still needs flowers if my practical grandmothers did it (they fed their families from the garden).
Beth