Adding Cured Compost
Adding Cured Compost Why Building your soil by adding cured compost is the best way to get your soil back to the ideal of five percent organic matter for two reasons: One, it’s typically the fastest way to add organic matter. Mulching and tilling in cover crops are great methods, Read more…
Dealing with Sod & Persistent Weeds
Dealing with Sod & Persistent Weeds Sod is the matted, entangled roots and vegetation of grassy areas. It makes adequately working the soil extremely difficult. Also, any of its remaining clumps regrow easily, creating a weedy mess that competes heavily with garden plants. If it’s growing on your prospective garden Read more…
Building Raised Beds
Building Raised Beds If you prefer, once the soil underneath is loosened (via trenching, bastard trenching, double digging, a digging fork, mounding with a rake after tilling, or even just tilling), you can also make raised beds to corral your loosened soil and even to hold added soil—or just to delineate the Read more…
Tilling Only but Keeping Beds with Paths
Tilling Only but Keeping Beds with Paths If tilling and raking your own mounded beds is too much work, just add compost and till your whole garden as usual and skip pulling up the path soil to create higher, mounded growing beds. Still organize your garden into a mixture of Read more…
Tilling and Raking Your Own Mounded Beds
Tilling and Raking Your Own Mounded Beds Spring is a busy time for gardeners, maybe a little too busy sometimes. It seems like everything we want to do happens in a month or two, leaving us slightly frenetic, a little overextended, and a bit exhausted by the end of it. Read more…
Loosening Soil with a Digging Fork
Loosening Soil with a Digging Fork With foot-long tines, a digging fork or broadfork is able to loosen the soil 12-to-14 inches deep, providing the next-best method to double-digging with only a moderate amount of work. (Tillers, by contrast, with six-inch tines, only loosen the soil six to eight inches Read more…
Double Digging’s Finer Points
Double Digging’s Finer Points For most of us, double-digging provides all the benefits we need and pays true dividends. There are, however, a few finer points, options, and differences of opinion within double digging that are helpful to know, especially when starting out. Plus, it might be beneficial to know Read more…
Double Digging
Double Digging Like bastard trenching, double digging is a version of trenching. It’s simply trenching to loosen the soil two feet deep instead of the three-foot depth of standard trenching. As such, the trenches dug—to gain access to loosen the soil an additional foot with a digging fork—are a foot Read more…
Bastard Trenching
Bastard Trenching Bastard trenching is actually an alteration of trenching that is practiced during the first few years of digging a new area as a method to keep from mixing the layers of soil before each is evenly improved by deep loosening and the addition of large amounts of organic Read more…