My grandad had a small holding in Yorkshire and he and his wife (my grandmother ) lived pretty much off the land and my mum and her two sisters and brother grew up with this lifestyle. During his lifetime the railway company decided that they had to have a track running across his land. He had no choice about the matter. However, he got his revenge - he made one of the tracks slightly bent and as the trucks rolled across carrying coal - the small defect he made in the line meant that there was a small bump as the trucks passed over his land. He never bought coal again as of course a small amount of coal would fall from the trucks!
@sineadmcardle22483 жыл бұрын
Same thing happened to my grandparents in Ireland! They weren’t quite as clever as yours to get coal tho! Props to them 😂
@jameswaterhouse-brown66463 жыл бұрын
That’s brilliant
@ramonexs9bm7692 жыл бұрын
thats a great example of "improvise, adapt, overcome"
@shivajuice4 жыл бұрын
I’m a fan of everything you have mentioned. I have clay soil in the U.S. I’m an old man. I don’t have 7 years to grow soil. Next door cows provided huge amount. I also added truck loads of wood chips on my 1 and half acre. Yes, I have sinned. Tilled them right into manure and clay soil. Winter Rye held everything in place over Winter. I tilled, hopefully, the last time in Spring. Now I am using a hand shovel like a warm knife through butter. What doesn’t mix ...clay and being old. Respects. Loved your presentation.
@marissaalonzo79973 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate your pros and cons and levelheaded approach. We are in pure clay in the mountains of Colorado arid and cold climate. There are no live worms in our compact clay. There is no soil breakdown at 0% humidity with 10 inches of rainfall a year. I failed with compost, no dig, cardboard and other weed control methods. We had to literally auger holes into the ground, then tractor till the ground AND we have to start plants in a poly tunnel in early spring, then plant into the ground after 6-8 weeks of growth so that their roots can punch through the clay. We have to weed by hand anything that gets by us. We do do mulch at the base of the plant and allow purslane to grow as a ground cover. We do amend our soil with fish oil, molasses etc. Our clay is PH balanced and has high mineral content, so we don't have to amend alot, just right after planting and before flowering. It was great to hear your experiences.
@mominthe2092 жыл бұрын
@@marissaalonzo7997 I read or watched, don’t remember, to put oatmeal in the dirt to attract worms. I found some cheap oats and put them on the ground and put hay on top. I was surprised that within a couple of months there were so many worms. Our soil is better and it is clay that will bake like a brick.
@marissaalonzo79972 жыл бұрын
@mominthe209 Thank you for this! What a great idea! I tried mulching by itself and it just fossilized vs breaking down. This should work for both because they oats may mold as well. Good idea 💡
@tactteam004 жыл бұрын
I don’t think I’ve ever seen a dog look as lovingly at their human as Moss does
@SweetOsoka4 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@Cate74514 жыл бұрын
Yup!
@Cate74514 жыл бұрын
k b ,
@nancymathisen97074 жыл бұрын
I bought a house with, unbeknownst to me, enormous quantities of landscape fabric and black plastic buried under a ton of mulch. There was an electric dog fence wire buried all around the perimeter under plastic. There were multiple layers of plastic and mulch sandwiched between, topped of course by mulch in every bed, and pathways too. I wouldn’t have bought this property had I known I’d be pulling up plastic for a year and more, but I remind myself that I’m here to restore this bit of ground to fertility, verdancy, and the accumulation of organic matter.
@levenscott6454 жыл бұрын
I like the balanced, experience-based information and your clear, non-verbose presentation. Many thanks and good luck.
@lorellstoneman744 жыл бұрын
If you look at your old videos, and now you are getting younger and more refreshed looking with time...you have found your peace of mind..way to go.
@flatsville14 жыл бұрын
Admire your practical approach. Not all methods work in all enviroments under all circumstances. Recently had a crazy conversation with someone who thought you could grow a field of wheat using woodchips.
@lisakilmer26674 жыл бұрын
Very nice, instructive "Intro to Gardening" type video. I was taught by my mother-in-law, who turned barren red clay into a rich, highly-productive, organic, small vegetable plot for a family of 9. The first thing she taught us was to toss away the shovel and use a mattock for the first soil turning (we have dark, rich clay like yours). It's really good that you are telling people that "no-dig" can be a myth, because soil structure is the key to success.
@taspaddebourgo4 жыл бұрын
These videos will end up in lectures in agricultural colleges on the subject of sustainable farming. They will name some building in your honour, maybe in Galway. We are all looking forward to your videos on the restoration of the cottage.
@tk33264 жыл бұрын
Literally the kindest face I've ever seen. Ever.
@mariahsmom94573 жыл бұрын
💯
@riki24044 жыл бұрын
I am here for the dog😊
@mariahsmom94573 жыл бұрын
Moss is a star! 🌟🌟🌟🌟
@idahogardengirl9424 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this video! About 20 years ago I bought a small tiller like the one you have. The house that I had just moved into had just been built. There was no landscaping whatsoever and heavy equipment had driven across the soil many times. The soil was heavy clay and thus it was compacted heavy clay! Like tilling through bricks, but I managed to get it ground up. I added bales of peat and bags of well rotted manure. My first year garden was not that great. I added homemade compost in the autumn and by the next Spring, the soil seemed not to need tilling. I kept thinking, "I must be doing something wrong! I am supposed to be tilling the soil every year!" But all I did was rake the soil out of the paths and into beds, and then plant. I kept the same beds and paths from then on and my garden did really well with just additional compost and leaves added to the top of each bed every autumn! I sold the tiller and haven't missed it. I had no idea I was practicing no-dig gardening, but that is what it is. Thank you again for the video!
@jamesreynold67113 жыл бұрын
Important distinction to make between no dig and no till Good video - one I always come back to
@Starlight222154 жыл бұрын
I'm a no dig but I had to dig to get beds in the first place and remove stones, bricks and general rubbish. I do love hoeing it's so relaxing so I hoe the top off of the weeds I don't pull out. It works well in my experience as long as you mulch. I add grass cuttings and the contents of my chickens coops. I'm sure that adds seeds but as I like hoeing it's not been a problem. I now have polytunnel envy. 😎
@ogadlogadl4904 жыл бұрын
I watch the commercials to help get you that 10 cents. The lady in your life is extremely lucky. Beautiful videos, thank you
@holdmyyarn4 жыл бұрын
That dog is a love pit. You can give it everything you’ve got, and he wants more🥰🐕
@marthameadows90134 жыл бұрын
Excellent tutorial. Give Moss a hug from me. He's a great digger. Blessings
@robertmedzai81632 жыл бұрын
Good video again Mossy, I have watched loads of videos about gardening here on KZbin but if I'm honest people have made gardening TOO COMPLICATED. I'm 56 yrs old and before I came to Ireland I always had a garden to work in . I had a small vineyard too up in the hills in Hungary. I always dug my gardens by hand how my dad taught me and would never change that method . Manure from animals is always the best but home made can be great too . Back in England I used to take away all the waste from the fruit & veg shops near us they and put it in bins to rot away then dig it into our garden once ready . I used to sell the extra veg to my neighbours for a bit of pocket money . I like the fact that you were honest in this video . Mossy that machine you have in your hands is rubbish it's like a tooth pick in that garden . My relative had 1 made for me it had a 50cc motor bike engine on it and the blades were a meter wide , it had 3 gears but I could only use 1st and that was a job to hold it back. Ye to be honest digging the garden over is the best as long as you use manure or compost and for clay soils you need ash and some sand to mix in . I don't know about you but i've notice that everything as in vegetables are generally getting smaller in the shops and what used to be the normal size is getting called extra large which is a joke . Keep up the vids they're great.
@crossnthistle4 жыл бұрын
Amazon prime members have an unlimited supply of cardboard! 😂
@MissGretch143 жыл бұрын
When you started talking about your potato crop I got really distracted by your doggo, and the way it was gazing at you with a look of total admiration, so I had to rewind! What an amazing companion you have there
@jasonhatfield47474 жыл бұрын
I did my first no dig garden this year and so far, it's worked okay. I used a compost that ended up not being the best quality and things were kind of slow to take off. However, now that we're in mid-July, things are growing quite well. I think next year will be even better since the soil will have had time to fully mature and will be amended with new compost as well.
@23sunderland4 жыл бұрын
Very informative and bang on . Doing very similar stuff on a slightly bigger bit of land . 2 wormeries have added some quality to the soil which was quite red plus lots of sea weed and any other leaf mulch and rotted horse dung . It's our 6th year . I did dig first then adopted mulching working great
@davidevans31754 жыл бұрын
So happy to see you. My favorite YT channel.
@keerak4 жыл бұрын
Great video. I just used my fresh grass clippings for my no dig potatoes. Learned it from Liz who has the Byther farm KZbin channel. Worked a charm even on first year no dig on clay. I don't have as much potato growing as you do however, so during a dry spring like we had, I certainly wouldn't have enough grass clippings for your amount of potatoes. Using fresh grass clippings sounds bonkers and I wouldn't have done it if it wasn't recommended by an experienced gardener, but I'm glad I took the leap!
@gsdbellaoneone93254 жыл бұрын
Soooooooo glad you posted this! Thank yoouuu! I've got compacted clay garden soil and wasn't convinced about how to improve it until I saw this.
@lesliewatts28784 жыл бұрын
This is an excellent video...….it all begins with soil. I have a roto tiller, a Mantis. With the soil type in my current garden, it is useless in that it pulverizes the soil. Creates a flour like consistency. One month after using it the soil level drops two inches. For the last two to three years, like you, I have been using the log handled, 4 tined fork with wide tines, inserting, moving it back and forth, covering all with an inch or two of compost and lightly raking it over the surface. The compost drops down the holes 6 to 8 inches deep. Structure isn't destroyed. Wonderful ! Thanks again. Continued success to you.
@biulaimh30974 жыл бұрын
Congratulations on everything you have achieved and thanks for these videos.
@magicsupamoggie4 жыл бұрын
I was so excited to see your new video. I can’t wait to see the next one. Love to you and Moss and all the other animals.
@rainbowpony39994 жыл бұрын
Hi, I stumbled over your vid and was hypnotized by your kind eyes and positive energy. I also admire your love and enthusiasm for creating something beautiful. Also you are speaking from my soul. I am planning to buy a piece of land in the next weeks and live in a caravan with solar and rainwater collection. All the best to you. Love from Austria 🌼, Nicole
@diane55224 жыл бұрын
I really love your videos, it’s always a treat when one pops up. They are the happiest videos on you tube 🙂
@sashawilkinson69784 жыл бұрын
Thank you for those tips, I was really struggling with the no dig method and now I really understand why ❤️
@valoriesmith88754 жыл бұрын
Again, thank you, thank you, thank you. After 4 years of a very poorly producing garden in clay soil, this old woman finally had decided to break down and rototill one time. Will get someone to do that for me, then compost/manure heavily and be ready to plant in the spring. So glad for the confirmation!!
@lynnfomison39353 жыл бұрын
I am sure this will be really helpful to people on clay soil. I gardened on clay for 16 years. Hard labour. But on good loam for the last 37, 10 years no dig. Wish I had known about no dig in 1968! Really well made video. Will look forward to watching more. I can always keep learning...
@andymancan647610 ай бұрын
Very good! Many very good points and a well thought out and refreshing analysis. You cover issues that most no dig people avoid which is very helpful. Thanks
@zenden65844 жыл бұрын
I just love all your videos I get excited when I see a new one pop up 💚
@veronicabalfourpaul22884 жыл бұрын
Your place is beginning to look established and productive. So impressed!
@devafrost174 жыл бұрын
Always exciting to see a notification from Mossy Bottom pop up on my phone. A really lovely vid, Daniel. Thoroughly enjoyed your take on things. We have grown everything no dig here in our garden except for carrots/parsnips and spuds and everything has done beautifully. Looking forward to your polytunnel video!
@sangeetakalani55224 жыл бұрын
Extremely important information regarding soil.Such an important aspect of eco system restoration.
@melindastclair4 жыл бұрын
Your hair is looking great!
@flowerchild78204 жыл бұрын
I wish I could be touching soil in Ireland. TC, stay safe, healthy and happy ❤️☘️☘️☘️☘️❤️
@DianeD8624 жыл бұрын
Will be watching tonight after a busy day doing our own garden .We watch mossy and your self for any tips we've picked up a lot .We love your videos and channel we love Ireland all so we like to see what are up to you've been our saviour in time of lock down so thank you for all you do . Peace to you both Diane Colinxxxx 🙏🙏🙏 🙏🙏🙏 🌈 🌈🌈
@OrtoInScatola4 жыл бұрын
This was definitely one of the best videos on the topic! As usual you never disappoint, my friend. Having a very clay soil as well I have had the same exact experience as you did. You did forget to mention one of the major benefits of no dig which is that it gives the ability To do succession interplanting using better the growing season. I gave up on doing all the hard work you did and decided to use raised beds, since I don’t grow as large of a space as you do, but now I have the issue that the good soil is leaking out of the beds from the bottom and from the sides and I need to keep refilling the beds a lot every year. On top of that the beds when untreated do not last very long and being timber quite expensive they make the whole ordeal quite expensive. I still enjoy doing gardening but I wanted to share my cons as well. Take good care of yourself!
@bradlafferty4 жыл бұрын
Best summary of no till, forking, and tilling a new garden space I’ve ever heard. Thank you! I’m going to place my compost beneath the soil as you did, as well. Go, roots!
@martinfletcher62504 жыл бұрын
This video has perfect timing for me as I am just about to take over some land
@guyjulius80784 жыл бұрын
I would have a blast in your garden. So peaceful
@cherylgolja73964 жыл бұрын
God bless you sweetie , love your pup 🐾❤️
@Greennoob24 жыл бұрын
This is so interesting. I'm in no way a farmer but I'd love to keep hearing about the Irish geography. I'm finished my leaving cert and i don't know where else to find this kind of content. it's very unique
@pureenergy51364 жыл бұрын
It was curious at first until the tutorial went on... Then I just felt overwhelmed and exhausted. And I'm not even the one doing the digging tilling ploughing weeding collecting carting planning prepping or planting... Just listening and watching. Good on you guy, you're definitely a keen and hard worker. Thanks for the info. And Moss is sweeeeet. The place is so green and lush. There's something very exciting and beautiful about that. You planted clover!? And have grass that's growing and blooming pink!? With some untamed kale mixed in!? Nice... I like that. Besides being great nitrogen fixers...is clover edible? OK I won't keep you. But I thoroughly enjoy your videos. Very informative entertaining and refreshing... And a bit thrilling.... Literally Cottage Country in the Old Country... ;-).
@frankkoenig14114 жыл бұрын
@@marygunning5121 Sorry but Clover is edible for humans. It's not the best wild edible out there but the flowers are very nice in salad especially if you pick them early in the season before the bees get to them. Clover btw. is in the pea family.... Also some other weeds mentioned in the video are edible like Nettle (one of the most nutrious plants on the planet) and Thistle as well Dandelion and Chickweed. All cultivated plants that we grow these days have their ancestors in the wild and it's well worth knowing them....
@therealtoni4 жыл бұрын
Gardening well is very hard work!! That's why most of us only putter a bit! Do what you can and you'll be happy
@thisorthat76264 жыл бұрын
@@frankkoenig1411 Yes, we should learn to embrace "weeds" and eat the edible ones since nature is providing free food. Clover jelly is great! I was thinking if Daniel ate the nettles, he wouldn't be as unhappy with them growing in his garden. Pigs work too. Cheers!
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
@@frankkoenig1411 Clover is beloved by bees.
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
you could set up one raised bed. Or only one small garden bed. Borders ! (wooden planks for instance) watch a Charles Dowding video how to set up a no dig bed and keep down weeds. He explains it well. Daniel did not follow the method to a T. And he gets more rain so that may promote the weeds. There is also squarefoot gardenening. A small area but tightly planted. Different plants so pests have it harder. and no space left for weeds.
@englishrose43882 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your candid thoughts on no dig. I have clay, and very established grass, so…this broke my heart (or is it my back?) that didn’t want to dig. But you saved me time in the long run… The part of Moss digging on command cracked me up.
@rumorhasit95064 жыл бұрын
I think Moss stole the show! You have a great, well integrated gardening system.
Fantastic and informative video on your experience with no dig. Really enjoyed that one and the place looks great.
@suecordingley5384 жыл бұрын
This is great to know, I’ve just got myself an allotment and I have been digging. I am going to try a small no dig bed as well to see how it goes 🙂
@jhadesdev95764 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the update, Mossy Bottom is looking awesome. I know you have some much on your plate, but I'm really looking forward to: 2 year updated garden tour, update on the selling point for vegetables, update on the cottage and granary, general life update and plans for the future year. That strawberry wine looks like a delicacy, enjoy the awesome life outdoors I wish I could live in a place like that. Maybe one day I will. Thanks for sharing.
@SonniReign4 жыл бұрын
We've got the same soil type and conditions (weeds up to our shoulders in heavy clay soil) ... We are growing spuds in the weeds we cleared (piled up) working perfectly ! - getting a crop from pioneering raised bed mounds ... We've found that if we dig up weeds (with roots) - we get more coming back than if we snip them off just beneath the surface (leaving the roots behind) . Apparently this is because weeds (as we call them) are actually triggered to grow by digging as they are the soils first line of defence when exposed by the removal of whatever plants were growing in it . Our soil is really well structured though as it had 8 years without agriculture for the worms to create their caverns within it . I'll never dig or leave soil bare ever again for any plant - just grow carrots in deep raised beds full of compost ! - works amazingly ! Get rid of that rotivator ! U don't need it ! Digging generates weeds, breaks fungal networks and causes soil erosion - digging (tilling / ploughing) is humanities greatest act of vandalism against nature - what were we thinking ?? Probably not very hard . The Greeks grew in raised beds and word on the street is that they had thinking nailed ... oh and we're moving now to agroforestry / forest gardening - tending seeds and planting (year after year) is so last century ! ... all the best fella . X 😁
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
Charles Dowding recommends that as well in one of his videos - Title weeding in a no dig garden or something like that. Borders around the beds and exhausting the weeds if they keep creeping in from the side. He does try to uproot them if he can, but if they have extensive root systems, he doesn't bother. It has to use extra energy to cover the distance and he says consistency is key. It is not much work once you are set up, but every time they shoot up you take it away and that exhausts the roots over time, they give up ;) he got rid of most of the weeds in year one and one super persistant one needed another year when he developed an adjacent plot he was able to buy.
@2gooddrifters4 жыл бұрын
My first year with no dig and I have had amazing harvests. My compost was mainly leaf mold from the massive trees in my garden. I couldn't have done it any other way. Now have lots of good compost.
@melissaoleary81964 жыл бұрын
Oh Mossy's dad, we just planted 10k garlic cloves! Only love here for you! 😁 Love your videos and way of life. Thank you for sharing your real-life knowledge with us. ☘
@katipohl24314 жыл бұрын
Here in Germany we have around 39 different types of worms in the soil. The compost worms Eisenia foetida and E. hortensis are living in different ecosystems than the other worms and will not survive in an average soil. When I took over a garden on sandy soil this year I mulched with cardboard for three months, removed the cardboard and then put vermicompost on top of the dead weeds. Now I digged small holes planted seedlings inside and covered with a modern material (permeable foil which allows air and water to circulate but prevents weed growth, durable for 20 years). Everything is growing fine.
@flatsville14 жыл бұрын
Can you please provide a link to the permeable foil? Thanks in advance.
@penumbrame4 жыл бұрын
Once you've tilled the soil for a season or two, and sort of dealt with most of the perennials, you could try starting to just layer with grass clippings, straw, manure, compost, leaves, hay, seaweed, bit of coffee grounds, wood ash .... whatever comes your way, to begin the no dig method. I find putting down grass clippings early, like April, May, in a good fairly thick layer, takes care of most "weeds" for the rest of the season. Then I just keep adding, layer upon layer. I'm in year 4 of the current garden now, and the soil is so so beautiful underneath the last layer of mulch. And ... no more weeding or digging. Happy days :) Enjoy I am thoroughly enjoying your videos and progress. Thank you for sharing :)
@ukqwerty9993 жыл бұрын
love the vids mate, your doggie loves you so much, he gave the camera an amusing sideways look in this one "not this again" ❤️
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
10:30 Bordes (Charles Dowding talks about no dig and the importance of borders, wood boards). I would have used less manure maybe but would have grown something right away - maybe rye or barley as cover crop. Animals can eat it. Or oats. If the manure is too intense - well then it becomes green manure. Or I would have just thrown on a highly robust cover crop or something that grows like a weed. Could be tompinambur. Or a robust pea, or a mix of grasses. Comfrey as cover (it also grows wildly so it can outcompete the weeds. I seem to remember that John Seymour detected that method. Plant topinambur, drive in the pigs, let them uproot it, if you do that 2 years in a row it costs the weeds a lot of energy. You exhaust their roots.
@SC-fk9nc2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info! Moss is such an affectionate doggy.
@michaelmcclafferty33464 жыл бұрын
My allotment had weeds three feet high three years ago when I took it on. After setting out the beds , my wife and I dug out the weeds. Thankfully, it was sandy soil but like Daniel said, nettles root systems underground everywhere. Since then we have used a no- dig approach which is hugely successful. I don't regret it. The only downside is you need lots of compost. We have three huge bins made out of pallets. You couldn't make compost for a plot of an acre or so. Good video Daniel , thanks, and a wise choice to buy a scythe when you first moved there.
@msbauer16874 жыл бұрын
I am so enjoying your experiments and experiences. Thank you for sharing 🥰
@veemcg36824 жыл бұрын
I'm so relieved to hear your experience with no dig as my brother and I have struggled in our garden. Our heavy clay just doesn't seem to respond to the method. We are gardening in Northern Ireland and at present have a lovely big black and white Springer spaniel and are thinking about chickens but I don't expect them to be helpful in the garden
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
Broadforks. And planting daikon radish for a season. Maybe it is a harvest and maybe it is only soil improvement (leaving it in the soil to rot). Big holes and worm fodder. Chicory is even better. The guys of Cotswold Seeds claim it even goes through hard underground that is clay. But it needs 2 years. Of course one could interplant to not lose one or two years.
@carmenpopescu74724 жыл бұрын
Very interesting full of many information. Good luck and a beautiful summer!
@cynthialouw29703 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your explanations and sharing your experiences. I love Mossy dogs interaction too!
@noproblem2big3374 жыл бұрын
I was just thinking about mossy bottom recently and here comes a new video, great content 👍
@fionagrows18484 жыл бұрын
Thanks! It’s great to hear both sides of the argument for “dig” and “no dig” . I’ve come to pretty much the same conclusion as yourself. There’s really no need to hold , militantly, to one method or the other....a bit of a mix of methods works well for me!
@soniarose13874 жыл бұрын
Very interesting! Love the idea of more videos on permaculture, thanks ❤️🙏
@soniarose13874 жыл бұрын
Oh btw, I am a huge fan of the no-dig method and of the person you mentioned who is huge on KZbin 😁
@ladylexiea30844 жыл бұрын
I have watched u from the beginning. Lovely to see you looking so healthy and content. All u need now is a partner to share your life with and you have Nirvana! Bravo. Thanks for all the info.
@upendasana78573 жыл бұрын
why assume someone needs a partner ? maybe some people just don't want or need one...I mean maybe he does but its pretty presumptuos to say such a thing
@ladylexiea30843 жыл бұрын
@@upendasana7857 yes maybe. Nothing wrong with wishing someone the fullness of life.
@dmk_games Жыл бұрын
Dowding tries to make it clear in his videos that not dig just means to minimise soil disruption. E.g. he specifically mentions in many videos that you have to dig out woody perennial weeds for new beds.
@windywalcha4 жыл бұрын
So glad I found your channel! Iv'e been thinking about the no dig system and how it would fit here for us. I really value your measured and honest feedback re no dig. Also just love your plans for your cottage! Pat Mossy, for us, love from down under.
@iwonahunter33503 жыл бұрын
I have also tried "no dig" technique on my plot. Card bords and old juta rugs + soil on a top of that. Next I have sown mustard to provide quick nitrogen fix. It was a disappointment. My plot is a small field size wise like yours situated amongst the pastures. Grass self seeded everywhere and supressed mustard seedlings plus the old covered roots grew into the new plants. Enough to say, I no longer use this method. I believe it may on the allotments but not on an exposed site E.g. a field. Thank you for sharing your experience.👍
@joellesharples47622 жыл бұрын
Hello Daniel. The way I was told (Geoff Lawton) to do no dig gardening using cardboard was to soak the cardboard very well before laying it. It makes all the difference to kill the weeds. Over the weeds I place worms and compost to help the worms establishing themselves. Then the cardboard being wet it is easy the place many layers. I soak it a while in a wheelbarrow. Then more compost and mulch. For planting I make a whole in the cardboard to help the roots. When the crop is finished I do the same again over what is left. After 2 or 3 seasons there is a few centimetres of top soil. My soil a pure clay I am sure I can use the clay straight for pottery. Thank you
@joellesharples47622 жыл бұрын
I get the cardboard and shredded paper for free from the local school.
@lrigdrenlrigdren21474 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video and all the other "teaching" videos like it. I've quit my job here in the USA bc of COVID risks; I don't have another job yet, and I'm trying to grow a little food for myself, but know so little about it. Definitely soil type and quality are factors whose effects I'm observing now, for good or ill. I talked to a teacher at a local junior college about their horticulture classes, and I hope to enroll in some once the virus situation is better (gosh I hope it gets better soon!), but in the meantime, you are providing us bits of a free course, well organized and well communicated for very newbie people like me. I don't know if you realize how vital that is, to those of us who need to learn as much as we can, rather quickly. And I guess we'll all forgive you for disliking garlic too. Every friend I have, has some unfathomable flaw ...
@hanorabrennan88464 жыл бұрын
Irigdren Irigdren, try the MI gardener in the USA also Justin Rhodes, Joe Saladin plus Roots and Refuge who are all into the permaculture and have daily vlogs. Best of luck with your course but there are great books to be had on the same subject too.
@sclark2234 жыл бұрын
@@hanorabrennan8846 Thank you! Yes, I've been looking at their channels too! Very helpful! :-)
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
Charles Dowding (if UK growing conditions are relevant - or ar you in the subtropics ?). Melissa K Norrris - she has a homestead in the state of Washington many very practical tips how to grow specific plants, check out vertical gardening, her trellis methods.. Maritime gardener (Canada I think) - when it comes to slugs and pests or how to fill raised beds for cheap. Dowding also has good advice (nets for brassicas and carrots). And the How To when it comes to turning a weed covered plot into garden beds (carton = sheet mulch) and how to suppress weeds. Daniel did not quite follow his method, it is possible that cost him and he was just using the wrong crop for a start. He could have just used a broadfork to loosen the soil after mowing weeds. Then manure, THEN carton on top (he put the manure ON the carton so the opposite) to kill off the weeds. Then planting into holes of the carton, if he has compost or soil to put on top fine. If not, also fine. Carton breaks down quickly when it is rained at. Daikon radish as green manure planted immediately and later in between some clover as soon as the carton has broken down. And if it is not a great harvest (for humans or pigs or chickens) - he would not have lost any time. at least the weeds are suppressed and the soil is improved the rotting bulbs of daikon aerate the air, and feed the worms. There are even nets for hail protection (VergePermaculture channel). Just don't start a hugelbed, chances are it does not work in your climate (unless you live where Sepp Holzer had his farm). What you can do is establish a raised bed built from wood and fill it at the bottom with wood logs, branches, spent soil (no air pockets) - the good soil, compost is on top. Maritime Gardening explains that in You have all the soil you need (only slightly raised beds for better drainage). And James Prigioni, he has higher beds. Or only have a slightly raised bed with borders made from corrugated roofing material - since wood is so expensive in the US right now (Cuban method). fungi will very slowly break down wood (chips) or any carbon rich bio mass and they bind nitrogen in the process. So the layers where the roots are and the layer where the breakdown happens must not be mixed. And if you use wood chips as mulch - don't mix them into the soil, then they compete with your plants for nitrogen. On top they rot too slowly, so no problem (unless you are in the suptropics or tropics, in Florida wood chips on the top become soil within 1 year, maybe those growers added a little nitrogen). Nitrogen lack can be fixed with blood meal, fish meal mixed with water (or fresh urine). Wood chips are great as garden path, to maintain a clean look, drain water, and they start rotting and suppress weeds. You can use them for soil building later when they have started to break down somewhat (then they gobble up less nitrogen). Mulch on top - straw, hay (beware of seeds) and even wood chips can attract slugs. In the South of the U.S. mulching is an issue. Seems like fire ants like undisturbed soil. And termites like wood. In wettter cooler areas slugs can be an issue. You can build your defenses by attracting wild birds, predatory insects (some go after slugs or their eggs), amphibics, reptiles (litte wet corner, dry corners with a "stone wall", insect hotel, bat hotel) permanent little pond with some reeds for the dragon flies, bird house, hedges with fruits. Martime gardener gives good advice how to deal with them with iron pellets - until they are large enough. For those plants that would be eaten even when the plants are larger a raised bed is great because you can defend it better (hoops against birds and copper against slugs).
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
However if you start out be super careful not the get any grass clippings, straw, hay, compost, or manure with *_aminophyralides_* in it. Check it out. - There are youtubers that warned others - only to be tripped up (on one bed) when they added manure from a friendly source. - Dowding even had it in bought compost. he now tests every batch of compost (whether he bought it or whether he made it with bio mass from outside). The test is done with seedlings of sensitive plants in smaller pots - and a few are planted in soil that he knows is safe, so even if pests get them or they do not like temps he has the direct comparsion of the soil effect. all of that to make sure that herbicide from hell is not in it. If it is in compost / soil the seedlings that just looked good and healthy, will stop growing, curling leaves, etc. Lazy farmers use it to kill everything that is not a grass, and it only breaks down slowly with the help of soil bacteria. (or if a thin layer of soil would be exposed to summer sun, but that is not practical and of course kills soil life and oxydizes carbon and nitrogen out of the soil). Aminophyralide is used for grass on meadows (to kill all plants that are not nutritious for lifestock, if a farmer can't be bothered to improve pasture with other methods). Or for wheat, rye, corn,... to kill weeds. If cows (or other animals) eat that grass the herbicide is in the manure, it does not break down during digestion, and also not with hot composting. If you get that stuff into your soil (for instance by getting bedding from a horse stable that used straw from wheat that was treated with it - which the horse owners likely do not even know) you can forget about any conventional harvest that year. With luck only _that_ year. There were organic farmers that had their whole plantings wiped out because they got and applied manure or compost containing that herbicide. Their only chance was to grow corn or a grain and I assume they lost the organic certification for a few years. Some vegetables can kind of tolerate it - but must don't. The only possible crops would be corn or oats, barley,.... And of course you can expect aminophyralide to be in the food, which defies the purpose of having a garden. Allegedly it is harmless for animals and humans - they said that about glyphosate too. (I already was on organic dairy products - one more reason).
@jimmyrichardson674 жыл бұрын
I converted some of my lawn with no dig. I layered it though with green and brown layers about two of each. It worked really well.
@wonderwhy61334 жыл бұрын
I love seeing your hard work for years is paying up! I’ve been following you since the beginning. Your cottage and the surrounding where you live is heavenly! God bless & take care from Hong Kong ❤️ Where your beautiful dog??? He’s so handsome 👍
@christopherswainson3714 жыл бұрын
Great video, Daniel, if your dog goes missing you will know he is in safe hands with me!! He's just gorgeous. Re-mineralising the soil with volcanic dust could be worth a mention, Thanks a lot, and good luck, Adam
@universallyinsync4 жыл бұрын
My daughter has grown a Back To Eden garden for the last two years it is basically a no till garden, built on compost and a bit of added topsoil. It was two years to get to the gardening point because she raised 8 chicks, and in addition to the eggs, they made her compost (initially in the coop run), and a year after they matured, she had just enough to make her garden, with cardboard and newspaper. The ground has some clay, but fortunately her plot formerly housed an abundance of spearmint and had not been gardened. It's a great cycle; she chose this method because she has physical issues that make regular gardening impossible for her. Her chickens were raised almost organically, use their own shells for some of their calcium needs, and they eat wonderfully, they are almost like pets who produce, and she fences them in to get rid of weeds, etc. and take care of the biters. They also get dandelion greens, and I've made battered dandelion flowers and dandelion salad. I enjoy your videos, wonderful. Valerie ☺🌿🌄🍁🍂🙌
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
chickens like young nettles. In another video (winter) Daniel says he lets brasscias stand over winter (and continues harvesting) and they flower in spring. The chickens go wild over those flowers. If you have a greasy pan wipe it with cooked potatoe peels or mash a potatoe with a fork, that absorbs the fat. Chickens love that stuff, they need fat to ceate the yolk. I know homestaders that cook a big pot of potatoes (from the field). They don't bother washing the potatoes a lot. The nice potatoes are for the humans and the chicken get the other ones. the water with soil in it goes into the garden. They have an old pot only for that.
@colly19523 жыл бұрын
Some people likely won't like this comment, but this is not to put down this wonderful young man. But I just can't stop myself here. First, second, third, etc... are adverbs deriving from their respective number, and as such do not need the suffix "ly". I've noticed that most young people and a lot of older ones make the same mistake. It just seems to grate in my ears. But young man, appart from that, I just love to watch your videos as it has been my life long dream to live the kind of life you live.
@kateb68664 жыл бұрын
thank you for this informative video :) it made me aware that I probably would not be able to do it on my own...I could probably grow some flowers but that would be about it :) in the future I would probably rely on having people like you around and buy the fruit and veggies from them on a regular basis. And one last comment to what I saw and heard - your dog loves you so much...his eyes are filled with love and joy when he looks at you. And in this experience this love is the most important...the love you give to the soil and your other animals is very important too - without it - nothing would grow :) Your dog's love is very personal and so pure though. I just love to watch him as he is truly quite exceptional :) Love and Light
@malindsell4 жыл бұрын
Totally agree with you re the weeds and no dig struggles. I’ve had a couple of allotments in my time and found that no matter how much you lay cardboard or plastic sheets, the weeds will come back unless you dig them out first. On my current allotment it has taken several years to get to the point where I’m on top of the weeds. I hate disturbing the soil, but you have to from time to time. However, not all weeds are a nuisance! Their roots provide channels which vegetables use for extending their own roots. I mainly work to extract bindweed and thistles and the dreaded brambles. Constant pulling eventually wears them out. I also totally agree with mulching in autumn and covering.... does wonders for the soil. I probably spend more time collecting compost materials than tending my plants!
@dianarussell62783 жыл бұрын
Where I live we have very heavy clay soil. When dry (I live in a very arid state in the western US) it is like cement. So my dad and I built raised beds and filled them with topsoil and compost mixture. The first year was a failure because the were in the wrong part of the yard. We moved the beds against the north fence allowing the garden to have full southern exposure. The garden did ok there but required a lot of watering as we had little rain in the summer months. On summer we had lots of rain and my garden did so well I was donating veg to a local food pantry. A few years later I started an egg business were I cared for over 100 chickens, 30+ ducks, 10 quail, 3 turkeys, and 3 geese and their eggs. This left little time for gardening as I did it all myself. So for about 5 years my garden beds were left to nature. One day while unloading poultry feed, I injured my back. I muttled along and learned how to work smarted. Then 3 months later I learned I had cancer and would have to have surgery. That was a scary diagnosis so I began to sell off my poultry save a handful for personal eggs. I lived with my parents who were becoming elderly so I didn't want to leave them with so much to care for while I recooperated. After surgery I learned that I would have to undergo several months of chemo and radiation. All tolled it was about a year of treatment during which I was very inactive and my back issue worsened. It took another 6 months of physical therapy to regain my strength enough to take over my chores. After being inside for most of a year and a half I was itching to get out and garden however I could no longer dig in my beds or even run a tiller because I was left with pinched nerves in my back which effected my legs and caused me to need assistance to walk either a cane or walker. Difficult to run a tiller when you can't stand in aided. So I searched for ways to garden that didn't require a lot of physical labor. First I tried straw bale gardening. First problem was, I couldn't handle the bales myself (each weighing between 60-65 lbs. ) When I finally got someone to place the bales for me, our short growing season had already begun and I still had to prep the baked which took a couple more weeks. By the time they were ready it was well into growing season. I bought started veg plants but it took them awhile to get established. Some didn't survive. I found it difficult to keep the straw wet enough until I got soaker hoses attached. The plants I started by seed did not survive. They were eaten by insects as soon as they sprouted. All the setbacks delayed the plant growth too much. While my plants did produce a lot of fruit it was too late in the season and nothing ripened before our first hard frost. The next year I tried no dig gardening reclaiming my garden beds. The people on KZbin made it look easy. It was in ways. Again I got a late start in preping the beds. And again I had to buy some started plants. For those plants I had to cut through the cardboard to plant them. It took a while for them to get established but some of the plant survived long enough to produce fruit but too late in the season. Once again, although the plants were loaded, the fruit didn't have time to ripen before the killing frost. The plants I tried to grow from seed did not survive. The next year I tried self wicking tubs. Again it was well into the growing season before I was able to aquire all the necessary equipment. Some things that were easy for the KZbin gardener to find were more difficult or costly for me. I finally got some tubs prepared and began to plant. Some things grew but some things didn't. I soon realized that I had them in the wrong spot in my yard and there was little direct sunlight getting to them. I will move the tubs and try again this year. I want so much to grow a garden. Gardening is a journey.
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
Hi, interesting story, hope your health is good so far. Maybe your problem is that you set up the materials, it gets late in the season - but you do not _not build on it next year_ but try out something new, instead of repeating the experiment of last year under better conditions (starting earlier, which may be the only thing that hindered yur success). So you have to gather new things or build them or wait until someone builds them - and are late again. I would return to the methods of last year but this time with an early start. Likely you could start seedlings yourself (if you have space) and get to an early start (in case of a crazy spring you can keep some seedlings to replant. 101 of gardening: there is no such thing as growing too many seedlings). And hoops or improvised clear foil just laid on top or your raised bed with the seeds - with a little distance - could be bricks - can lengthen your growing season. Or persuade someone to build a hoop. Even an improvised structure. even cardboard and clear foil might do (depends on how much rain you get). You can use wood glue (PVA glue) to glue wood stripes or cardboard stripes onto carton or wood to "reinforce" them, put a weight on it it needs some pressing especially if you use wood. If you put the foil on top of the bed and it hangs over the frame of the raised bed (wood ?) and is tied to the sides of the bed (screws or hooks into the wood should do) it should even protect the carton for a while. You can reinforce PE foil be gluing more foil or tape to it and then cutting out a hole so you can tie down your foil. You can even iron on patches on PE to reinforce the space where the hole will be (between parchment paper or aluminium foil. and with openwindow - fumes. And the iron should not be too hot. That would work for 1 bed or 2 until you can talk someone into building you a nice professional hoop / top cover. Or maybe you have DIY skills if you take your time. Thin wood stripes can be strategically reinforced if you glue small wood pices on it, that saves weight. Of course you might have a lot of wind exposure ..... I would try the improvised prototype (and watch videos). By working with an improvised solution you might find out how you want the better version to be. Check out the channel of Melissa K. Norris, she has a video about growing plants on a trellis or self made arbor. People bend ? steel or plastic stakes into half circles and stick them into the earth and put foil or textile over it (caterpillar tunnels, too she covers cabbages and keeps them till winter). Some stones can weigh down the foil , That oculd be a good enough improvised structure to protect seeds from spring frosts and rain that is too heavy. the arbors stay in the soil the foil is removed (or lifted) curing day until the cool spring is over. Then you do not have to bother with seedlings and can use seeds but get the longer growing season like in a "glass house". but you have to lift it or alllow for some ventilation or you get mould or they over heat. and you have no delay with waiting for a "proper" hood, that is not yet built. You protect the seeds for a while. in fall when you want to extend the season you might have gotten round to building it and until then you know exactely what you want. Happy gardening.
@kevinlynch67214 жыл бұрын
Great to hear a realistic account of experience with no-dig gardening and a homestead in general! In fairness to the no-dig approach, advocates will advise laying the first cover in autumn and leaving the weeds die over winter. It is a particular my tough patch of weeds!
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
I would plant a robust plant with bushy and fast growth above ground and not too deep roots - but plant that immediately, and the manure comes UNDER the carton, then some compost on top - or not carton can be top layer. That crop most likely ends up being green manure or might not do so well with the fresher manure. Interplanted with a pioneer digger like daikon radish. Which has a slimmer, "piercing" tap root. He waited with planting, he could as well have planted something immediately (rye would have been possible too) and not worried too much whether that would be productive already. No weeds (the space is occupied) and some roots in the ground to promote soil life and penetrate the soil would be good enough - in round one. It could be interplanted with daikon radish or even chicory - both go deep and have the reputation to be good with dense soils. (chicory grows over 2 years but seems to be even better with going deep than radish that is often planted to loosen compacted soil also by big ag). Potatoes need a LOT of space underground, they need to move dense clay soil out of the way to create space for the bulbs (or manure and only the roots would have to pierce into the clay. But he had the order of layers in the wrong order. Carton top layer, bushy plant, bulbs develop in the manure layer and the roots go into the clay. That could even have worked. And the bulbs must always be covered or they will develop solanin. Daikon radish is the better digger and if the top of the bulb pops up a little above ground it does not matter. The form of the root is better for pioneer work, a slim tap root going deep, not many round bulbs horizontally. potatoes are likely an uphill battle in year one, he chose a crop that was ill suited especially with dense soil and no dig. And wrong oder of layers.
@sweetpeapumpkin19234 жыл бұрын
Very informative video. So jealous of what your doing. Stay the course. You will be better for it in the long run.
@alexandraborscork62693 жыл бұрын
I also have clay soil and use the no dig to start with. I had fresh horse manure which I layered as you did and stamped on well after watering. It ended up 30cm high, nextto it we kept adding wood shacings and cardboard on the path to bring it up to at least half the level of the bed which received after the manure an additional 10 cm of compost. I had good yields - as you say weeds kept coming up and I had to look and pull byhand the ones coming through. The path had fairy more weeds and we kept putting cardboard and wood shavings or wood chips. it went ok because we persisted adding once a month cardboard and shavings on the path and on the sides of the beds where the coverage was lower and weeds did get through. I had no brambles... Got some lovely carrots rooted right through the clay (my horsepoo and compost disappeared literally in a year
@fourdayhomestead28393 жыл бұрын
A great up and coming homestead/gardening KZbinr. Great job!
@atroutflycrazy8057 Жыл бұрын
Very glad to have found your channel and welcome to Ireland 😊 You have answered all my questions on no dig excellently. As you said it depend on your soil conditions , i like the idea of no dig but with a heavy clay garden that hasnt been touched in yrs i think the 1st yr 2 will need the spade. A great point you mentioned about plants toppling over due to lack of root depth. No dig n alot of rich manure method the roots dont need to search for nutrients. Its prob a down side to it depending on the plant your growing. Im sure theres a happy medium between the two methods.
@tedpreston41553 жыл бұрын
I wish I could share my compost with you! I'm one of those lucky sorts you mentioned who has an endless supply of horse manure, and a loader tractor that makes quick work turning that manure into mountains of lovely compost. As you suggest, my no-dig potatoes grow really well in compost laid on 12 inches thick. I just planted the same potato bed for the second year, and I have seen very few weeds or grass growing into the bed through the cardboard. If I had to haul that compost in the trunk of my Honda, though, I would not love it quite as much! Having a mountain of compost right next to the garden sure helps! Like you, I do need to collect cardboard and haul it home, but that part is easy, even in a small town. All it takes is regular visits to the trash bins behind three restaurants, and I have all the cardboard I need each season. It's interesting hearing how different your experience has been, on different soil (mine is sandy), with different weeds and in a different part of the world. I've had much better luck killing weeds with a cardboard layer than you had. My experience has been so positive that I add new beds every year.
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
beware of aminophyralides - that could be in the horse manure if the horses get hay from grass treated with it. (or straw bedding from grains that were sprayed with that herbicide from hell, it does not break down easily and can wipe out your plantings).
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
The thing is: the owner of the stable might not even know that the manure or straw bedding contains it.
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
The manure was supposed to go UNDER the cardboard, with a light layer of compost or soil on top of the cardboard (if available) so he did not follow tested protocols. And potatoes are not a good choice for a first harvest. He could have used a mix lower rooted plants that grow bushy ABOVE ground (suppressing weeds) as crops - that are robust and tolerate fresher manure. Even strawberries could have worked (with luck some harvest and if not they prepare the bed. Stawberries can deal with fresher manure and have the large leaves. Or topinambur - it grows like a weed, so it is good competition for weeds. And daikon radish as tap root and soil improver (left in the soil for rotting). Rye is also a good first crop, can be green manure or fodder for the pigs. Or peas. or maybe even some zucchini (likely no harvest but never mind about yields in year one). He waited before planting anything so there were not roots active and he did not harvest carbon or nitrogen. As long as something grew above ground, even w/o yield he was better off. and the roots do _some_ work in the soil.
@tedpreston41553 жыл бұрын
@@xyzsame4081 Thanks for the warning. In this case, I own the horses. Only in winter do they eat hay that grew elsewhere. (In summer, they eat only our pasture grasses, with no pesticides at all.) I'm fortunate, so far, that the hay we buy in winter does not seem to contain aminophryalids. Nor does our bedding, which is simply pine wood shavings.
@Alexandre-cr2if4 жыл бұрын
lots and lots of great and usefull information. Perfect!
@indirajane4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the informative video! I'm very interested in this subject and it was good to hear about your experience thus far with no-dig.
@ConscientiousOmnivore4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience. It's great that you have adapted what you've learned to your particular situation and are making it work for you. I have very loose, sandy soil so what I've done is cover the existing weeds and grasses with cardboard and a thick (6 inches or so) layer of wood chips. After a few months, it really softens up the ground beneath and I'm able to plant into the soil directly (first rake back the chips to expose the ground beneath). After my seedling is in the ground, I just push back the wood chips around the stem to provide as much ground cover as possible. This method has worked very well and it's certainly helped me to save a lot of water too but it's not perfect either. The weeds do grow through the chips after a while and I need to remove them. After a year or so, they do seem to weaken quite a bit and I spend a lot less time weeding than in a standard dig garden bed. Not sure how easily you can obtain wood chips in your area but it may be something to look into as well. It takes years for the chips to breakdown into black soil but it does happen after a while and that helps build fertility as well. I highly recommend checking out James Prigioni here on youtube for inspiration with this method.
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
You can use the chips for well drained, neat, weed suppressing garden paths. They pre rot and the material then can go on the compost or on top of the beds as mulch (Diego Footer even shovels it to the other side. The path becomes the bed, the former path is "bare" soil and he plants in there.
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
He has a Bosch chipper to process his branches etc. many muncipalities have them, some compost the material, burn it (for heat and warm water. If they dispose of the bio waste it has less volume when shreddered it. That is insanity of course. Not only is the good material wasted it also produces methan on the garbage site - which is a STRONG greenhouse gas. In the U.S. landscaping companies and power plants (they cut trees to keep the lines free) also shredder wood if they cut down trees and they gladly will give the material to citizens that pick it up.
@ConscientiousOmnivore3 жыл бұрын
@@xyzsame4081 Great points! I have a small chipper/mulcher as well to do the same for my branches. The other benefit is being able to walk in the garden bed without compressing the soil. This is because the chips distribute the pressure.
@katana26654 жыл бұрын
He's back!
@dinnerwithfranklin24514 жыл бұрын
Very interesting, thank you. I hope you enjoyed your time here in Canada
@BenniLkitchengarden4 жыл бұрын
Very interesting content. Thank you. I’m looking forward to your next video.👍
@mysticmeadowshomestead62094 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed your video. Another reason for using the no-dig method is ROCKS. Many homesteaders do not have industrial-sized equipment. They cannot dig through all the rocks they have to plant. So 'lasagna gardening' is a practical way to grow.
@tamitng4 жыл бұрын
Your gardens look great! 🍀
@veemcg36824 жыл бұрын
Moss is like our Springer spaniel Snoopy. Isn't it nice to be loved unconditionally! I needed to hear all about no-dig because I had the same difficulties on my clay soil. Maybe I'll get a rotavator/tiller. Please show more of the pigs and other livestock. Thanks
@suzannewalsh724 жыл бұрын
We have one of those Organic Tillers too, he's the reason the veg garden is sectioned off from his own area 🙄🤣 You may want to look into using Japanese Daikon Radishes as cover crops too. Planted in July, Minowase are a great crop as they are slower growing, go upto 24 inch deep, are frost hardy... I've seen them being dug out of a couple of foot of snow... and they pull up nutrients usually locked away from other plants. They are great food for us, wonderful roasted, in soups, but also great for animals too, so your pigs should love them. Left in the ground though, they act as a soil improver, most especially for clay soils, bringing in much needed organic matter, and air :)
@Cate74514 жыл бұрын
Ha ha. Read this many times before I got it.
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
in the U.S. daikon radish is sown by planes as a big ag cover crop. The large fields are likely compacted from the machines (I assume they use a little different seeds they are not meant for food but left in the soil to decompose, but a gardener could work with the regular seeds that are more easily available ). Cotswold Seeds sells seeds to UK farmers for Green manure and cover crops, and they do webinars (see youtube) also interesting for a gardener. They of course cover daikon radish which is as staple for soil loosening, but also recommend chicory for deep, deep losening. That is a perrenial it needs 2 years. And mixed cover crops.
@xyzsame40813 жыл бұрын
Daikon radish can also be fermented, and it is good raw on bread and butter with a little salt - like the radishes. Or grated as a sald (like kohlrabi).