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On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 19:37:47 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote: "PocoLoco" wrote in message .. . On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 17:15:08 GMT, "Doug Kanter" wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... A Bully of Bunnies! What's your problem with rototillers? They make gardening much easier. You can rent a commercial grade tiller down here for about $35 for a day, and that's enough time to turn over the dirt for really large garden. For a number of reasons. 1) You're not supposed to turn over the soil. The soil exists in definite layers. The layer at the top BELONGS at the top, not buried or mixed with the layer that's a foot deeper. It contains more of the microorganisms that make organic gardening work so well. If you screw it up, it can take 2-3 seasons to recover, and there's NO way to speed up the process using soil amendments. 2) If you're making new beds where there's now some lawn, the goal is to remove the turf, not chop it into a million pieces and bury some of it like a rototiller does. Otherwise, the grass will be popping up all over the place a month later. You have to slice the turf into manageable pieces, slide under it with a fork, and shake off the soil. It's easy if you get the right spade & fork, like a Smith & Hawken or something like that. Sounds like a lot of work, but you're gonna end up doing it anyway if you rototill. At least with hand tools, you know you've gotten 99% of the grass because it never gets hidden under the surface. Once the garden's been prepared, it NEVER gets turned over - just loosened slightly with a fork in the spring. I injured my shoulder back in March, but I was able to do this job one-handed because the soil was perfect. You mean all that time I spent plowing the cut corn stalks under the ground (about 9" deep) was *wrong*. You could make a lot of farmers happy if you could convince them that plowing was a waste of time! -- John H Sometimes they have no choice, due to the scale of their operations. And, some of them don't plow as deeply as they did 50 or 75 years ago. Farmers are infinitely adaptable. They've learned to use some organic techniques, especially when the new ways cost them nothing but a minor adjustment. Farmers will grow clover and just plow it under. They did this to help fertilize the soil. Farmers today still plow their fields, turning the earth and putting the top about 9" underground. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
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