ducks4you
Garden Master
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2009
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@Triffid , I'm gonna jump in--I think your soil looks clayish and needs amending, but the real reason is the roots of that bean are dead. I tried (failed, mostly) transplanting sugar snap peas this season. The roots were very shallow and wherever I disturbed the roots, the plant died. They were planted on the very north edge of my large bed, which has had the least amendments.
You might try mixing in grass clippings. I heard from a Master Gardener that they break down quickly.
OR, try filling the hold for your beans with imported potting soil. That could be expensive, I understand!
You probably know, there are Many things to buy to make your garden work, readily available, largely inaffordable.
I like to use cheaper methods that do work.
I have been amending my big garden bed for years now with soiled horse stall bedding (from the barn) and it has gotten me very rich and dark soil, where it was mostly clay when I moved here 22 years ago.
If you can get leaves, and have a mower to mulch them, bag them and encorporate them into your bed this Fall, it is probably the Best way to improve your soil.
Read:
This is how we get soil on sidewalks that aren't cleaned off, the leaves that have fallen there are broken down into soil by worms and microbes.
You might try mixing in grass clippings. I heard from a Master Gardener that they break down quickly.
OR, try filling the hold for your beans with imported potting soil. That could be expensive, I understand!
You probably know, there are Many things to buy to make your garden work, readily available, largely inaffordable.
I like to use cheaper methods that do work.
I have been amending my big garden bed for years now with soiled horse stall bedding (from the barn) and it has gotten me very rich and dark soil, where it was mostly clay when I moved here 22 years ago.
If you can get leaves, and have a mower to mulch them, bag them and encorporate them into your bed this Fall, it is probably the Best way to improve your soil.
Read:
The Importance of Earthworms: Darwin’s Last Manuscript
Charles Darwin died 130 years ago today, leaving an intellectual legacy which has profoundly influenced the general course of Western thoug…
www.nypl.org
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