Beekissed
Garden Master
We've found that here one can grow a large row of wildflowers next to the garden and it acts as a sacrificial lamb to bugs and we've not had any bug problems since implementing that step.
Weeds are a whole other breed of cat, but we've conquered them mostly with the use of planting clover for our pathways and just tilling rows to plant in instead of tilling the whole garden....then we mulch heavily around the plants. This is pretty successful unless the mulch moves and exposes bare earth and then the weeds will use that opportunity, but for the most part it does an excellent job. If the clover/grass gets too high in the pathways we just run the pushmower through it and that deposits grass clippings right where they need to be to compost for the benefit of our plants. In the fall we just seed the tilled rows back to clover and the chickens feed on that all fall.
This year we are going to implement the BTE method to try and get a better type of soil than we currently have so that we can plant root crops we currently don't have much success with due to the heavy clay soils. The BTE method will help with many things here~weeds included~ and will look neat as well, which we love.
It will take much initial labor to install it and install a permanent fence for the garden, but after that it will be much more easy to get into gardening each spring as I will no longer have to wait until it's dry enough to till to get to plant early crops, I will no longer have to till at all, I will no longer have to mulch specifically around the plants(it will already be there) and I will no longer have to worry about crop rotation, what I can and cannot grow, soil amendments, etc.
Weeds are a whole other breed of cat, but we've conquered them mostly with the use of planting clover for our pathways and just tilling rows to plant in instead of tilling the whole garden....then we mulch heavily around the plants. This is pretty successful unless the mulch moves and exposes bare earth and then the weeds will use that opportunity, but for the most part it does an excellent job. If the clover/grass gets too high in the pathways we just run the pushmower through it and that deposits grass clippings right where they need to be to compost for the benefit of our plants. In the fall we just seed the tilled rows back to clover and the chickens feed on that all fall.
This year we are going to implement the BTE method to try and get a better type of soil than we currently have so that we can plant root crops we currently don't have much success with due to the heavy clay soils. The BTE method will help with many things here~weeds included~ and will look neat as well, which we love.
It will take much initial labor to install it and install a permanent fence for the garden, but after that it will be much more easy to get into gardening each spring as I will no longer have to wait until it's dry enough to till to get to plant early crops, I will no longer have to till at all, I will no longer have to mulch specifically around the plants(it will already be there) and I will no longer have to worry about crop rotation, what I can and cannot grow, soil amendments, etc.