Organic gardening 2025

Alasgun

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jan 11, 2021
Messages
1,311
Reaction score
5,448
Points
195
Location
S. Central Alaska
Over the years i’ve mentored several folks who developed an interest in Organic gardening. The more you study, the more your head will explode from all the good ideas and advice you will discover. Some of it may be helpful but some of it wont; a lot depends on your situation; what you grow, how you water it, what you feed it etc.
I tell all of them “dont try to wrap your head around all this at once or you’ll loose interest.”

In my opinion the number one thing i try to pass along is “learning how to make good Compost tea”. There’s tea and there’s good tea; it’s simple enough for anyone to master and along the way you will be building up the microbe population in your ground. Those little buggers are your friend. You hear people talk a-lot about feeding the soil not the plant, this is what they are telling you.
 

akroberts

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jan 3, 2024
Messages
378
Reaction score
1,212
Points
135
Location
Northern California
I've heard of the tea but didn't get the real down low on how to make it but I can always ask Google. I'm not trying to do everything all at once but I really need to get a serious hold on the plan for the garden. I know I want to fence it all in because of the stray cats and the neighbors' chickens. I'm just really tired of my garden only doing good one day and crappy sorry the next day.
 

flowerbug

Garden Master
Joined
Oct 15, 2017
Messages
16,990
Reaction score
26,683
Points
427
Location
mid-Michigan, USoA
The heatwave that went for about 3 weeks or more took a toll on the garden this year and it sucked but next year will be better.

if heat and drought are an issue raised beds are not probably going to help without the added complications of needing more water or an irrigation system. :(
 

baymule

Garden Master
Joined
Mar 20, 2011
Messages
18,835
Reaction score
37,078
Points
457
Location
Trinity County Texas
You can use soaker hoses in your raised beds.

I used to get bags of leaves off the curb in the fall. I piled leaves in the coop and run up to 3 feet deep. Chickens loved it. They made tunnels, walked on top of the leaves and reduced them down to about 6 inches. I tossed garden trimmings in too. I cleaned the coop and run out 2-3 times a year and put it directly on the garden.

Here is an old thread from 2012 that shows my 1’x12’ green bean garden that was next to the driveway at the house I lived in for 30 years. There is a picture that shows my garden in the background, it was a strip between the driveway and sidewalk. I divided it into beds with brick walkways. Hard dirt like a rock, but the chicken leaf compost made it rich and fertile.


This is the sweet potatoes I planted in my front yard garden in 2012. It has good pictures of my small strip of garden that produced a bounty of vegetables.

 

ducks4you

Garden Master
Joined
Sep 4, 2009
Messages
11,887
Reaction score
15,843
Points
417
Location
East Central IL, Was Zone 6, Now...maybe Zone 5
Over the years i’ve mentored several folks who developed an interest in Organic gardening. The more you study, the more your head will explode from all the good ideas and advice you will discover. Some of it may be helpful but some of it wont; a lot depends on your situation; what you grow, how you water it, what you feed it etc.
I tell all of them “dont try to wrap your head around all this at once or you’ll lose interest.”

In my opinion the number one thing i try to pass along is “learning how to make good Compost tea”. There’s tea and there’s good tea; it’s simple enough for anyone to master and along the way you will be building up the microbe population in your ground. Those little buggers are your friend. You hear people talk a-lot about feeding the soil not the plant, this is what they are telling you.
Being So physically immobile in 2024 I made some super good compost tea by inadvertently letting straw sit in a 5 gallon bucket, leaving it for a few months, come back to find it full of rainwater and ready to use! :lol:
 

ducks4you

Garden Master
Joined
Sep 4, 2009
Messages
11,887
Reaction score
15,843
Points
417
Location
East Central IL, Was Zone 6, Now...maybe Zone 5
I've heard of the tea but didn't get the real down low on how to make it but I can always ask Google. I'm not trying to do everything all at once but I really need to get a serious hold on the plan for the garden. I know I want to fence it all in because of the stray cats and the neighbors' chickens. I'm just really tired of my garden only doing good one day and crappy sorry the next day.
Try grass clippings in a bucket and do what I did and leave it for a good month to capture rainwater and cook.
 

akroberts

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jan 3, 2024
Messages
378
Reaction score
1,212
Points
135
Location
Northern California
I will try the grass clippings and rain water, if we get anymore. I'm trying to stay positive about the garden because I'm tired of going to the store and looking at the prices of just little small cans of vegetables and telling myself well it's either pay the BS price or do without vegetables. I love vegetables and going without isn't an option for me. My strawberry plants did really good this year. I mean considering the fact that this is the first year I've ever gotten them to grow instead of die, so I was very happy with that. I planted a bunch of different types of tomatoes and got almost nothing but cherry tomatoes. I only got about 5 hot peppers. Maybe 5 lbs of green beans and a big bunch of yellow squash, no zucchini 😫, and I did get some nice cushaws but that was about the best I got this year. Last year I was trying to find ways of making meals with my peppers, tomatoes and zucchini. It was crazy good though.
 

Latest posts

Top