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Garden Basics: Tossed Salad

by: by foot

Fri Feb 06, 2009 at 21:13:47 PM PST


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( - promoted by Jill Richardson)

(Also available in another shade of green)

Some of the plots over at the Hawthorne Community Garden in north Boulder have incredibly rich, dark brown soil.  Others are reddish -- with little organic matter to mask the iron oxides that are in all the soil there.  Oftentimes, the plots with poorer soil are visibly lower than those with good soil.


Each  garden season, two things happen that entrench the disparity.


First, long-time successful gardeners add compost and aged manure, as well as turn under their cover crops, increasing the organic matter and overall fertility of the soil.


On the other hand, some of the more challenging plots may not have been given much in the way of soil amendments last year.  They may not have received much care, either, so they're covered with perennial weeds.  These plots can be made fertile, but it's a tough row to hoe, so to speak.


To make matters worse, there are plenty of plots on which the soil is actively impoverished each season.  In an effort to get a handle on weeds, gardeners may pull them up and throw 'em away -- along with all the soil attached to the roots.  That's a double loss:  soil and the organic matter in the weeds.  No wonder some plots are lower -- they literally have less soil.


This sweet clover, a common weed, has a huge taproot that helps gather nutrients from the soil.  When turned under, the decaying plant provides organic matter to the soil.  When a weed is discarded, part of the soil's fertility is discarded, too.

Granted, turning under perennial weed species is asking for trouble.  But it works quite well to throw the weeds on the surface of the soil and let them die in the sun.  Once that's done, they can be used as mulch and will eventually return to and enrich the soil.


Productive soil is the key to a bountiful garden.  If you're disposing of your weeds (especially if you're also throwing away the soil stuck to the roots), you're tossing out the ability of your garden to produce well.  You're tossing potential salads, really.

by foot :: Garden Basics: Tossed Salad
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It's time ... (4.00 / 7)
... we stopped treating our soil like dirt.

I love that bumper sticker.

OMG, bees are cool.


omg where do I get that bumper sticker? (4.00 / 5)
I need one. Amazing diary By Foot. LOVE IT! But the title... LOL. Could be interpreted as a little dirty.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
Bumper stickers ... (4.00 / 4)
... I don't know where, but I'd like to know.  I just spent the better part of an hour looking for one online.  

I did, however, find a 'Soil Scientists for McCain/Palin' sticker.  Go figure.

Dirty title?  Oh goodness me.

I'm shocked.  Shocked!

OMG, bees are cool.


[ Parent ]
ok, ok i'm pot calling the kettle black (4.00 / 3)
i get it.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
soil technicians more like it (4.00 / 4)
soil scientists, my hind foot (so to speak).

I have a fair amount of easement around my place that I don't cultivate as it doesn't belong to me and the city can cut it whenever they want. Meanwhile I'm expected to maintain it, at least minimally (Catch-22 there). So I just let it grow wild, and from spring through the beginning of the summer monsoon I like to selectively take out the "weeds," promote others (with a little water when it's 110oF), sometimes throw in some wildflower seeds. I hit it with the weed whacker a few times in the late summer and early fall and that's it.

As a result, I have a wildflower meadow that gets better every year, while the people who religiously mow their easements have not much more than bare dirt. Moral of the story: if you're not going to put anything in, think twice about taking anything out.

"If God were to appear to starving people, he would not dare to appear in any other form than food." - Mahatma Gandhi


[ Parent ]
Particularly dandelions, excellent in salads. (4.00 / 5)
You're tossing potential salads, really.


Sic Transit Gloria Locavore!



To say nothing ... (4.00 / 6)
... of lamb's quarters, amaranth, and purslane!

OMG, bees are cool.

[ Parent ]
Leave the weeds... (4.00 / 6)
only if you cut them before they set seeds.  Let them go to seed before you cut and you'll be miserable.  One year of seeds means seven years of weeding.  So says the organic gardener.

Amen to that (4.00 / 4)
I have burdock and thistles everywhere and try hard to dig them out before they go to seed. But I always miss a few. Miserable is certainly the word!

[ Parent ]
Definitely so. (4.00 / 4)
Never, oh never ever, we should say to new gardeners, never let 'em get to that point.

On the other hand, I like the extra organic matter and/or mulch so much that I raid the piles of stuff other people have set aside to throw away.

When I picked up my first plot, it had truly godawful thistle and bindweed issues.  But, as soon as they showed their leaves, that Spring, I dug them out a foot deep.  And kept doing so, since they sure weren't done yet!  But, it really only took a season to get rid of them, and their bodies went straight back into the soil after dying in the sun for a few weeks.

OMG, bees are cool.


[ Parent ]
Amen and A Woman (4.00 / 5)
I say, but unfortunately, in my experiences working urban community plots in Chicago and Des Moines I found that this sort of radical thinking tends to create a problem. I have found there is invariably a "garden nazi" who is more concerned about the problem of aesthetics created by leaving weeds lying there dying in the sun, than the nutrient value inherent in turning them back under for soil development.   Why do they put garbage cans right next to the plots for us to use, after all?

Nature's messy, ain't it? (4.00 / 3)
Personally, I hate to see stuff growing in neat little rows, spread (unnecessarily) wide apart, with tons of lovely soil between rows sitting uncovered in the sun.

Reminds me of little rows of tombstones.

Which is what I'd like to say to detractors ...

OMG, bees are cool.


[ Parent ]
I hoe em under (4.00 / 3)
when they first pop up. If you cultivate the soil around each plant and bury the little weeds, you get happy plants with less weeds. It is a bit of a pain on those super hot and humid days, but it works pretty well.

do you ever try mulch (4.00 / 3)
to limit the amt of sunlight the weed seeds get?

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
I mulch some, and use (4.00 / 4)
dried cut grass after the lawn has been mowed. The vegetable garden is pretty massive. We also rototill between the rows before the plants get too big.

Grass clippings ... Yum! (4.00 / 4)
My soil loves them!  Two years ago I house-sat for a friend, who had a big lawn.  I had to mow, but I didn't mind.  I ate those clippings all winter in the form of leeks, for which the clippings had been summer mulch.

OMG, bees are cool.

[ Parent ]
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