It's the same problem we talked about.
It's the same problem we talked about.
"There are no finger prints under water."
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"When law and morality contradict each other, the citizen has the cruel alternative of either losing his moral sense or losing his respect for the law." -Frederic Bastiat
"I am a conservative. Quite possibly I am on the losing side; often I think so. Yet, out of a curious perversity I had rather lose with Socrates, let us say, than win with Lenin."
― Russell Kirk, Author of The Conservative Mind
I'll send you a pm about it, maybe. The pictures are of my yard with a 43'x5' box painted in the grass where I plan to build the raised bed. Once it's done I'd like some direction add to how to prep it for seasoning over the winter, then get some ideas of how a garden should flow as far as what to plant and where.
"There are no finger prints under water."
When you first posted I could see the pictures but now I cannot.
Okay, let's try these pictures again since I've made some progress.
This is what our yard used to look like. I've torn out nearly all the foliage as it was just too much to manage. This is the progress I've made so far. I'm trying to finish up the garden this year so I can fill it with dirt on top of all the branches, leaves, consumables, dog crap, etc I have in there. I want to fill it with dirt, stir it up, and let it sit all winter/spring. Then rototill it and put a layer of top soil or something before I plant a garden. I'd really like some tips from you guys, as I've never really tried to garden before. Let's check out the pictures.
**I was quoted $3,000 to remove all the foliage in the backyard and juniper bushes in the front yard. I bought a Ryobi Sawzall for $60 instead. What looks like a line of bushes in front the new fence in the picture above is what was left of a mature grape vine that I had cut down the year before. That's how much it grew back without the scaffold.
Found these grapes near the ground when I tore out the vine, for the second time.
I traced my sprinklers so I could see how much room I had for a raised bed garden. I didn't want to try and level the yard and a garden seemed like a better use of space.
I made a couple different draws of ideas and asked my wife to pick one. She liked the idea of multiple boxes so she could access them easier. We ended up with something in between.
The last photos are from today. I've gotten more of the trim up, but it got too dark to take a photo. I really need to button up the sides so I can start just filling up the whole box with sticks and leaves and junk in a hugelkultur/compost hybrid. I'll get a photo from the roof later so you can see how the gardens connect along the back.
Each of the three boxes is roughly 10'x5'. I'm going to put the chicken coop on top of the left cubby (middle of the last photo). I have some sprinklers that I'm going to pave over in another part of the yard, and had a fantasy of using that circuit to make a garden drip line or something, but that's all way outside my level of experience. As I said in the beginning, I'd like some planting ideas and general tips on how to plant a garden (what to plant and where, etc). This is way larger of a garden than I ever thought I'd have, especially considering the very small size of our yard (1/6th of an acre). I'm a bit concerned that if this garden is successful that we'll have way more stuff than we can use. What do you think?
Last edited by Irving; 12-04-2015 at 19:42.
"There are no finger prints under water."
That looks awesome. You can grow some serious food in that space. You can't grow too much. Can, dehydrate, ferment, barter and just give extra away.
I'm pretty much a novice gardener myself, so no advice except that you need to save all the chicken crap - compost GOLD.
I got the hugelkultur idea from your thread. While I paid someone ($300) to haul away all those cut down trees, I still had some left over yard waste. I knew I wasn't going to get around to building this very soon (heck I'm still not done) and didn't want it sitting around all year. I'm going to need a lot of fill dirt as well, and the only way to get it back there is with a wheel barrow. The gap between the fences is very high and the neighbor's dog gets in. I've got her mostly blocked off now, and the fill dirt will finish things off, but I can't have her coming into my yard if I'm going to be having chickens.
"There are no finger prints under water."
Bit of a repost from the chicken thread, but the garden is pretty much completed with the exception of the sides. Thinking about sacrificing one box per year as a chicken run, with the idea of rotating the run each year. Thoughts?
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"There are no finger prints under water."
Watched this film called Back To Eden tonight. It is about gardening in a way that uses little to no active watering. The reference to Eden is directly related to the Bible, so there is a significant amount of Bible reference. The actual video is somewhat boring and repetitive, but I felt that the method seemed sound and the information very useful. The whole idea is to mimic nature when growing things. I found the website and the full documentary is posted online. Hope this information helps someone.
http://www.backtoedenfilm.com/
Last edited by Irving; 12-02-2015 at 00:49.
"There are no finger prints under water."
Got two Focus loads of free deadwood from a neighbor today. I noticed that a big branch had fallen out of their tree during the last round of high winds. I drove by their house every day till I caught someone outside to see if I could clean up the branch for her. She was pretty happy to have someone come get it.
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"There are no finger prints under water."