Thread: My scenario.
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Old 02-05-2003, 05:20 AM
lummy
 
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Default My scenario.

I have heard people who just lay a bag of potting soil, good variety and
slit on the top and plant inside the bag. make sure you have drainage holes
underneath. that would be very easy.
deb
"Pat Kiewicz" wrote in message
...
Richard Periut said:
snip description of lot
I have had good success with individual pots in which I've grown
Habanero peppers, some tomatoes, and some cukes.

But I want to expand this year, and grow more stuff.

Any suggestions? Should I raise a bed, and if so, can I do it on top of
the grass? Or should I have to rent a tiller and till the whole thing?
My soil seems sort of sandy and compact.


My personal preference would be to strip the sod, let it dry out a bit,
and shake out as much of the soil clinging to it as you can manage.
Tilling sod into sandy soil was a bad experience for me -- way, way
to much survived. (Plants that run, run far and fast through sand.)

It would be best to get a soil test before you do anything else. That
would let you know what your limiting nutrients are, and give a pointer
to what mineral amendments might do your soil some good. For
instance, my own sandy soil was short of potassium but OK on
phosphorous, and maybe a little shy of calcium and slightly acid.
I add a lot greensand and a little bit of dolomitic limestone when
I start new beds. These might be appropriate amendments for you;
a soil test would help determine that.

(I must admit, I only got the soil test *after* a poor first-year veggie

garden.
The soil here was much different than where I last lived. The soil test

helped
me fix things.)

If your soil is sandy all the way down, all you have to do is till it.

Till in as
much compost as you can get, and whatever other amendments are

appropriate.
If you have a sandy topsoil over a more clay-like subsoil, you might want

to
consider double-digging. It's a lot of hard work, but can be enormously

beneficial.
Do it right (and treat your soil well afterward) and it only has to be

done once.

http://hcs.osu.edu/mgonline/Herbaceo...02/07gen02.htm

(I renovated a large flower garden for a dear friend who had a thin layer

of
top soil over heavy clay. It was heavy labor to double dig that, but the

results
were spectacular.)

--
Pat in Plymouth MI

Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(attributed to Don Marti)