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Old 25-03-2011, 08:35 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Bob Hobden Bob Hobden is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,056
Default Soil preparation



"Mike Lyle" wrote ...

Vegegrower wrote:


Up till now I've digging over every year prior to planting veg plants.

However I've been advised that this upsets the natural layers of the
soil and a more beneficial course of action would be to spread compost,
perhaps with some manure added, over the surface late in the year and
let the worms take compost down in to the soil during the winter.
Shortly before planting veg, spike the soil with a fork to get air down
into the depth.


Has anyone got an opinion on this?


I see everybody's a bit backward in coming forward, so I'll be the
fool who rushes in where angels fear to tread. If your soil is
reasonably good, you could try it on half the plot for three years and
see. You need a hell of a lot of compost, and I didn't have brilliant
success on a heavy clay, so I reverted to the annual forking over.
Once a no-digging plot is established, it should really aerate itself,
as the worms and things are supposed to keep the soil open. Arrange
the plot in narrow strips so you never, ever, have to walk on it: you
don't need raised beds, mind, just ones you can reach into easily.

...............................................

I also think it depends on your soil type. Last spring I was unable to dig
our potato plot (rain and operation) and just spread manure over it and
planted the spuds through that. Over the season the soil compacted into
concrete and when I did dig up the spuds I can't say I noticed any increase
in worms, slugs damage yes but worms no, and it was hard work.
This year, with this wonderful spring, I've now got all available soil dug
and the manure well rotovated in this year's potato bed so you can see where
my thoughts lie.
Can image if you grow on sandy loam then a no dig approach might be
beneficial but on clay you will get solid concrete which will not drain etc.
--
Regards
Bob Hobden
W.of London. UK