Coop poop and compost will help also. Both can be free with just a little effort on your part. We have a gal at work who collects all the coffee grounds for her worm bed. Anything to get organics in the soil to help hold the moisture.


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Coop poop and compost will help also. Both can be free with just a little effort on your part. We have a gal at work who collects all the coffee grounds for her worm bed. Anything to get organics in the soil to help hold the moisture.
Living more and more frugal each month. But it would take a fortune to do something to get my soil to support a garden. Sandy ...sandy soil. We have 2 acres and basically cut the wire grass! Now I'm about to get a chicken coop finished out of recycled materials with the help of a friend. At our ages....we are where we are....!![]()
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The soil here is SOOOOOOOO bad!!!
Great for tomatoes, but that's about it.
We bought 8 pick up truck loads of composted horse manure which has worked wonders in our raised beds, but once tilled into the ground in the other big garden it pretty much washed away. The chicken poo is great for corn because it needs all the nitrogen.
I've yet to be able to grow any fruit successfully (melons, strawberries, other berries, citrus, etc.)
But we spent a small fortune putting in all our gardens and you've seen how small of an area I'm working with, I can't imagine for 2 acres!
We are trying to grow a garden but being on top of a mountain we have more rock than anything. They grow faster than the garden!!
I have developed a whole lot more compassion for farmers since trying to grow stuff. We went from a temperate climate on chalk to clay in the sub tropics - both are hard. So desert, mountain, chalk (cold for most of the year), clay (dry & hot unless it's flooding) ... Everyone should try to grow just one thing to eat! Even if you live on the top floor in a flat.
We also live on a mountain top with more rocks than soil, but there is much you can do. We bought a few bails of wheat straw and after spreading it over our garden area, we discovered that it will germinate its own wheat plants which we then turned into more compost. This is our second year of doing this, and this time, I am leaving a patch of growing wheat to mature. For an experiment, I want to try harvesting the wheat, separating it from its chaff, and grinding it into flour. I’ll bet the wheat straw will help jtbass2756’s sandy soil quite a bit.We are trying to grow a garden but being on top of a mountain we have more rock than anything. They grow faster than the garden!!
We also live on a mountain top with more rocks than soil, but there is much you can do. We bought a few bails of wheat straw and after spreading it over our garden area, we discovered that it will germinate its own wheat plants which we then turned into more compost. This is our second year of doing this, and this time, I am leaving a patch of growing wheat to mature. For an experiment, I want to try harvesting the wheat, separating it from its chaff, and grinding it into flour. I’ll bet the wheat straw will help jtbass2756’s sandy soil quite a bit.
A while back, on this thread there were folks who tried planting their garden right in the straw bail. I tried it with some success, but I wasn’t very impressed. I have better luck mixing the straw in our existing soil - which, by the way, is a great deal better than when we first started. You wouldn't believe anything would grow in it. The earth has amazing recuperative powers.
Absolutely, I am growing slips for my organic sweet potoatoe pile one side of my house. I also regrow green onions in my kitchen in a jar.![]()
Not a gardener, yet but getting there. *always learning*