Abundant Harvests - garden info

  • Abundant Harvests - garden info

    “Fertilizer” versus fertility

    The term “fertilizer” is undeniably a marketing person’s invention. Looking to the roots of the word, “fertilizer” should be that which actively creates fertility. But once we understand that the true sources of soil fertility are a rich abundance of…

  • Abundant Harvests - garden info

    The Bad and the Ugly: Bermuda grass

    Many garden books promote methods such as the “Lasagna method” where you layer materials such as cardboard, black plastic, compost, mulch, etc., onto grass and create a garden. In Southern California we must evaluate such recommendations carefully: Does the person…

  • Abundant Harvests - garden info

    Soil workhorses

    daikon radish (can break up clay), a favorite of Fukuoka burdock, similarly deep and powerful root chicory, burnet, lamb’s quarters, dock – described as “deep rooted” by John Jeavons (J2) beets, comfrey – accumulate potassium (J2) clover – accumulates nitrogen…

  • Abundant Harvests - garden info

    More compost

    Premade plastic bins are great for newbies and for those who demand a slick visual appearance in the garden. But ours is a culture which has been so completely out-of-touch with natural cycles and growing things; we have lost our…

  • Abundant Harvests - garden info

    Preparing a new garden

    What we did at the Community Garden at Holy Nativity: Removed lawn. Waited for regrowth. Dug out regrowth. (We did rototill after regrowth removal.) Marked the footpaths and defined growing spaces. We have variously used wood, plastic edging, and rocks,…

  • Abundant Harvests - garden info

    Moving the compost

    Q: What is hot and juicy and black and very, very stinky? A: My anaerobic compost trial. In the mid 1990’s when we lived in Orange County, composters were hard to come by. I read somewhere that you could compost…

  • Abundant Harvests - garden info

    Compost Happens

    Making compost isn’t rocket science. Admittedly, upon deep scientific analysis the soil web is highly complex. But Nature knows her stuff. Don’t get in her way. Work with her, embrace her as your partner, and she’ll ably handle all those…

  • Abundant Harvests - garden info

    Healthy garden soil is ALIVE.

    One teaspoon of compost may contain: 1 billion invisible bacteria(20,000 to 30,000 species of them),400 to 900 feet of fungal hyphae (thread-like structures), 10,000 to 50,000 protozoa, and 30 to 300 nematodes. Then there are algaes and slime molds, and…

  • Abundant Harvests - garden info

    Soil building

    Feed your soil. Your soil feeds your plants and your plants feed you. — Paraphrased from John Jeavons When I teach the soil-building session at my class series at the Community Garden at Holy Nativity, I always bring along my…