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The thread on turning your soil a deep rich crumbly brown with little green thingies sticking through - like in all the Home Improvement mags.
6 responses total.
Compost all your kitchen scraps in a corner of the yard. It probably goes faster in a warmer climate. Every time before you plant dig up the soil and sprinkle some sieved compost over it and dig that in. Find some farmers who don't want their manure. It is easier here. SOmeone offered peacock and rabbit manure. Compost it first. We bought a truckload of 'Michigan peat' - very low quality peat. I don't know if India has any of that. We also added a truckload of sand to make the soil more porous. After 20 years we have good soil. It used to be solid grey clay, left by runoff from the glaciers. Some areas of town are mostly sand. Your next problem will be to pull up all the green thingies that you did not plant. You can buy or beg bales of hay (better than straw) and mulch your seedlings heavily after they come up, which retains water and discourages weeds. Our big problem here is not enough sun. Sometimes we need to water. It also helps not to plant things too close together. And to start them indoors two months before the last frost (end of May) and to cover them with a tarp whenever frost is predicted all of October. You won't need to do that.
I'm thinking, plant vetch and alfalfa and then 1 year later trample it under and replant - less work. The roots will loosen the soil and grow quite deep - 5 feet (tap root). I've got compost pits started - One thing i notice is that they take ages to fill up! The pits are small (1x1x1 foot), many, and strategically scattered. I planted potatoe in it, and once the vine had grown a bit i started filling it with veggie matter. Hopefully the compost and the potatoes will be ready simultaneously. We get cow-dung and hay here but it's getting to be a pain to find, because they city has grown so much! My dad used to keep poltry and rabbits, but the rabbits died and the hen fly all over the place and chew up the plants. (Planting too close) I always do that and then regret it soundly, when the plant starts to bend away. Also, sometimes i dig a pit and then fill it to the brim or i dig in a uneven place because I'm lazy - makes it very hard to water! I'm planning to experiment with bamboo if i can't find any vetch. There's a nursery close by which has bamboo (not sure what type running or clumping). If i plant that and let it grow - it should generate tons of green leafy matter. The problem is that it's fairly shallow rooting. But it's easily available :) and i can use it as mulch and to break up my soil :)
Alfalfa and vetch will add nitrogen to the soil. What does bamboo add? Around here we pile all the compost into one big pile to keep the center warmer so it will decompose faster. Your climate is different. Chickens supposedly will eat a lot of predatory insects from your garden. Can they jump or fly over a low fence, to keep them away from plants that you do not want eaten?
I'm worried about them flying into the neighbors fence :) I don't mind my plants getting chewed up a bit. Well, bamboo generates a mother-load of leaves. That is N2 and nutrients.. i mean, the earth is huge and deep and filled with goodies, but i want all that in the top 3 feet.. plus you can eat bamboo and make tasty pickle out of it.
Most plants do not fix nitrogen from the air. Legumes do. Bamboo probably does not, though it will add organic matter. Do you eat the bamboo when very young?
yup, bamboo shoots. It's got to be soaked in water and stuff to extract any poison in it.
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