TopVeg – growing veg,fruit&herbs

June 6, 2009

Lawn mowings make good mulch

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — TopVeg @ 6:54 pm

The lawns have grown since the last rains, and the lawn clippings make a useful mulch.

* Grass clippings form a mat if spread thickly, which is no problem round trees, as it helps to conserve the moisture.
* Grass makes a good vegetable mulch and it is rich in nitrogen. But spread thinly for vegetables.
* It is probably safer to put all the clippings on the compost heap, and use them next year when they have rotted down.

Remember NOT to use lawn mowings for a mulch if the grass has been treated with a herbicide.

May 16, 2009

Wool Shoddy

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — TopVeg @ 7:27 am

Wool Shoddy is a byproduct of the wool textile industry.

Shoddy used to be used by farmers to add organic matter to the soil.  In the 1950s, the brussell sprout fields of Bedfordshire were cheered up with the different coloured wools making up the shoddy which was put on the sprout land.

The advantages of using wool shoddy in the vegetable garden are:
* slow release fertiliser
* completely biodegradable
* rich organic source of nitrogen
* other elements beneficial to
* plant development
* slug deterrent

Wool shoddy makes an ideal mulch which acts as a:

* weed suppression
* soil moisture retention
* soil structure improver

Beneficial results from the use of wool mulch have been achieved in a range of trials on vegetables.

Greater top growth on wool mulched broad beans gave a heavier crop yield, showing that even nitrogen fixing legumes can benefit from an application of nitrogen rich pellets.
In a root crop – beetroot – using wool pellets allows earlier cropping. On the trial site wool mulched plants produced mature roots of harvestable size earlier than without by weeks.

Shoddy can be used in pellet form, where the pellets:

* act as a self felting mulch
* absorb and retain moisture; ideal to mix with soils and composts
* cut down evaporation; major reduction in watering costs
* help suppress weeds
* bio-degrade over 6 to 14 months, releasing organic nutrients
* are ideal as a water retainer and soil improver
* are natural mulch and soil conditioners
* protect soil
* are ideal for vegetable beds, container pots and hanging baskets

April 22, 2009

Water Newly Planted Trees

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — TopVeg @ 2:08 pm

Water and mulch newly planted trees, to avoid wasting all the effort spent digging the hole and planting the tree.

If the soil around the tree is very dry, it will need several buckets of water. Once the soil is wet, cover it with lawn mowings or another mulch.
When the tree has been mulched it will not need watering so often.

Trees planted before Christmas have had time to develop roots and benefit from the winter rains.

Trees planted after Christmas, nearer to the Spring, have an increasing problem getting established.

* The disturbed soil in the planting hole will dry out easily. There will be problems with capillary action, and water will not be able to rise up from the subsoil.
* The tree will want to grow in the spring.
* As bare rooted plants come out of the winter, they will start to produce roots. But the disturbed soil will not provide a suitable environment for rooting.
* The disturbed soil will not have sufficient water and nutrients to enable the tree to keep growing.

Therefore the newly planted tree will need extra water.

Scrape away a bit of soil from under the tree with a hand. Squeeze the soil between finger and thumb. If the soil stays together it is wet enough.

To check if a mulched plant needs water, move some mulch out of the way, to feel the soil beneath.

It is easier to keep the soil topped up little and often. Once the soil has dried out, it is more difficult to wet because the water runs through the gaps in the soil particles. So it takes more water to wet baked-out soil.

It is very difficult to over-water a growing tree, as the water will just drain away.

When wet soil is mulched with lawn clippings, the moisture is retained.
Mulching is the key to a healthy, well-grown tree.

Look After New Trees

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — TopVeg @ 2:02 pm

Give young trees the care and attention they deserve, to ensure a payback on the hard work undertaken in planting them.

* Keep the soil around them moist
* Mulch around the base of the tree
* Check the stake is secure so that the tree does not rock and dislodge its roots
* Heel the tree in again. To heel in, press the soil down around the roots with the heel of the foot. This will ensure root to soil contact.

When the tree is planted in wet soil, the disturbed soil will dry out and shrink. The soil then becomes loose. Then the roots are not in sufficient contact with the soil to take up sufficient moisture.

April 18, 2009

Newspaper as a Mulch

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — TopVeg @ 12:39 pm

Black-ink newspaper pages will conserve moisture in the vegetable garden, according to researchers at the University of Georgia.  The newsprint  works in two ways:

    * holding moisture
    * acting as a barrier to prevent moisture loss.

Two or three sheets of newspaper is ideal, any more will prevent water getting through to the roots.

Method of newspaper mulching:

    * Place 2 or 3 sheets of newspaper on the soil, around the vegetables.
    * Thoroughly wet the paper.
    * Cover the paper with 3-5inches of fine mulch. Coarse mulches are better than nothing, but a fine one will conserve the moisture better. A crumbly, well rotted straw or compost is good.

 The mulch:

    * holds the newspaper down
    * helps hold the moisture in the soil
    * prevents evaporation from the soil surface
    * prevents weed growth

Coloured newsprint, comics and magazine sections should not be used around vegetables. Although most coloured inks are now made with food colour dyes, and they will not kill the plants, E- numbers in food colourants do have their problems. It is better not to risk having any additives on the vegetables, so stick with the black-ink newspapers.

March 3, 2009

Mulch soft fruits.

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — TopVeg @ 7:39 am

Mulch soft fruits with organic matter.

A mulch is something which covers the ground completely, in a thick layer, without any gaps.

  • Place the mulch round fruit bushes and trees.
  • Leave a slight gap around the base of the fruit plant to avoid fungal growth.
mulch-on-raspberries

mulch-on-raspberries

Organic matter is stuff which was once alive, such as:

* lawn clippings
* straw
* farmyard manure
* wood chippings

The benefits of mulch are:

* stops the soil drying out
* gives nutrients to plants
* encourages worms
* reduces weeds
* keeps the soil an even temperature
* saves work

Applying mulch to soft fruits now will improve the yield of berries in the summer.

March 1, 2009

What to do in the vegetable garden in March

Filed under: calendar — Tags: , , — TopVeg @ 5:09 am

Everyone wants to crack on in the vegetable garden in March, as the birds begin to sing and the days get longer – but the ground is still cold, and will be until it dries up. So don’t go mad and sow all your seeds – just put a few in and leave the rest until the soil has dried out.

  • Sow:
    early beetroot, carrots, lettuce, radish,spring onions, perpetual spinach directly into the ground
  • peas & broad beans in pots
  • celery in trays on warm window sill & keep moist
  • leeks in a tray to thin later and leave under glass
  • plant onion sets, garlic, Jerusalem artichokes & shallots if not already in
  • plant early potatoes as soon as the ground is dry enough

Crop:
Finish harvesting cabbages, leeks, parsnips, kale and sprouting broccoli.

Other jobs:

  • mulch soft fruits with organic matter
  • lift mint every 2 years & divide
  • hoe weeds regularly before they get too big
  • be on constant alert for slugs

May 11, 2007

Mulching the Mulberry Tree

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — TopVeg @ 1:51 pm

In January 2007 we planted a Mulberry  Tree (latin name is Morus nigra) to celebrate the anniversary of William Wilberforce’s abolition of the slave trade.

The Mulberry has just started to break its buds. It is not unusual for newly planted trees to have a slow start. The roots will be slowly developing in their new home.

The tree has been mulched with grass clippings, which can be seen at the base of the tree.

mulched mulberry

mulched-mulberry

mulched-mulberry

The tree is being kept moist by watering when necessary. The next job is to give it a decent stake, to anchor it firmly in the ground, and to help the Mulberry Tree grow straight.

March 20, 2007

Tips for Cold Spell

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — TopVeg @ 11:32 am

Take precautions to avoid a setback in the garden during a cold spell:

    * move tender potted plants inside
    * cover delicate plants in the garden with polythene, cloches, old
      curtains, conifer branches, horticultural fleece
    * delay buying plants
    * mulch  to keep warmth in soil

Work the soil:

    * dry, cold conditions are ideal for cultivating – soil structure
      will be maintained
    * prepare seed beds, by knocking the soil into small crumbs

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