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#1
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I know, off topic but I do get good advice from this group. I will take the
mud slinging,,, hope it is mixed in with your regular good information. I have a back yard garden, I live in Southern Ontario Canada. I roto till it and we grow vegetables like tomato, peppers, My friends were telling me I should mix in some leaves, my garden is about 20 feet by 20 feet. I collected about 50 big bags of grinded up leaves and roto tilled them all into my garden. Very light and fluffy now and soft and full of broken down leaves, mostly Maple Leafs and some other varieties. My question is what should I do? Should I mix in manuer? or furtalizer? Should I do something with this mixture now? Will it be ok on its own after a few years ? will these leaves breakdown on their own? should I put more leaves in? I think 50 bags is a lot. Any advice or tips is much appreciated. Thank you 73s |
#2
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On 11/30/2011 3:10 PM, Tuuk wrote:
I know, off topic but I do get good advice from this group. I will take the mud slinging,,, hope it is mixed in with your regular good information. I have a back yard garden, I live in Southern Ontario Canada. I roto till it and we grow vegetables like tomato, peppers, My friends were telling me I should mix in some leaves, my garden is about 20 feet by 20 feet. I collected about 50 big bags of grinded up leaves and roto tilled them all into my garden. Very light and fluffy now and soft and full of broken down leaves, mostly Maple Leafs and some other varieties. My question is what should I do? Should I mix in manuer? or furtalizer? Should I do something with this mixture now? Will it be ok on its own after a few years ? will these leaves breakdown on their own? should I put more leaves in? I think 50 bags is a lot. Any advice or tips is much appreciated. Thank you 73s Check with your local county extension agent. |
#3
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" Tuuk" wrote in
: I know, off topic but I do get good advice from this group. I will take the mud slinging,,, hope it is mixed in with your regular good information. I have a back yard garden, I live in Southern Ontario Canada. I roto till it and we grow vegetables like tomato, peppers, My friends were telling me I should mix in some leaves, my garden is about 20 feet by 20 feet. I collected about 50 big bags of grinded up leaves and roto tilled them all into my garden. Very light and fluffy now and soft and full of broken down leaves, mostly Maple Leafs and some other varieties. My question is what should I do? Should I mix in manuer? or furtalizer? Should I do something with this mixture now? Will it be ok on its own after a few years ? will these leaves breakdown on their own? should I put more leaves in? I think 50 bags is a lot. Any advice or tips is much appreciated. Thank you 73s You might want to check with the good folks over at rec.gardens.edible. What I do is to leave the leaves on the garden untilled as mulch. In the spring I will roto-till them in. Let them sit for a few weeks, then test the soil to see if any amendments are needed. |
#4
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![]() " Tuuk" wrote in message ... I know, off topic but I do get good advice from this group. I will take the mud slinging,,, hope it is mixed in with your regular good information. I have a back yard garden, I live in Southern Ontario Canada. I roto till it and we grow vegetables like tomato, peppers, My friends were telling me I should mix in some leaves, my garden is about 20 feet by 20 feet. I collected about 50 big bags of grinded up leaves and roto tilled them all into my garden. Very light and fluffy now and soft and full of broken down leaves, mostly Maple Leafs and some other varieties. My question is what should I do? Should I mix in manuer? or furtalizer? Should I do something with this mixture now? Will it be ok on its own after a few years ? will these leaves breakdown on their own? should I put more leaves in? I think 50 bags is a lot. Any advice or tips is much appreciated. Thank you 73s Compost. It's one of the best "soil amendments" you can have. A composter can be built for a few dollars but you have to attend to it with moisture, aeration and/or tumbling. Google for "homemade composter" and see what others have built. Properly composted material will resemble ashes or dirt, depending on the texture of your source plants. The leaves will eventually break down on their own and sort of "self-compost" but you can speed the process with a little work. Mix in the compost and it replaces some fertilizers. Garden centers all sell soil test kits. The results of a test will suggest whether you need supplimental fertilizers. Manure can be acidic and may do more harm than good. If you compost it, too, it will be less acidic. Sal |
#5
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On 11/30/2011 3:10 PM, Tuuk wrote:
I know, off topic but I do get good advice from this group. I will take the mud slinging,,, hope it is mixed in with your regular good information. I have a back yard garden, I live in Southern Ontario Canada. I roto till it and we grow vegetables like tomato, peppers, My friends were telling me I should mix in some leaves, my garden is about 20 feet by 20 feet. I collected about 50 big bags of grinded up leaves and roto tilled them all into my garden. Very light and fluffy now and soft and full of broken down leaves, mostly Maple Leafs and some other varieties. My question is what should I do? Should I mix in manuer? or furtalizer? Should I do something with this mixture now? Will it be ok on its own after a few years ? will these leaves breakdown on their own? should I put more leaves in? I think 50 bags is a lot. Any advice or tips is much appreciated. Thank you 73s As one other poster suggested, check with your local agri-support folks. I'm from northern NY, FN24, and moved straight west to MN, EN34. When you are this far north you need to know exactly what climate range you are in, and then assume it's a half point to a point worse. Then your plants will usually survive. You are probably a fraction of a climate zone north of me unless you are tucked in between the ends of Erie and Ontario. 73 tom K0TAR |
#6
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On Sat, 03 Dec 2011 08:43:31 -0500, Tuuk wrote:
Yes, thanks all hams, yes, excellent advice. I don't want to put in a composting pile as I feel that might attract a lot of mice or animals as my neighbors have told me. I know the pile of leaves gets warm in the middle. One neighbor told me about nitrogen, my situation required nitrogen and the region here has a byproduct from our waste and they call it bio wastes and the farmers line up apparently for it. He said he can give me a couple pails but he says it is very potent or almost 95% nitrogen. And he says the ministry of environment wants to know about it and fill out a bunch of forms. I like the idea of a composter, easy to do, looks managable. Thanks again hams for the great advice. I know it is off topic but as I said, I get a lot of good advice from this group, the gardening groups are not active or attached to my news server. Much appreciated. 73s and happy holidays "Ozric Terminator" wrote in message ... Tuuk wrote: My question is what should I do? Should I mix in manuer? or furtalizer? Should I do something with this mixture now? Will it be ok on its own after a few years ? will these leaves breakdown on their own? should I put more leaves in? I think 50 bags is a lot. Any advice or tips is much appreciated. Thank you 73s The breakdown of leaves is a dfferent process than that of making compost and takes a lot longer. You should not add leaves to you soil but in time the worms will eat it all up. Use the leaves to make leaf ulch which you can then use on the surface, see http://www.hereandthere.org/making-m...om-leaves.html Turn it when it starts to get warm or you may end up with an ash pile. Any green waste (no sticks) will feed it. I used neighbors' lawn trimmings and leaves. I never needed any extra boosters. Only critters you get is earthworms. Their poop is the fertilizer. I think the nitrate may inhibit earthworms. Earthworm casting is the fertilizer you get from a succesful compost situation. Build in on the ground. |
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