kratos015
Well-Known Member
Made another woodchip run today. I'll be making woodchip runs pretty much every day for the next month until my entire backyard is covered in them. I will be covering my entire yard; beds, native dirt, and all with a 1ft layer of woodchip mulch. Possibly even more.
Winter will be here very soon, and in another 10 days my nights will be back down to the low 50s again. This mulch will be game changing for me. The sunlight will be hitting 6+ inches of woodchips, which will then absorb the heat and transfer it below down to my soil to warm things up during the night. The composting process happening in the soil and the woodchips will also provide heat for the soil. Lots of it. This, and the hoops should ensure my medical grow survives during the winter this year.
Now that I got the woodchips today, I was able to "repurpose" my rows. What do I mean by that?
You can see how there are two "rows" there, individual holes filled with the soil I made in the first post. The holes here are smaller than the ones that had my 6ft medical plants (15g), these ones only have ~5g of soil in the holes. The roots will actually grow out of these holes and into the native dirt. In fact, here's a picture of that exact thing.
If you zoom in on the photo, you can notice the roots of the weed plant not only grew through the native dirt, but it found its way into the adjacent hole that once had the bell pepper in it. As a result of doing this, I've effectively turned my native dirt into part of the soil web. Remember, roots/rhizosphere is where the bulk of the action happens. Sure, microbes can exist outside of the rhizosphere, but certainly not to the extent of how they can thrive in the rhizosphere of a plant.
I've also done so with minimal pre-made soil used. I did not need to fill a 2x8 row with soil, I only had to fill 4-5 holes with 5g of soil. Way less cost, with the same results.
The wood chips on top of the the native dirt will soon become a mixture of compost and native dirt for me to dig up and repeat the process with. I want to expand without having to buy and make more soil. I will be attempting to grow in nothing but compost and dirt by this time next year.
Before
and after (I'll take another in the morning)
Hoping the plants don't mind the transplanting. I tried with one yesterday to test, and it took well, so the others should do fine. Problem is, they weren't fully rootbound in the geo-pots.
I've noticed mixed results with transplants when I'd accidentally break the root ball. However, the depth of the soil web here is massive. My guess is that plants survive transplant shock depending on how much life there is in the soil. It is mind-boggling how deep the roots get in the ground here, even with only 5g of pre-made soil. Imagine all of those roots combining their rhizospheres with not just one another, but also combining with the rhizospheres with the trees in your yard.
Eventually, the entire underground of your land can be a soil web with proper planning. Once this happens, you can plant practically anything in the ground and it'll grow if there are no temp related issues from my climate. This nearly 1ft layer of mulch I just applied will help me deal with the climate from now on, I believe.
For those of you wondering about disturbing the microbes by yanking root balls up like this. A few things about that. Sure, it is ideal to just cut the plant by the stem and plant your new plant next to the stem. However, this isn't always practical. Sure, this will work perfect with seeds up to solo cups, but even a 1g pot will need a hole, let alone a 2g-5g pot. I find that yanking the rootball always leaves me with the perfect sized hole for transplanting. Think about every plant you've yanked from the ground. Damn near perfect hole for your new transplant almost every time.
And about the microbes? The 3-5 gallons of soil web being dug up is absolutely nothing compared to how large the web as a whole is. Definitely not the biggest deal.
And finally, repurposed this jalapeno bed that didn't really do much of anything.
Plants haven't done much there, too much shade. I considered trimming the tree to provide more light to this area, but would rather have it grow extra to help me more in the summer.
I don't want to work against the trees. I would be so fucked without them and things would look much different. So, I'll just start a fuckton of greens here.
I dug up all the soil from the hole and spread it out where you can see. Woodchips have been dumped for a "pathway". I can finally access all of that empty space in the tomatillo bed, more space for greens. I will be covering any unused native dirt with woodchips. The entire yard eventually.
Things get busier and busier by the month it seems. The rate of growth is exponential. 1-2 hours in the garden has quickly turned into 3-4. I'm enjoying the ride.
Winter will be here very soon, and in another 10 days my nights will be back down to the low 50s again. This mulch will be game changing for me. The sunlight will be hitting 6+ inches of woodchips, which will then absorb the heat and transfer it below down to my soil to warm things up during the night. The composting process happening in the soil and the woodchips will also provide heat for the soil. Lots of it. This, and the hoops should ensure my medical grow survives during the winter this year.
Now that I got the woodchips today, I was able to "repurpose" my rows. What do I mean by that?
You can see how there are two "rows" there, individual holes filled with the soil I made in the first post. The holes here are smaller than the ones that had my 6ft medical plants (15g), these ones only have ~5g of soil in the holes. The roots will actually grow out of these holes and into the native dirt. In fact, here's a picture of that exact thing.
If you zoom in on the photo, you can notice the roots of the weed plant not only grew through the native dirt, but it found its way into the adjacent hole that once had the bell pepper in it. As a result of doing this, I've effectively turned my native dirt into part of the soil web. Remember, roots/rhizosphere is where the bulk of the action happens. Sure, microbes can exist outside of the rhizosphere, but certainly not to the extent of how they can thrive in the rhizosphere of a plant.
I've also done so with minimal pre-made soil used. I did not need to fill a 2x8 row with soil, I only had to fill 4-5 holes with 5g of soil. Way less cost, with the same results.
The wood chips on top of the the native dirt will soon become a mixture of compost and native dirt for me to dig up and repeat the process with. I want to expand without having to buy and make more soil. I will be attempting to grow in nothing but compost and dirt by this time next year.
Before
and after (I'll take another in the morning)
Hoping the plants don't mind the transplanting. I tried with one yesterday to test, and it took well, so the others should do fine. Problem is, they weren't fully rootbound in the geo-pots.
I've noticed mixed results with transplants when I'd accidentally break the root ball. However, the depth of the soil web here is massive. My guess is that plants survive transplant shock depending on how much life there is in the soil. It is mind-boggling how deep the roots get in the ground here, even with only 5g of pre-made soil. Imagine all of those roots combining their rhizospheres with not just one another, but also combining with the rhizospheres with the trees in your yard.
Eventually, the entire underground of your land can be a soil web with proper planning. Once this happens, you can plant practically anything in the ground and it'll grow if there are no temp related issues from my climate. This nearly 1ft layer of mulch I just applied will help me deal with the climate from now on, I believe.
For those of you wondering about disturbing the microbes by yanking root balls up like this. A few things about that. Sure, it is ideal to just cut the plant by the stem and plant your new plant next to the stem. However, this isn't always practical. Sure, this will work perfect with seeds up to solo cups, but even a 1g pot will need a hole, let alone a 2g-5g pot. I find that yanking the rootball always leaves me with the perfect sized hole for transplanting. Think about every plant you've yanked from the ground. Damn near perfect hole for your new transplant almost every time.
And about the microbes? The 3-5 gallons of soil web being dug up is absolutely nothing compared to how large the web as a whole is. Definitely not the biggest deal.
And finally, repurposed this jalapeno bed that didn't really do much of anything.
Plants haven't done much there, too much shade. I considered trimming the tree to provide more light to this area, but would rather have it grow extra to help me more in the summer.
I don't want to work against the trees. I would be so fucked without them and things would look much different. So, I'll just start a fuckton of greens here.
I dug up all the soil from the hole and spread it out where you can see. Woodchips have been dumped for a "pathway". I can finally access all of that empty space in the tomatillo bed, more space for greens. I will be covering any unused native dirt with woodchips. The entire yard eventually.
Things get busier and busier by the month it seems. The rate of growth is exponential. 1-2 hours in the garden has quickly turned into 3-4. I'm enjoying the ride.
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