Tiller First time with tiller

   / First time with tiller #11  
I've never tried it that way myself Bird. I've read cautions in several places against adding wood chips directly into the garden, but that may have been referring to where you were actively growing plants. Overwintering may allow them plenty of time to rot down before planting? I've got so many grass clippings this time of year that I'm running short of carbon sources to add to compost piles. Wood chips and sawdust work well there too!
 
   / First time with tiller #12  
if you do add the grass and the saw dust together it is OK, but do not add MUCH of either alone as they will bump the PH up or down depending on WHAT you add. composting them will stop that problem. as for adding SAND to the clay it will help but very little at a time and wait, what is actually BETTER is adding GYPSUM to the clay which binds to the clay and forms a sand like partical. this is better for the soil. drywall works well and if you can get some dropped off free from people who do it for a living (drywalling houses) ones that SCRAP OUT the houses, the scrap hunks are small and till in pretty well if tilled in while they are HARD, don't let them set & get soft very long as they then tend to NOT break appart as well. (found out the hard way I figured tilling int he soft board would be easier, boy was I wrong! I tilled in 3 pick up loads, (my brother does drywall hanging & finishing for a living) I loaded it up and got $ to get rid of it! /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif spread it out in single layers across the garden, left it set & rained on it for 3 days, tried tilling and it basically pulled ahead rather than chunking it up, tossed on NEW load and tilled it same day broke up into small fragments very fast & worked great. I kept back a bunch of small chunks & runners and laid them down between the rows, to walk on last year, worked out great!!! kept the weeds down and you could walk into a WET garden and not get muddy. last year was 1st year for the garden @ it's new location, this year we had 10 times the produce as we did last year!!! still picking cucumbers like mad the tomatos all seemed to not care for it very well, but then it dried out and baked them pretty good, the rains recently sure perked them up good though. they taste OK to me, but the woman says they are acidy... pickels oh boy are they good & sweet though! taters grew like snot, then got ate to the dirt in a weeks time by tater bugs, (I DON'T and WON't use sprays/dusts) must have picked & smashed 5000 of them buggers!. then the dang deer ate 3 rows of beans flat too! (now woman changed her stance on deer hunting! /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif darn weed water has to be cleaned now1! hahaha. we actually canned probably 25~30 qts of beans still ... same with the peas. stupid high winds wipped out my sweet corn, I got 8 ears only (still a few left) they seemed to have cross bread with the indian/ornimental corn I planted down wind of the sweet corn some how, tasted great just the same! /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif just a few blue marbled kernels, kind of dressed em up! lol. /forums/images/graemlins/tongue.gif

I got one volintier pumpkin which has 4 or 5 NICE pumkin fruits on the vines too... 3 are bigger than a beach ball and perfict round ones!

the RED taters did OK but the white are still growing, and have pushed them selves OUT of the dirt! not sure if the rain caused that or just the rapid groth? they are still going though...

Onions did REALLY well, peeled a RED one last week and cleared the house! man NEVER had an onion make you cry like that, but it wasn't hot or spicey tasting very good flavor, but man what a powerfull scent! planted red, white vedilias and yellow hots ones. not sure what a HOT one would have done! hahaha, got to dig them soon or else they are gonna rot in the ground... any pointers for drying them?

Mark M /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
   / First time with tiller #13  
WARNING! WARNING! Danger Will Robinson!

Adding drywall to soil as an amendment is an absolute NO NO! ESPECIALLY for growing vegetables for human consumption.
It was a while back that I researched this topic for myself so I do forget a lot of the details, but the manufacturers of drywall that I contacted directly recommend against it, even when the land use is not for raising crops for human consumption. IIRC there are certain additives for mould control and other toxins in modern drywall that make it risky stuff to use for this purpose. My own academic background is Biology, and I am an astute practicing environmentalist, like to recycle just about anything, and even I would not do this after doing the research that I did.
Just wanted to chime in in case anyone else was considering doing this. Gypsum specifically made as a soil amendment - YES, absolutely the right stuff for clay. Dry wall - NO.
- Brian.
 
   / First time with tiller #14  
Check with the local municipalities or waste management companies in your area to see if they compost yard waste. Land fills are getting full so fast that many areas have gone to separate pick up for yard waste that they compost and give away as a community service free or for a small fee. Around here the city dug two huge trenches that they dump yard waste after running them through a chipper. Every other year they doze out one of the pits for the next year and leave the compost for anyone who wants it. I take my tractor and 1 ton dump truck over and fill up whenever I can find the time. It has been a great amendment for our red clay soil.

MarkV
 
   / First time with tiller #15  
Out here we have a lot of clay, though it's not that pretty red stuff you guys in NC have, and it's usually so dry it's like bedrock. The quickest, easiest thing I did at our last house was to pick up some compost mix from the local landscape supply yard. It consisted of manure and pine bark chips. Pine bark is used out here extensively when planting trees - it supposedly breaks up clay when mixed in, and so far, I've had great luck getting trees established quickly by mixing in plenty of pine bark (very fine chips).

If you go that route, get the 'coolest' (as opposed to hot) compost mix they sell. You'll need to do at least 1/3 compost to 2/3 clay soil. Till it in real good this fall, then cover with grass clippings, etc. to sit over the winter. Then add all grass clippings, leaves, and kitchen organic leftovers you can get ahold of over the course of the fall and winter - I'd just dig holes and bury it in a few spots in the garden area, so it could break down.

Then come spring, till it again real good to get everything all mixed together, and you should have a decent garden soil to get started with. Keep in mind, that next spring, your garden soil may be a bit 'hot', and you'll notice it in some veggies, like tomatoes (they'll be a little bit more acidic), but the following year, it should be perfect. I ended up with some real dark brown, well draining, high quality soil after doing it that way, and it started out as a light tan, non-organic dead dirt. The only sand I ever added was when the weight bags got old and ratty after sitting in the pickup bed over the winter, so the sand amount was negligible - I really don't think you need to bother adding sand to the garden soil - a good organic soil will drain very well on it's own.

Just make sure you don't set your new garden soil down in a hole, or "container" of regular clay soil surrounding it, or all the water will end up sitting in the garden with no way of draining into the adjacent less porous clay.
 
   / First time with tiller #16  
I want to add to this that you have to keep adding organic material year after year to maintain the high quality soil that you have created. The organic material eventually breaks down and only the clay particles remain, so you have to keep replacing it with new stuff. I till in compost throughout the garden each spring, and add manure to the specific spots where I am planting. Everything but the beans looks and tastes great this year!
 
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

1.5 Rolls of Red Brand Barb Wire (A50515)
1.5 Rolls of Red...
2013 AMSIG S/A Solar Towable Message Board (A50322)
2013 AMSIG S/A...
2013 Chevrolet Cruze Sedan (A50324)
2013 Chevrolet...
2013 John Deere 544K Articulated Wheel Loader (A50322)
2013 John Deere...
2013 CATERPILLAR 420F BACKHOE (A51242)
2013 CATERPILLAR...
Kubota 24in Quick Attach Compact Excavator Tooth Bucket (A52128)
Kubota 24in Quick...
 
Top