Libertine
Gold Member
What\'s your garden strategy?
The purpose of this thread is to solicit reports, comments and possibly reasons as to what strategy you use in gardening (those of you who have gardens); not so much what you may grow, but rather how.
There are two areas (methods). First, what could be referred to as extensive vs. intensive, and, second, row vs. bed. By extensive I mean, as the extreme, minimal ground preparation, planting far more than you might actually use, little or no cultivation. By intensive I mean, again as an extreme, creation of "perfect" planting medium (make your own soil from vermiculite, charcoal, peat moss, etc.), a "no weed tolerated" policy, etc. As an example, say you like radishes in your salads. An extensive gardener might plant a package of seeds, pick as needed until they become too large and woody for use, till under what's left and then plant another package. An intensive gardener on the other hand might figure his family used say a dozen radishes per week and so planted 12 seeds one week (plus a few extra to account for any germination issues), 12 seeds the next and so forth, which, because of an ideal weed free environment gave him the amount required. I realize these are the extremes, but I suspect we all tend toward one direction or the other. Which direction do you tend towards and why?
The second issue is bed vs. row. Of course, a bed is really a wide row (or a row is a narrow bed, depending on how you look at it). Usually, an intensive approach is often associated with a bed approach, but there's no reason why you couldn't use rows to garden intensively, or, vice versa. So do you use rows or beds and why?
JEH
The purpose of this thread is to solicit reports, comments and possibly reasons as to what strategy you use in gardening (those of you who have gardens); not so much what you may grow, but rather how.
There are two areas (methods). First, what could be referred to as extensive vs. intensive, and, second, row vs. bed. By extensive I mean, as the extreme, minimal ground preparation, planting far more than you might actually use, little or no cultivation. By intensive I mean, again as an extreme, creation of "perfect" planting medium (make your own soil from vermiculite, charcoal, peat moss, etc.), a "no weed tolerated" policy, etc. As an example, say you like radishes in your salads. An extensive gardener might plant a package of seeds, pick as needed until they become too large and woody for use, till under what's left and then plant another package. An intensive gardener on the other hand might figure his family used say a dozen radishes per week and so planted 12 seeds one week (plus a few extra to account for any germination issues), 12 seeds the next and so forth, which, because of an ideal weed free environment gave him the amount required. I realize these are the extremes, but I suspect we all tend toward one direction or the other. Which direction do you tend towards and why?
The second issue is bed vs. row. Of course, a bed is really a wide row (or a row is a narrow bed, depending on how you look at it). Usually, an intensive approach is often associated with a bed approach, but there's no reason why you couldn't use rows to garden intensively, or, vice versa. So do you use rows or beds and why?
JEH