About 7 years ago I built a greenhouse out of free lumber, windows, and roofing from Craigslist. I then built a bunch of raised beds out of old cedar fence boards and tried the Square Foot Gardening method.
Last year (now at a different house) I have a few garden plots but I’m doing the Back to Eden method, which is essentially sheet mulching. Started out by laying down a layer of cardboard boxes (without any tape or shiny print on them), then garden soil and 1+ year-old horse manure from a local farmer. I had set up a huge compost pile with arborist chips, grass clippings, and coffee grounds from Starbucks the fall before, and I screened the bigger chips out through 1/2” hardware cloth and used that as top dressing. Worked really well! Everything seemed to grow big really quickly - sugar snaps, lettuce & spinach, carrots, tomatoes, potatoes, squash, peppers. I found this method to be more productive and flexible than square foot gardening.
I have ducks that are excellent slug hunters to keep the pests at a minimum. Ancona ducks lay over 200 eggs/year, are friendly, are great grazers, and can’t fly off.
If you’re interested in the documentary for Back to Eden, it can be watched here:
Last year (now at a different house) I have a few garden plots but I’m doing the Back to Eden method, which is essentially sheet mulching. Started out by laying down a layer of cardboard boxes (without any tape or shiny print on them), then garden soil and 1+ year-old horse manure from a local farmer. I had set up a huge compost pile with arborist chips, grass clippings, and coffee grounds from Starbucks the fall before, and I screened the bigger chips out through 1/2” hardware cloth and used that as top dressing. Worked really well! Everything seemed to grow big really quickly - sugar snaps, lettuce & spinach, carrots, tomatoes, potatoes, squash, peppers. I found this method to be more productive and flexible than square foot gardening.
I have ducks that are excellent slug hunters to keep the pests at a minimum. Ancona ducks lay over 200 eggs/year, are friendly, are great grazers, and can’t fly off.
If you’re interested in the documentary for Back to Eden, it can be watched here:
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