Last summer I picked up an old copy of a book called “Lasagna Gardening” and immediately recognized the method. Years before I had made a large compost pile out of arborist chips and grass from the yard (1-3” layer of grass, then 4-6” wood chips) that was 12’ long x 6’ wide x 4’ high. The next spring the most glorious soil was pulled out of that pile and worms were crawling everywhere in the bottom 3’ of the pile. I had squash & tomatoes growing like crazy with minimal watering and no fertilizer.
Lasagna gardening does the same thing but right on the garden bed. Put down an overlapped layer of clean cardboard or 5-6 layers of newspaper, then layer greens & browns 12-18” thick in fall or winter. By April I hope to have nice fluffy stuff I can plant directly in.
Nice thing is, all the ingredients are free
Lasagna gardening does the same thing but right on the garden bed. Put down an overlapped layer of clean cardboard or 5-6 layers of newspaper, then layer greens & browns 12-18” thick in fall or winter. By April I hope to have nice fluffy stuff I can plant directly in.
Nice thing is, all the ingredients are free
- moving boxes from Craigslist (1st layer)
- arborist chips from getchipdrop.com or leaves from the trees in fall (brown layers)
- compost or veggie scraps from home (green layers)
- coffee grounds from Starbucks - they give it away by the bucketful (green layers, high in nitrogen)
- aged manure from local farmers (green, high in nitrogen)
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