_tessarecting
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a few of my neighbors actually have entire fields already halfway through flower, it looks like a few thousand, maybe ten if I'm really off.
Cheers
:jawdrop:
a few of my neighbors actually have entire fields already halfway through flower, it looks like a few thousand, maybe ten if I'm really off.
Cheers
man , you need to get some machinery in there . a small excavator . mound that place up in no time .
Is that true about the pine needles? Awesome.
Let the chickens in the weed patch once the plants are big enough, they'll get rid of caterpillars and the like while fertilizing as they go.
A small excavator would be love, but I only have couple big rocks left and I'm worried that if I mounded up my whole hillside with no erosion control in place that it would basically be a giant mud pile that would be a nightmare to work in Laying down the rocks/wood and then trying to till up the soil. It would be mandatory if I was using holes or mounds but growing many plants in rows, and with not much soil depth already I'm most concerned with holding on to the soil I have.
i,ve done long rows on steep hill sides , no problem . no erosion at all . if anything the water is trapped above the mound a seeps into the base of the mound . i,m talking lots of rain .
i kinda think your making this a lot harder than it needs to be . its actually prevents erosion i,m pretty sure terracing a hill . you could in fact terrace it and have foot or so in between the beds and have the original grass thats there as walk ways . your going to want walk ways to leave some room to allow the plants to grow out . i would recommend .
not saying your wrong . just saying seems to be a lot of work that could be done a lot faster and better . digging beds turns soil air rates and loosens the soil couple feet deep at-least . though i would do it a month before i planned using it minimum .
just offering ideas . i,m just a bit surprised you chose this way . especially such a large plant grow .
best wishes anyway , good learning trying new things . maybe next year can pull a machine in and dig it .
With the waterboard certification and the certified kind orgization I can't just terrace or move earth without permission. I would not allowed to do the recommendation you have with Either certifying agency. To move more then 27 yards of soil and then to post that information under my certifying name would be begging for problems. The only way to legally move that much "earth" would require waterboard approval, county permits, and certified kind approval. Plus all the costs of equipment and time spent getting approval. I have thought out my plan very carefully even if it "surprises you". I am not looking for perfection. I am looking for what works best for me in a sustainable way, that's affordable and that will require little additional maintenance over multiple years and that doesn't require additional permits. I not be changing my garden next year.
I only have 2' of soil AT BEST. So no I will never be terracing.
I have walkways. 2.5" irrigated/amended soil and 2.5' walk space with .5" rocks/wood.