


Digital and Trail Cam Photos & Videos from Southeastern Ohio. CLICK ON PHOTOS TO SEE A LARGER IMAGE. WATCH VIDEOS BY CLICKING ON THE 'PLAY' ARROW. I own and recommend MOULTRIE and STEALTH trail cameras and MOULTRIE game feeders, and maintain the path with a STIHL leaf blower and gas trimmer and FISKARS hand tools. Want to be sure you never miss a new posting? Just enter your email address at the very bottom of the page to subscribe.
You still managed to get a good variety of shots with all the wind. Speaking of planting, I started weeding my garden boxes Saturday. Last year I made 10 of them and filled them with topsoil but they don't hold water very good. Any suggestions on what I might be able to do to help retain water? I thought maybe mixing compost to the topsoil or mulching around the plants. I'm not much of a gardener but willing to learn from the experts.
ReplyDeleteMikey
My raised beds are made of a mix of 1/3 compost, 1/3 peat moss and 1/3 COARSE vermiculite. Raised beds do tend to dry out quicker, that's for sure. Once plants are growing well, especially things like tomatoes and peppers, I mulch them with either shredded straw/newspaper mix or shredded hay, whatever I have on hand. I see lots of gardeners use straw without running it through a chipper-shredder like I do, and it seems to stay in place just fine...but if you have a shredder, shred, but as coarse as you can, not as fine as you can. Throwing some sheets of newspaper into the shredder along with the straw makes it serve sort of as a paper-mache binder, keeping the straw from blowing away (once the mix has been wetted.)
ReplyDeleteCoarse vermiculite is sometimes tough to find at garden centers - where they usually carry a fine version - but the larger pieces in the coarse bags hold water a little better.
Finally, if you plant rather intensively in raised beds or garden boxes, you DO use up a lot of nutrients in the soil every year, so adding compost (or well-aged manure) can be a real plus.