News:

Picture posting is enabled for all :)

Main Menu

Green Manure.

Started by telboy, August 29, 2008, 21:04:00

Previous topic - Next topic

telboy

Hi all,
Decided, after my disastrous experience this year with 'toxic manure', to try green manure.
Bought my local town (pathetic) garden centre out of the only two packets of mustard seed they had - at a cost!
Where can one buy industrial packs of this particular seed? The two packs I bought only covered a pathetic patch?
Ta. :(
Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

telboy

Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

Larkshall

If you know a local farmer, he might be persuaded to sell you a pound or two, or to order some for you.
Organiser, Mid Anglia Computer Users (Est. 1988)
Member of the Cambridge Cyclists Touring Club

tonybloke

You couldn't make it up!

telboy

Thanks Tony,
The problem now is how does one drill seed on an allotment without the equipment?
Like the prices but hand spreading is what I'm after.
;D
Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

telboy

I think Phacelia is what I'm after at this time of the year?
;D
Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

hopalong

Quote from: telboy on August 30, 2008, 22:39:29
I think Phacelia is what I'm after at this time of the year?
;D
Phacelia is a large plant genus so you need to be careful to get the right one. Phacelia tanacetifolia is the green manure that is winter hardy.  It's good for adding humus, I'm told. I sowed some about 3 weeks ago and it has produced a lush carpet of green, but I would probably have been better advised to leave off sowing it until the autumn. I want it to overwinter but it may flower before then. You must dig it in before it flowers, as I'm sure you know.

If you want a nitrogen fix, field beans survive the winter and grow strongly. I tried them last year and they seem to have worked well.

I get mine from the organic catalogue but there may be cheaper sources.
Keep Calm and Carry On

caroline7758

I like phacelia- leave some in for the lovely flowers. Kings have packs which cover 25 sqm

http://www.kingsseeds.com/Ko-transact/productlist.asp?as=True

Larkshall

Quote from: telboy on August 30, 2008, 22:18:09
Thanks Tony,
The problem now is how does one drill seed on an allotment without the equipment?
Like the prices but hand spreading is what I'm after.
;D


Have you never heard of broadcasting? You have a container in your left hand held against the waist, take a handful of seed with your right hand and cast it with a swinging motion of the hand. That's how farmers used to sow the fields before the days of corn drills. A refinement of this was the "Farmers Fiddle", it had a bow with a cord which passed around the spindle, on the spindle was mounted a disc with vertical partitions on it into which seed was fed. by moving the bow forwards and backwards it cast the seed in front of the operator who walked forward. My Governor used to use one for sowing mustard.
Organiser, Mid Anglia Computer Users (Est. 1988)
Member of the Cambridge Cyclists Touring Club

telboy

Thankyou for all your information.
Have finally found a supplier with low delivery cost for a good quantity which should last a few years.
With the latest & predicted rain - should be off to good germination.
;D
Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

saddad

We have a "fiddle" in our Horticultural Museum!
;D

robbo

Care to share the name of the supplier with us telboy.

  Robbo.
Don't take life so seriously, it's not permanent.

telboy

Hi robbo,

www.organiccatalog.com

Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

robbo

Cheers mate :-* ;D

  Robbo.
Don't take life so seriously, it's not permanent.

STEVEB

i put in suttons mix 2.75 for a 10x6 coverage pack a lot lighter than a bag of manure,i dig add a handfull of comfrey cover and repeat then broadcast green manure boots and braces maybe but i enjoy the workout
If it ain't broke don't fix it !!

artichoke

I have never grown green manure. If field beans are good, would it not be just as good to sow overwintering broad beans and eat them? Or are they not tightly packed enough?

Powered by EzPortal