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Allotment Stuff => The Basics => Topic started by: Beer_Belly on March 08, 2004, 08:24:35

Title: bed preparation
Post by: Beer_Belly on March 08, 2004, 08:24:35
I've split my plot into 5 equally sized beds for a 5-year rotation plan and I'm trying to be organic where I can.

Bed 1  Peas & beans
Bed 2  Brassicas
Bed 3  Onions, garlic, leeks sweetcorn
Bed 4  Carrots Parsnip Scorzonera beetroots
bed 5  potatoes

Rotation sequence is Peas followed by brassicas followed by Onions followed by carrots followed by potatoes then start again with beans.

My bed preparation is as follows
Bed 1  Add lime
Bed 2  Add compost
Bed 3  ??
Bed 4  ??
Bed 5  Add pelleted cow muck

I haven't got any well rotted manure otherwise I'd have used this instead of the cow muck pellets (next year hopefully)
What can I add to Beds 3 and 4 (and maybe 1) will bonemeal be the answer ?

All input greatly appreciated.

-B_B-
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: The gardener on March 08, 2004, 12:54:43
You plan>>>>.

Bed 1  Peas & beans
Bed 2  Brassicas
Bed 3  Onions, garlic, leeks sweetcorn
Bed 4  Carrots Parsnip Scorzonera beetroots
bed 5  potatoes

Rotation sequence is Peas followed by brassicas followed by Onions followed by carrots followed by potatoes then start again with beans.

My bed preparation is as follows

If you mean this is first year preparation I would say;

Bed 1  Add lime>>>>>No!>>> Pelleted cow muck
Bed 2  Add compost>>>>>No!>>>add Lime
Bed 3  >>>>>Fish Blood & Bone
Bed 4  >>>>>Fish Blood & Bone
Bed 5  Add pelleted cow muck>>>>agreed


Its possible others might disagree, the nature and pH of the soil will also play a part in your decision.


(http://www.honleyvillage.co.uk/images/Community/GardenClub/bYkYhw.gif)
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: aquilegia on March 08, 2004, 13:07:16
what's a good organic vegetarian option to blood, fish and bone?

Do chicken pellets count as manure or fertiliser?
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: gavin on March 08, 2004, 19:49:29
Hi Beer_Belly

It's another Bob Flowerdew question - one of those things that he says to set you racking your brains!

On Liming
Testing the pH of your soil - a good idea.  Practice what I preach?  Nope - but liming is a way to control club-root.

On adding manures etc to your beds.  It's your call!
All best - Gavin

PS With ranting, I think I forgot to mention that I still have some blood, fish and bone meal left from last year - and I'm using it on several beds this year.  I probbaly will not do so next year, though - I like the idea of moving "up a level" in being organic, and will give it a go.
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: gavin on March 08, 2004, 20:25:12
For aquilegia - veggie organic alternative to BFB meal?

Just a thought - not sure there could be an alternative product;  the only ones I can think of areNot a great deal of help?  Sorry! - Gavin

PS  Hey, but going straight for the organic jugular, you wouldn't be over-feeding your veg.  It's cynical me again - the number of books I have, which have incredibly detailed instructions about when to add which product!  I don't have the time (nor do I want the time!) to grow show-bench veggies.  Plus - overfed veggies = "prone-to-pest-and-disease" veggies?  Ignoring the "extras" gives me perfectly adequate and healthy yields on my plot.

Rambling!
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: Beer_Belly on March 09, 2004, 07:51:27
I took my liming advice from Bob Flowerdew he says this ->

"Brassicas like lime but potatoes don't like lime, so it makes a lot of sense to have them well apart in the rotation.  Peas and beans also like lime, so it's common to add the lime when you have peas and beans.   That leaves the soil rich, so then you plant your brassicas.

"After the brassicas the soil is quite firm, which is good for the onions.  You don't even have to dig the soil, you can just put the onions where the brassicas were.

"After the onions, carrots come rather well.  Because carrots are a root vegetable you break the soil up getting them out, which leaves the soil in lovely condition for planting potatoes!

"The potatoes take a lot of goodness out of the soil, so I earth them up with grass clippings, which increases the humus content.  At that point it's good to add lime so it's time for the peas and beans to come back again!"


I have clubroot though so I'll do this
Bed 1  Pelleted cow muck
Bed 2  Add Lime
Bed 3  Bonemeal
Bed 4  Bonemeal
Bed 5  Pelleted cow muck

Now I just need to know what to do with my compost ?

Gavin - I agree heartly with yoyur sentiments on pellets - I've only just started so need to build up a manure pile for later years, in the meantime I'm having to resort to what I can get, thus the pellets

Thanks for your reactions so far
-B_B-
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: aquilegia on March 09, 2004, 09:25:00
Quote from: gavin on March 08, 2004, 20:25:12
  • going the other way, down the non-organic road >;( ;
  • going straight for the serious organic option - nothing but compost, and well-rotted animal manure
thanks anyway Gavin - I'll just stick to what I've been doing then (compost and manure!) ;)
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: The gardener on March 09, 2004, 15:28:34
For the vegens ...........you could use fertilisers based on 'seaweed' if the 'animal' content is a concern.

But then again thats a long story.................
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: The gardener on March 09, 2004, 15:50:13
Interesting points of view here, particularly with liming.

Let me explan my view...........I lime for 'brassicas' which everyone seems to agree with, but then, assuming I am using a three year rotation programme, I won't lime that ground again until the 'brassicas come around again.

Generally lime is a pH adjustor not a fertiliser, so all it does is keep the ground in a state that allows the plant to take the optimum goodness from fertilisers.

In the intermediate years between liming I will test my pH and if needs be I add a little lime, if not I don't.

Regarding fish blood & bone I always considered this an 'organic' product simply because they are all derrived from natural sources.

The other reason I use it is, it has more nitrogen in it than just bonemeal on its own, which is generally higher in phosphate, and as nitrogen is a plants first requirement this is readily available when required.

Later in the plants growth the slow release bone meal kicks in.

So in effect, like Gavin, I do what needs must,not necessarily what the TV pundits say.

.........and thats is my opinion ::)


(http://www.honleyvillage.co.uk/images/Community/GardenClub/bYkYhw.gif)
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: gavin on March 09, 2004, 19:44:52
Hello Beer_Belly

Looks good - but your bed 2?  For the brassicas,  I'd add lime AND lots of feed material - compost, manure, or pellets - just as long as I do the lime a month or so before the other.  Brassicas are greedy b.....s, much greedier than the crops before and after - that tiny seed needs a lot of nitrogen (+) to produce such a huge ball of green goodness!

And your compost?  Make as much as you can - I suspect I can never have enough!  I spread as much as is usable (and that in itself would horrify purists - if it goes in the barrow and is not actually green?  I'm happy to spread pretty raw compost in vegetable beds - but not permanent fruit beds).  Means you use less of the Blood/Fish/Bone stuff - and really only as a "top-up".

Good luck - Gavin

PS For The Gardener - TV pundits?  Step 1 - switch 'em off!  Step 2 - chuck the telly - best thing I've done in 6 years, and so much fun arguing with the TV License people (my next letter will offer to conduct them on a personally guided tour to the council skip into which my TV was dumped 5 years ago - they want to trace it?  Up to them!)
Title: Re:bed preparation
Post by: Beer_Belly on March 10, 2004, 06:35:49
Thanks again for the tips - I'll lime bed 2 this week, That'll just about give me enough time before I add compost to it before I plant my brassicas

-B_B-