Strangely though, I miss tilling. I somehow got a lot of satisfaction from turning the garden remains into pretty rows of loose and inviting soil.
Strangely though, I miss tilling. I somehow got a lot of satisfaction from turning the garden remains into pretty rows of loose and inviting soil.
Hey Jags-
Yes, it's intentional. I went with a slightly smaller spacing of 14-15" as opposed to 16" recommendation. The pic might be a little deceiving. It's a 4x8 bed and the plants were larger than I would have liked. I believe the cages are 16" across at the top. It's certainly a little bit of an experiment. I wanted to see how many plants I could get in the bed. To be honest, I almost went three across on the 4' span.![]()
I do the same. Never going back to all that work, with lower yield.I used to till -- stopped about 4 years ago. I doubt I'll ever go back. I just keep adding organic matter as mulch and the soil and critters living there are loving it.
http://www.no-dig-vegetablegarden.com/no-till-gardening.html
I rarely dig without finding many earthworms. Since I decided not tot chop them up with a tiller anymore they have agreed to till for me. And no, halved worms don't grow into two worms.
http://www.livescience.com/38371-two-worms-worm-cut-in-half.html
Well, I have looked for clay deposits for years without success here (mostly sand), so it stands to reason that it would work differently.I tried the no till stuff for the last 3 years (with AP's urgings). Going back to tilling. It has more to do with the dirt than not being a success. I live in an area that has truly "black" dirt. I am finding that I do need to get it ground up once in a while or it turns to cement (even with yearly applications of compost). It just is what it is.
Well, I have looked for clay deposits for years without success here (mostly sand), so it stands to reason that it would work differently.
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Quick pic
I never found those tomato cages were good for anything but peppers.
My tomatoes will get 6,7, 10 feet tall if I don't top them.
Cages or a wire fence ( like concrete reinforcement) with large openings works better for indeterminates that one might allow several central leaders, but for determinates I use old VHF antennas for poles and use garden velcro to attach them to the pole for vertical growth and heavy tomato support.
I'll also stick the snapped off suckers in some wet potting soil to get them to root and have some more tomato plants. They catch up pretty quick in the Summer heat.
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