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Before you top-dress your RB/SFG beds this spring

jbest123
15 years ago

Something you may or may not want to consider before you top-dress your beds this spring. http://www.jbest123.thegardenjournals.org/?p=142

John

Here is a link that might be useful: Johns Journal

Comments (4)

  • sinfonian
    15 years ago

    I posted this on your blog.

    John, you probably already know I'm presonally biased toward vermiculite because I need to justify spending so much to fill my beds. However, I am the first to conceed that it is not necessary for a successful garden.

    That said, I am kind of surprised that it would break down then I've read so often that it doesn't. I for one will think long and hard before adding more vermiculite to my garden.

    I haven't had my garden long enough to say if it goes away or not, but you'd think Mel would say it does since he has had his garden for decades. Is it possible that the vermiculite manufacturer you contacted just wanted to sell more product? I think the truth is probably a little of both. For that matter, have you found that peat doesn't decompose? If it does, then over time you would end up with 100% compost. Wouldn't that be a shame.

    Definitely worth more investigation, especially when I dig into my garden in the spring. Food for thought.

  • kayhh
    15 years ago

    John, I think the response you got makes sense. It's a soft rock. It gets crushed.

    What I wonder about is why your beds have not raised at all, My current veggie garden is about 7 years old. I add chicken chit to it every fall. Rabbit poop when I have the inclination to go dig it up at the neighbors. Ashes in the winter, leaves in the fall and grass clippings all summer. It is definitely heaped. This spring I will build walls around it. Both to keep the amendments in and the grass out.

    I used to have a much larger garden ala Ruth Stout and even there, 4 years later I can see that the old garden area (now part of the lawn) is a good 4-6 inches higher than the rest of the yard. Certainly it is a very large area and sloped so much that nobody but my husband and I can spot the old outline of the garden without help, but it is definitely higher.

    Could run-off be the reason it has not gotten higher? Kay

  • jbest123
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Kay, in the photo below, the grass in the foreground was part of my garden 15 -20 years ago when the family was home. The soil under the RB boxes was part of the same garden. I do not know if you seen my composting area, but I added twice that much compost plus about 8000# of HM or mushroom compost per year on a 20Â X 70Â garden. That area is nearly flat and level, so run off is not a problem.

    John

    {{gwi:1260627}}

    Here is a link that might be useful: Johns Journal

  • jbest123
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    I replied with an email and asked;

    Subject: Re: Vermiculite disappears
    Is the same thing true for perlite?
    John

    There reply was;

    Not exactly  perlite is friable but retains its absorbency quality. For this reason it is ideal for landscapers and outdoor garden beddings.

    John

    Here is a link that might be useful: Johns Journal

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