keljonma
Epicurean Goddess
We've mostly used buckwheat as cover crop ... honeybees love buckwheat flowers and we love buckwheat honey.
Bee I hope you don't think I am targeting you, I am an equal oppurituny skeptic. starting with your first post. that clover used for pathways actually wastes more moisture back to the air than a mulched pathway would, clover itself does not fix nitrogen, microbes living on its roots do, and most of that nitrogen is used by the clover itself, thus not available to the rest of your garden until the clover dies and then it is free. Your other points in the OP were right on. but clover also attracks rabbits and deer...Beekissed said:The clover is just high~not in raised beds....I don't have raised beds in this pic but I do hill up my existing, permanent rows to a raised status, then mulch that raised bed or even plant more clover after that planting is mature enough to not need anymore hilling up.
The clover you see is just White Dutch...I chose it as it grows well in my soils, it doesn't get very high~it will get only a little taller than what you see here, the honeybees will work on it but I've read they won't work the red clover and as you can see, it grows thick enough to choke out any weeds.
When the garden is hilled and mulched, the effect is simply neat, beautiful and clean looking. Plus...everyone thinks I have some fertile garden going on because everywhere you look is green, when most people have brown between their rows.
The clover fixes nitrogen in the soil...right where I need it most.
That's how we did our gardens when I was a kid, growing up in South Jersey.mrbstephens said:I've read (somewhere) that a great method is to alternate rows and pathways year after year. Meaning what you have as pathway this year, use a good cover crop like clover and till it under next year and make that your new planting beds. Your beds from last year would be the walkways for this year. Does that make sense?
For an ignorant probably-not-very-green-thumb, if you till it under would there be a chance that the clover would come up in your crops later?mrbstephens said:use a good cover crop like clover and till it under next year and make that your new planting beds.
Good question! Let me know when you find the answer. LOL!hqueen13 said:For an ignorant probably-not-very-green-thumb, if you till it under would there be a chance that the clover would come up in your crops later?mrbstephens said:use a good cover crop like clover and till it under next year and make that your new planting beds.
I don't have to worry about rabbits or deer in my gardens...I have good dogs.~gd said:Bee I hope you don't think I am targeting you, I am an equal oppurituny skeptic. starting with your first post. that clover used for pathways actually wastes more moisture back to the air than a mulched pathway would, clover itself does not fix nitrogen, microbes living on its roots do, and most of that nitrogen is used by the clover itself, thus not available to the rest of your garden until the clover dies and then it is free. Your other points in the OP were right on. but clover also attracks rabbits and deer...Beekissed said:The clover is just high~not in raised beds....I don't have raised beds in this pic but I do hill up my existing, permanent rows to a raised status, then mulch that raised bed or even plant more clover after that planting is mature enough to not need anymore hilling up.
The clover you see is just White Dutch...I chose it as it grows well in my soils, it doesn't get very high~it will get only a little taller than what you see here, the honeybees will work on it but I've read they won't work the red clover and as you can see, it grows thick enough to choke out any weeds.
When the garden is hilled and mulched, the effect is simply neat, beautiful and clean looking. Plus...everyone thinks I have some fertile garden going on because everywhere you look is green, when most people have brown between their rows.
The clover fixes nitrogen in the soil...right where I need it most.
permanent rows? Our Master Gardeners tell us not to plant the same thing in an area year after year because the crops tend to exhaust anything that they need a lot of and pests that feed on them tend to concentrate there too. They preach crop rotation for annual crops. If I were to show her your picture she would probally ask me what cover I had planted in your brown rows and just when was I planning to turn over the green manure (your pathways) of course methods have to be right for local conditions and I don't know yours....~gd