So spring is here and it'll be time to plow soon. But is plowing the right choice? I watched a UW Extension presentation on lawn care and one of the points was that spring is a bad time to disturb the soil because of weed seeds that will then happily germinate. He suggested a slitter, which is like a no-till planter that does not expose new weed seeds. That sounds good.
But I also read about how compaction is such a problem and sometimes plowing and other deep tilling can help with that. The square-foot gardeners seem to advocate for double-digging. So that makes me think plowing wouldn't be so bad.
Then I read about how deep plowing is a problem in SANA (Southern Asia & Northern Africa) where the primary crops are a rotation of wheat, legumes, and other stuff. Apparently, most farmers are devoted to deep tilling (20 cm or more) but it can be counterproductive. I don't understand all of it but I think the main problem is that the deep tilling takes more time and that's a problem during some years, depending on where you are in a crop rotation. And it takes more fuel. And you need other equipment to break up the clods that results from plowing.
Then I read about no-till farming in the US. I read that no-till is a viable option in the midwest for large-seed crops. Great. And it requires herbicides before planting. Broccoli and carrot seeds are tiny. I don't see how no-till would work for a garden.
So I'm on the fence... to plow or not to plow? That is the question.
But I also read about how compaction is such a problem and sometimes plowing and other deep tilling can help with that. The square-foot gardeners seem to advocate for double-digging. So that makes me think plowing wouldn't be so bad.
Then I read about how deep plowing is a problem in SANA (Southern Asia & Northern Africa) where the primary crops are a rotation of wheat, legumes, and other stuff. Apparently, most farmers are devoted to deep tilling (20 cm or more) but it can be counterproductive. I don't understand all of it but I think the main problem is that the deep tilling takes more time and that's a problem during some years, depending on where you are in a crop rotation. And it takes more fuel. And you need other equipment to break up the clods that results from plowing.
Then I read about no-till farming in the US. I read that no-till is a viable option in the midwest for large-seed crops. Great. And it requires herbicides before planting. Broccoli and carrot seeds are tiny. I don't see how no-till would work for a garden.
So I'm on the fence... to plow or not to plow? That is the question.