The essential key to true food growing sustainability is to grow your own soil fertility in your garden. Importing fertility from elsewhere means you're depleting resources there. Thus, growing carbon-producing crops is vital, particularly those that provide food (wheat, rye, corn, sorghum, sunflower). These crops are grow to maturity, allowing the stalks to dry while in the ground, which maximizes lignin content. Then they are composted with other green material you have grown (alfalfa, comfrey, etc.) AND with soil. Soil is a key ingredient for making compost. In simple terms, sow winter covers of wheat or rye now, leaving some of it to reach maturity in the bed. Save the seed for fall replanting, and compost the stalks and roots. (Do not turn cover crops into the soil. This wastes soil life on the composting process, resulting in a net loss of organic matter). All of this info and technique is outlined in "How To Grow More Vegetables" by John Jeavons, the book for the "Grow Biointensive" method. www.growbiointensive.org Available at www.bountifulgardens.org, the seed and supply catalog connected to Jeavons.
Paco John Verin City Wide Coordinator - Philadelphia Green The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society 100 North 20th Street, 5th floor Philadelphia, PA 19103-1495 Phone: 215-988-8885; Fax 215-988-8810 http://www.pennsylvaniahorticulturalsociety.org <http://www.pennsylvaniahorticulturalsociety.org/> -----Original Message----- From: Nicole Georges-Abeyie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, October 30, 2002 9:32 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [cg] home grown mulch Do any of you use some of your own crop residues as mulch? --pea straw, garlic stalk, grasses, cover crops. I don't mean planting into winter-killed growth; I'm wondering about something you'd harvest, dry(?), and lay on a different bed. If so, how do you best harvest it for the purpose? And any other tricks of the trade. Also, Does anyone have strong feelings for or against using spoiled hay (intended for livestock feed) as garden mulch? I guess seeds could be a BIG problem. Are the mold spores detrimental to a garden or its gardeners? Thanks, Nicole Lewis Washington, DC _____ Surf the Web without missing calls! Get MSN Broadband. Click Here <http://g.msn.com/8HMREN/2023> ______________________________________________________ The American Community Gardening Association listserve is only one of ACGA's services to community gardeners. To learn more about the ACGA and to find out how to join, please go to http://www.communitygarden.org To post an e-mail to the list: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To subscribe, unsubscribe or change your subscription: https://secure.mallorn.com/mailman/listinfo/community_garden

