1 / 39

SOME NO-TILL GARDENING

SOME NO-TILL GARDENING. By Partnership Employees. Here’s Cathryn Flint (the bunny rabbit). Checking out the small grain/clover winter cover crop of daddy-rabbit, Matt Then, an April scene of the garden No-till for the past 3 years Cover was “rolled down”. A “slam dunk”

cana
Download Presentation

SOME NO-TILL GARDENING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SOME NO-TILL GARDENING By Partnership Employees

  2. Here’s Cathryn Flint(the bunny rabbit) • Checking out the small grain/clover winter cover crop of daddy-rabbit, Matt • Then, an April scene of the garden • No-till for the past 3 years • Cover was “rolled down”. A “slam dunk” • Great weed control, no crusting, no runoff ! • Cover grew more for later plantings of melons and eggplant

  3. CHARLES WALLACE, SCT, retired long, long ago, Lincoln Co. • Good variety of vegetables • Looks like no weeds to pull ! ! • Note the close-up of lettuce—bet he doesn’t need to wash off any sand ! • Thanks to Elton Barbour for these pictures.

  4. LLOYD PHILLIPSDavidsonCounty • Small grain for mulch, copious amounts • Cucumber, pepper surrounded by protective ground cover • Bet the SCI is pretty good here! • He prepared a “how to” on no-till gardening for his clients.

  5. BRIAN WOODCherokee County • Uses rye/crimson clover for cover crop • Rakes cover back, makes small furrow with hoe • Applies lime, fertilizer at planting • Note that he has cool-season crops, too. • Goes bear hunting with a switch!

  6. ROY MATHISWilkes County • Lots of different vegetables • Uses leaves for ground cover • Threw in a conventional till slide for contrast—note cloddy condition • Cites many advantages of no-till • Being a soil scientist on the soil quality team, could not resist digging to show the contrast!

  7. MARK and KAYLA HUDSONJackson, Swain Counties • A little different approach - - • Grass clippings and recycled, shredded paper for ground cover—looks like it works just fine, huh? • No-tilled for about 6 years • No weeding needed-no herbicides used • See contrast soil profiles, ten feet apart. Left, garden- right, lawn of 18 years! • Then, note the earthworms. Several people noted earthworm populations moved in !

  8. MIKE HINTONState Office • Big variety of vegetables, including sweet potatoes—second slide following this • Good-looking ground cover of rye—actually, all who use a cover crop have gotten the word—let it get big enough before you zap it ! • That’s his basket of goodies in the title slide. Good job! (Maybe he’ll bring in a watermelon one day.)

  9. Talk about convenient ! !

  10. Finally, your Agronomist • Irish potato and triticale mature together-no burndown needed • 2nd slide, about 13 years ago—then, deer got peas, butterbeans, and watermelon—raccoons got the corn, so he said @#$%^&* with it !! • 3rd slide is slice of Cecil SL, after 20 years no-till and annual additions of about 5,000 lbs/ac biomass. • Last photo—Proper use of disc !

  11. A BIG THANK YOU - - • To these who took time to share their pictures and information. • No doubt there are others who are doing just as well, but are spending their saved time at the lake instead of taking pictures, and, • Maybe others of you would like to give it a try—I’ll bet these good folks would share their knowledge.

More Related