How to Amend Raised Garden Beds

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
  • Soil in raised beds needs regular amending with organic matter. More organic matter means healthier soil and healthier plants. Gardener Scott shows and explains how to amend raised garden beds as part of normal autumn gardening activity. (Video #215)
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Комментарии • 380

  • @jennysheets3763
    @jennysheets3763 3 года назад +106

    The Bob Ross of gardening. ♡

    • @NashvilleMonkey1000
      @NashvilleMonkey1000 3 года назад +9

      combined with the Liam Neeson of Gardening, as he kills plants so that others can thrive~

    • @katiecannon8186
      @katiecannon8186 3 года назад +3

      I was thinking Mr. Rogers.

    • @ernestkairo6004
      @ernestkairo6004 3 года назад

      i know it's quite randomly asking but does anybody know of a good website to watch new movies online ?

    • @finnmatteo8763
      @finnmatteo8763 3 года назад

      @Ernest Kairo Flixportal :P

    • @williamwilson4642
      @williamwilson4642 2 года назад

      Lol 😆 nailed it.

  • @VTboys1220
    @VTboys1220 3 года назад +15

    I built my raised bed today. First time gardener here very excited for fall.

  • @livenotonevil8279
    @livenotonevil8279 3 года назад +39

    Going with 3-4 inches of leaves again this year. Phenomenal results this year! Soooo many worms this spring.

    • @LucretiaVanPelt
      @LucretiaVanPelt 3 года назад +1

      We (NY) have been having problems with the invasive "Jumping" worm. They are horrible and ruin soil. They are a shallow depth worm (top 3in of soil), unlike the wonderful European worm, which is found deeper. Hope you don't have to deal with the Jumpers.

    • @jeannie8050
      @jeannie8050 3 года назад +1

      Do you mulch your leaves?

    • @livenotonevil8279
      @livenotonevil8279 3 года назад +5

      @@jeannie8050 I mulch them fine in the mower with the bagger attached. Not adding full leaves helps in the breakdown process over the winter. After spreading them across the beds, I cover it all with large pieces of weighted-down cardboard to prevent them from being blown away.
      I'm in a very cold region, but I believe that the insulating effect allows the worms to get at it all winter long. They're definitely active by the time I take a peek in March.

    • @livenotonevil8279
      @livenotonevil8279 3 года назад +2

      @@LucretiaVanPelt So sorry to hear about the jumpers! Never heard of them. Our worms just wiggle and squirm.

    • @charlesstock64
      @charlesstock64 3 года назад +1

      This year (first with raised beds) is have a leaf blower that reverses and vacuums leaves through a shredder into a bag. Got tons of shredded leaves to mix with grass clippings and wood chips. Noticed that grass clippings really get the mulching hot process growing when added to the mulch mix pile. Up to 140 F in the hot bin when added, which cools down before I transfer to the finished/usable compost pile where worms are now seen when digging through. Great video GS!

  • @gschallert3293
    @gschallert3293 2 месяца назад

    You have an excellent grasp of what is important for soil health and an easy professional presentation. Now if you planted a cover crop in that new bed such as an over winter legume. BAM you hit a home run. Great job in educating what it takes to make a difference in soil health.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  2 месяца назад

      I have a number of videos on cover crops. I agree with going for a home run.

  • @Rlinn78
    @Rlinn78 3 года назад +4

    I follow the KISS mentality. If it’s free it’s for me. I use my fresh grass clippings during the summer. Maybe 3-4 applications. Then in the fall and winter I collect seaweed from the bay near my house. And move to collecting and shredding fallen leaves before spring comes. I use my homemade compost right before planting season. For the most part I follow the lasagna philosophy. Just pile it up and let it be. This year I feel like my garden is supercharged!

  • @ThirdCoastGardening
    @ThirdCoastGardening 3 года назад +10

    I’m becoming a master gardener. We just had our soil class. My favorite so far. I love reading about microbes and soil.

  • @danao1796
    @danao1796 3 года назад +5

    Oh man, my back hurts just watching you drive that spade into the soil. I'd have to get up onto the raised bed...

  • @TheTrock121
    @TheTrock121 3 года назад +2

    I finally got a yard of cow manure and built a second compost bin to break it down. I lined the bin w/ an insulated pool cover and it is around 150 degrees in there. Can't wait to spread it next Spring!

  • @dollyperry3020
    @dollyperry3020 3 года назад +13

    Scott, I have two comments. 1. You didn't mention that you need to make sure that your neighbor doesn't use herbicides or pesticides on their lawn or you could be poisoning your garden bed. 2. Craigslist almost always has free sources of manure listed...but once again make sure they are not using any feed sources that will kill your tomatoes as some of the herbicides last past the digestion of the horse or cow. I find rabbit manure to be pretty safe which is why I am growing my own manure machines :) Hope this helps!

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +7

      Thanks. I've mentioned it in other videos, but I check the source of my material so I know it doesn't have herbicides or pesticides. I also think the same holds true for manures, in addition to excess salt.

    • @lauralaspe329
      @lauralaspe329 3 года назад +1

      Make sure you aren’t taking too much rabbit poop from them or using a cage where they can’t get to it. It sounds gross but rabbits need to eat their own poop or they will develop a vitamin B deficiency.

    • @dollyperry3020
      @dollyperry3020 3 года назад

      @@lauralaspe329 Nope....All is well with the rabbits :)

    • @TrixieJFerguson
      @TrixieJFerguson Год назад +1

      @@lauralaspe329 We raised rabbits commercially for years in a rabbit barn in cages off the ground. Their poop fell through the bottom of the cage to the ground and they never got to eat it. We also never had any vitamin/nutrient deficiency problems. We just fed them fresh greens regularly as a supplement to their pellets. Whoever told you that was pulling your leg.

  • @UrbanGardeningWithD.A.Hanks14
    @UrbanGardeningWithD.A.Hanks14 2 года назад +1

    You are 100% spot-on, with finding good stuff for the garden on the side of the road. I deliver newspapers a couple days a week, and find awesome stuff for my garden all the time! This includes 2x4 livestock fencing for my tomato and cucumber trellises. You can get grass and leaves depending on the season, and I know where the leaves stay in the gutter and get run over, and break down in wet conditions. It's free humus. There is so much organic matter available free for the taking, if you just pay attention. Also widescreen TVs, propane tanks, grills, bicycles...

  • @ssfoste
    @ssfoste 3 года назад +4

    Since your beds are fairly new, I am looking forward to seeing them next spring.

  • @npast1
    @npast1 2 года назад +3

    Fantastic video! My parents had a garden for decades, and they did something similar. This is what I do too, except that I tend to use manure in fall, and when planting in Spring, I drop the seeds on the soil and spread a thin layer of compost on top of them evenly across the bed, since some of the nutrients might have been washed through the winter. The no-till method would never work for me, because my raised beds are in close proximity of bush trees surrounding my house in my suburban garden, and I found that if I don't till the soil with the shovel like you do, then in less than two years the tree roots from those bushes very aggressively penetrate the entirety of my 2 foot-tall raised beds, turning them into a dense mass of tree roots, making it like a super sod, sucking all the nutrients and water away from my plants. So I must each fall turn the soil with a shovel, sometimes all 2 feet down my raised bed, breaking the tree roots that grew like weed over the season. It is less optimal than what you do because I end up , as you said, somewhat destroying established soil, but better this than a super-sod of tree roots suffocating my plants.

  • @jyrbian
    @jyrbian 3 года назад +7

    Ironically, I was amending my raised beds when this video was released.

  • @heidiclark6612
    @heidiclark6612 3 года назад +4

    Thank You for another timely video. We have not had any frost yet, but I know its coming. The irrigation water is going to be shut off Oct. 6th. I grabbed some organically grown straw bales a month ago.I appreciate you putting out videos of exactly what I am supposed to be doing next. Its really helpful. I live in a different state than I used to so I am having to learn what to do when here.Since you live in a colder climate area, I have learned so much from you.

  • @indianajones7580
    @indianajones7580 3 года назад +3

    Hello Mr. Scott, I am thankful for your vlogs! I am learning lots of ideas about gardening. I've been doing gardening for a few years now but I still have a lot of things to learn.🙂 Thank you, Sir!

  • @groussac
    @groussac 2 года назад +1

    Thanks Gardener Scott. Very good run down on how to put a garden to bed for the winter. Leaves in abundance here, so they're a more prominent ingredient in my garden. Unlike grass clippings, I can get leaves from any of my neighbors without fear of herbicides or whatever else they put on their lawns. I coordinate with them ahead of time so they give me a bag of just leaves without sticks which can blunt the blade of my lawn mower. I mulch the leaves before adding them to the garden. Otherwise they tend to mat together, and the wind drives them into piles which then blow around and cover up spring seedlings. Common sense stuff. Most of you probably already do this. However--lessons learned--this year I'm going to spread the lawn mower mulching op throughout the back yard. Otherwise, if I continually mulch the leaves in one place, the mower strips the grass down to nothing, leaving a bare spot in the spring. Besides, mulching throughout the yard helps feed the grass. It's a win-win for everyone. My neighbors get rid of their leaves without having to pay the city to cart them off; I get free mulch. And FREE is the operative word here. If you don't keep costs down, your garden produce can end up costing more than store bought.

  • @ryanissa3353
    @ryanissa3353 3 года назад +34

    I'm a simple guy. I see a gardener scott video, I click.

  • @panduvijaya
    @panduvijaya 3 года назад

    Thank you gardener Scott for your clear explanations. I love your videos about gardening in raised beds. Yesterday I bought 4 wooden planchets and put together my 2 raised bed. So today I will put it in place and fill it up with Earth and different materials, like grass, leaves, cow dung and compost. I followed your guidelines and my vegetables bed is 280 x 140 x 46 cm. I live in the Ardennes in Belgium.
    If you’re lucky enough to be a gardener,...you are lucky enough. Thanks

  • @j.b.6855
    @j.b.6855 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for the good idea of amending in fall. I already amended the beds I planted the fall garden and garlic in. The rest is 5 gallon sips (22 of them). I was going to empty them, wash them out, and then fill them with amended soil in the spring. But if we have a few 60 degree days I might do as many as I can now. That way they will be ready for spring. Mixing the soil will make good use of the new wheelbarrow I bought, the last major thing I needed to buy.

  • @jeffcampbell479
    @jeffcampbell479 3 года назад +3

    Awesome that you did a video on this very subject! About to do the same here in NY state - have a feeling winter is going to hit quickly and hard here in northeast!!! Will be amending my own compost, grass clippings, chopped leaves, rabbit manure and some forest black soil as well! Oh yeah - pine needles too as well - yep! 😉👍

  • @jimbrockmann9756
    @jimbrockmann9756 2 года назад +1

    Many new lawn seeding landscapers use a straw blower that chops the straw to about 3" to 4" lengths so it won't blow around once it's on the ground. I spread straw on the concrete drive, then 'mow' with lawn mower that has a bagger attachment. The straw being in shorter lengths lays flatter and stays put. Some goes directly to the amendment process but also I save some in garbage bags for later use in the season.

  • @rebeccazody1278
    @rebeccazody1278 3 года назад +6

    Thx Scott. I was wondering about what to use.

  • @moradrabia6819
    @moradrabia6819 2 года назад +1

    It's not always easy to find the best advice due to several videos but seem very professional i subscribe

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  2 года назад +1

      Thank you. Welcome to the channel!

  • @ecologytoday
    @ecologytoday 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for another great video. I am re-establishing an existing garden plot to replace rotting old raised beds and also creating a separate new garden plot from scratch. These techniques plus hügelkultur to establish the new beds should get me ready for spring planting.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      Thanks, Jay. I anticipate you'll have great success.

  • @DanCooper404
    @DanCooper404 3 года назад +1

    I have a large "compost" pile that I don't turn or water. Basically just somewhere to store dead leaves and grass clippings at the far end of our property. At the end of the season, I plan to spread it out over my beds along with some real compost, cow manure, and finally wood chips.

  • @DailyLifeandNature
    @DailyLifeandNature 3 года назад +3

    Good video uploading show us how to amend raised garden beds, thanks for sharing to us such informative and good content, i will learn from your video clip and start to build my raise bed too

  • @jacquiesuper2200
    @jacquiesuper2200 3 года назад +2

    Perfect timing. I am preparing to amend my beds so lots of helpful info!!! Ty. God bless

  • @ontariogardening
    @ontariogardening 3 года назад +1

    This video was great! Very informative. I have heard other RUclips channels scream about not using Peat Moss in gardening, and I found it super helpful when planting my Dwarf Apple Trees in containers.

  • @theelpydimension
    @theelpydimension 3 года назад +1

    Another helpful video, thank you for this. Sometimes it's easy to forget that soil amendments are things like leaves and other organics matter. I definitely need to make a better point to amend my soils, even outside of my food gardens.

  • @huotlor255
    @huotlor255 2 года назад

    Hi Gardener Scott, I watch your youtube so often, your back yard is big, mine smala (Lakewood) next to Long Beach, Los Angeles. I hope other People love your youtube too.

  • @lukehebert6207
    @lukehebert6207 6 месяцев назад +2

    If you use your neighbor's leaves or grass, make sure to first ask if they use any herbicides/weed killers. Happy gardening!

  • @Dee.C
    @Dee.C 3 года назад +1

    We are getting our first good cold front blowing through. It won't drop the temperatures near the frost point but enough cool weather on the horizon to start the leaves changing and dropping soon. I have plenty of other organics ready to go , just waiting for my leaves to come tumbling down. Zone 7b , Oklahoma/Texas border area in SW Oklahoma. Sad to see my friends , the black soldier flies leaving soon for warmer pastures .

  • @sandranewkirk4
    @sandranewkirk4 3 года назад +2

    Thanks

  • @lanettelawrence6308
    @lanettelawrence6308 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for sharing.

  • @RockyDave
    @RockyDave 3 года назад +1

    That's a lot of work! I'm sure the results will be worth it.

  • @robertshorthill4153
    @robertshorthill4153 3 года назад

    Scott, sounds great. Hope to do some of this after frost and harvest. I have two key hole beds and one 4 X6 bed. Tom pots will go to compost beds and get mixed with organic plants and leaves,etc. Thanks,. Bob

  • @dustyflats3832
    @dustyflats3832 2 года назад +1

    The tiller was necessary as you said to mix in initial org material to get it started. I garden both in beds and open. I dont need to till beds as it just takes a few turns with a fork and its good. Last fall I really added Everything i could get my fork on🤣 Cant wait for this spring. I got a great late season deal on some perennials. I just wish I could help my neighbor keep his bees as one hive started to obscond in summer and I think one died out. He puts them in shed for winter and I think they get too much moisture. Need to figure it out. Should do a bee autopsy.

  • @edallen5119
    @edallen5119 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for all your videos and tips

  • @deathatsix
    @deathatsix 3 года назад

    I'm really excited to see how your garden does this year. About as much as I'm hoping mine does this year re starting out.

  • @FloridaGirl-
    @FloridaGirl- 3 года назад

    👍 Another great vid Gardner Scott! I never thought I’d miss straw so much! It’s near impossible to find in FL! But, like you, I use the resources available in my area. And you are right! It’s all about the soil! Love your vids!

  • @monicam.8006
    @monicam.8006 3 года назад

    I don't now if this follows your video or even if it counts as a success story, but I ran some numbers on my garden yesterday. I was injured throughout most of the gardening season, and so the only crop I managed to grow well was my pickling cucumbers. I spent about 20 dollars just in buying seeds, and with the pickles I made last week, I got that twenty dollars back, and I still have a ton more pickling cucumbers growing. I'm not going to turn a profit this year because I couldn't work much and I had to buy some materials to make things like trellises and soil. However, I was able to get my money back on the seeds, and now I know how to grow pickling cucumbers well in this climate. Next year, I might be able to turn a profit. Even with only one crop, I could break even!

  • @dustyflats3832
    @dustyflats3832 2 года назад +1

    I listened to video on Valentine's and said in live chat that peat is hydrophobic🤣 I'm doing another run on your vids. The garden gets really dry during day and when I water later it just runs through. All the org material dries out and hand watering from cattle tanks is not super soaking, Its Tuff in drought. Don't dig too deep or you'll catch all the sticks🤣 it happened to me.

  • @adampetherick7836
    @adampetherick7836 3 года назад

    Thank you for talking about the Y not the how.you make it alot easyer

  • @edwardbenton8323
    @edwardbenton8323 3 года назад

    Good drainage is important in the first 4 inches of raised beds, I often mix course sand with my soil/compost at the bottom level.

  • @abgovani
    @abgovani 3 года назад

    Awesome videos Scott. The only pro of coir is that it's compressed so it's easier to store if you have super limited space. Just need to hydrate for a bed.

  • @dianehall5345
    @dianehall5345 3 года назад

    Thanks for this helpful video. Those are going to be happy vegetables! I have started a woodland garden and it is responding to the amendments I have added. Our New Hampshire usually needs to be lightened up, so the peat moss is helpful. I have three of the books you recommended. Elliot Coleman is in Maine, so I can match his 4B growing season methods.

  • @jamessanders4310
    @jamessanders4310 Год назад

    Really informative video. You truly are a master gardener!

  • @stephenmoberg8807
    @stephenmoberg8807 Год назад +1

    Great video per usual

  • @dorang5156
    @dorang5156 3 года назад +1

    Thank you. It’s very informative

  • @junnielaine4208
    @junnielaine4208 3 года назад +1

    Such a great video. Thanks !

  • @jerrylassiter6443
    @jerrylassiter6443 4 месяца назад

    Sir, do you add char to your beds... thanks for all the great videos, you've made me a better gardener, I have 20 beds and add more each year

  • @johnjude2685
    @johnjude2685 2 года назад

    You are so wise to take one step at a time and keeping it fun.
    QUESTION I'm looking for your video having the warning of just what might be in what is sold as " Top soil " for a friend.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  2 года назад

      I mention it in a few videos, but am not sure which one you're thinking of. I think we talked about it in the livestream on Mar 29, 2021. The problem is that in most areas "top soil" is not regulated and can include anything.

  • @tombeckett4340
    @tombeckett4340 2 года назад +1

    Great information thanks 🇨🇦👍

  • @jimstewart1044
    @jimstewart1044 3 года назад +4

    Great video! A ton of very well explained content. Thank you!
    I do have a question. You mention "soil structure" and that you are simply wanting to turn the soil with the spade. Then you come back with a fork, after adding a few more amendments, and turn or break up at a more shallow depth, but you're still breaking up the soil. "Soil structure" is a bit of a new tern to me, but aren't you breaking up the soil structure with the fork? How is that different from a tiller?
    We are just heading into fall here in Texas and I have several fairly new raised beds (6 months old). We will be following your tutorial and amending our beds. Thanks again

    • @erickchristianson5416
      @erickchristianson5416 3 года назад +7

      Fork vs tiller is comparable to a swizzle stick vs a blender. The fork moves stuff around, the tiller pulverizes the soil.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +6

      Thanks. I want to try to keep the soil in clumps or aggregates as much as possible. Mixing the soil by hand rather than a machine avoids dramatic damage..

  • @kallienicolay738
    @kallienicolay738 3 года назад +1

    Great lesson. Thanks

  • @gnargnar1992
    @gnargnar1992 3 года назад +17

    No-till is the way, much less work.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +6

      No-till is great once the soil has reached a good level of fertility, but my dense, poor soil isn't there yet.

    • @earlshine453
      @earlshine453 3 года назад +4

      I wish Scott would do a long term comparison bed with no-till. I filled my beds with a mix of 40 percent compost and 60 percent of native dirt (very fine sand) plus some bentonite and crushed basalt. I avoid pulling whenever possible. My soil level does not drop and still is not compacted after four years. Only added very small amounts of compost to the top. After four years I replanted some beds with fava beans. It was amazing to see that the harvest doubled compared to the first year. I only use my shovel to create new beds, and the fork to flip my compost heap once a year ( lots of worms in there do the vermicomposting, most commercial compost is oriented towards high speed, high volume, weed and pathogen killing temperatures but without the worm activity). I suspect the decaying not pulled root mass along with the soil life keeps the soil level up and even improves the soil from the initial mix. Sometimes (in fall) I seed cover crops. Always running out of compost for new beds, I replaced that with a mix of kitchen scraps, cardboard and chipped garden waste. The leaks did well, just like the cucumbers and the tomatoes (no blossom end rot or other problems). I have no clue wether or not my subsoil watering affects the results, I only water overhead after seeding plus natural rain. Of course the rain water has more N and less Ca than the municipal water I only use when my harvested rain water runs out.

  • @gardenlawyer
    @gardenlawyer Год назад +1

    Great video

  • @Horse237
    @Horse237 3 года назад +8

    Why not plant fall-winter cover crops?

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +4

      I do that too. I have a video on that and will be releasing another one soon.

  • @jackiekitchennowordsneeded587
    @jackiekitchennowordsneeded587 3 года назад +1

    Great information.

  • @jeannie8050
    @jeannie8050 3 года назад +6

    I truly believe the coir added in my raised bed soil was the main reason I had such poor performance this year. Every gardener and experience is different, and I respect that. I just want people to do their own research for all materials they add into their garden. If anyone has had success with coir, I am interested in what the growing conditions were 🙂 Let us always learn and share. ❤️

    • @bobkernahan6340
      @bobkernahan6340 3 года назад +1

      coir has lots of salt and be soaked and rinsed very well

    • @5857Farm
      @5857Farm 3 года назад

      I grow all of my starts in straight coconut Coir and have a lot in my garden beds. It works well for me and has decomposed well in the beds. I love it for my pumpkins. Depending on where your cc was processed it can have salts, sometimes not.

  • @ivethgo2876
    @ivethgo2876 3 года назад

    Manos a la obra!! Esta semana empezaré a trabajar en esto 👌

  • @justinweaver8407
    @justinweaver8407 Год назад

    Water first then add the mulch, grasshopper x

  • @jamesguimary1252
    @jamesguimary1252 Год назад +1

    Nice,,,👍

  • @qwerty1234561233
    @qwerty1234561233 2 года назад

    Thanks!

  • @tntfishchannel3167
    @tntfishchannel3167 3 года назад

    Good video and nice Scott!!

  • @barbaraperry2796
    @barbaraperry2796 3 года назад +1

    Yay!! Thank you!!

  • @wendygillies7085
    @wendygillies7085 3 года назад

    This is really helpful! Thank you!

  • @VideoconferencingUSA
    @VideoconferencingUSA 3 года назад

    I heard a comment about pine needles being like any other organic matter. Although if you look at a Pine Forrest or Cypress Forest nothing grows underneath those trees.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      That's usually because the ground is fully shaded and there are a lot of roots near the surface. The pine forests near me have many native shrubs that can grow in shade.

  • @debbiehester5907
    @debbiehester5907 3 года назад +1

    I would love to find some straw that wasn't treated with herbicides. And if you could tell me how to control coastal bemuda grass, I would be grateful.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      I haven't had any experience with Bermuda grass. I'm sorry I can't help you.

  • @AutoDudes
    @AutoDudes 3 года назад

    This is brilliant. Thanks!

  • @judyvance1556
    @judyvance1556 Год назад

    I have field peas growing in my fall raised bed; in spring should I dig those pea plants in?

  • @aldente3585
    @aldente3585 3 года назад +2

    With great respect because you have taught me many things and made me the successful gardener that I am, I have to disagree with your plan for amending raised beds. Essentially you have created a compost pile inside your raised bed. It would be wiser to make compost remotely and pile your homemade compost on top in a thick layer and plant winter crops immediately. A raised bed is valuable real estate. Leaving it vacant is a huge waste. Remember, we have seen your seed collection! There’s got to be something you can plant there. Yes I’m a No Dig gardener but I’m not a fanatic. Plus that store bought compost was full of wood chips, I saw it. I have found that good homemade compost is the key to successful gardening. It takes a lot of time and effort, almost too much but it solves so many problems that would have taken your time in other areas such as tilling, fertilizing, pest control, soil Ph control and ultimately vacant garden space. I’ve learned about hugelkultur and core gardening and incorporated that with my No Dig and I think that hybrid gardening style is the best for ease and production.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      Thanks. You raise some good points. I am creating a bed similar to sheet composting. I don't always have the material for an active compost pile and it can be easier to mix directly in soil. My growing season is short and frigid fall, winter, and spring weather limits how much I can grow in the beds.

  • @NashvilleMonkey1000
    @NashvilleMonkey1000 3 года назад

    Make sure to "amend" all the vine borers overwintering in the squash garden beds~ It's very wise as you're doing to set up as much garden during the fall as possible before spring, as it's so much easier to direct sow than to try to dig when the ground is still frozen from winter~

    • @meramosvictorybelongstojes8221
      @meramosvictorybelongstojes8221 3 года назад +1

      Please explain. Is there something to do that gets rid of the squash bores. Lost all squash plants to the bores after the squash bugs were finally taken care of.

    • @NashvilleMonkey1000
      @NashvilleMonkey1000 3 года назад +1

      I asked gardener scott in his livestream the next day and he said that forking up the top layer of soil is enough so the dormant vine borer larva freeze in the winter.

  • @Neddoest
    @Neddoest 2 года назад +1

    Do you have any tips for amending beds in early spring?? I just got a bed in my local community garden and I only have a few weeks before I need to start planting.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  2 года назад +3

      Fully decomposed compost is best. Extra time in the soil before planting helps.

    • @Neddoest
      @Neddoest 2 года назад +1

      @@GardenerScott thank you! I was able to get plenty of fully decomposed compost to add in 👍

  • @l.dschick-inn-palacecrafts6174
    @l.dschick-inn-palacecrafts6174 2 года назад

    I appreciate your time. For making these videos. I am overwhelmed with the amount of different information given by sooooo many gardeners though. One says composted chicken manure is to be added weekly for feeding my plants. Others say peat moss or fish emulsion with bonemeal. So what say you sir ? I'm in west TX. What food should I be feeding my plants weekly????

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  2 года назад +1

      I say focus on your soil and make it as good as possible. With healthy soil you may not need any fertilizer and feeding. I don't feed my plants weekly or monthly, but I amend my soil twice a year.

  • @crowe6891
    @crowe6891 Год назад

    New Gardener here! Love Lord Scott so much wisdom! My old garden soil in my garden bed has a lot of old roots do I take them all out? Anybody know? Thanks.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  Год назад +1

      It depends on the roots. I would take out tree roots, but smaller flower and vegetable roots can stay.

    • @crowe6891
      @crowe6891 Год назад

      @@GardenerScott Its an old small garden bed thank you Scott!

  • @uncleor1938
    @uncleor1938 3 года назад

    I love your videos thank you

  • @CuriousinNY
    @CuriousinNY 3 года назад

    I live in zone 5 where we get problems of powdery mildew, blight, Leaf spot. I would really like to know if I can compost and chop and drop them. I thought I was taught in my master gardening course that all such infected plants or leaves should not be chopped and dropped or added to a compost pile. Try as I might, I do deal with these problems and with your years of experience and wisdom I would appreciate you clarifying whether I continue to throw infected leaves and plants in the trash or if they can go into my cold composting bins without fear of carryover into the next year.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад

      In most of our home gardens if one bed is infected the contaminant will usually be in the garden environment. The wind is also carrying in bacteria and fungal spores from other yards. I got powdery mildew on my squash this year in a brand new bed with brand new soil so I now know to expect the disease on a regular basis. With the common diseases like mildew, blight and leaf spot I go ahead and compost or chop and drop because I feel the soil is benefiting form the organic matter and I'm going to get those diseases from sources other than my compost.

  • @clawdia123
    @clawdia123 3 года назад

    I have been gardening all my life and have been using your videos for 2 years now. I thought i knew a lot but I have learned so much more from you. You are my inspiration. By the way..I have been looking for a gardening t shirt and I love the one in this Video. Any chance this is one of yours I can purchase???

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад

      Thanks. Yes, all of the gardening shirts I wear are available for purchase. You can click on the link below all of my videos or here: ruclips.net/channel/UCWsI0LmiDyezbnN2JCL4P9wstore

  • @lauralaspe329
    @lauralaspe329 3 года назад +2

    Would you be able to plant a little garlic in a bed like this before winter?

  • @jenpaige3110
    @jenpaige3110 3 года назад

    So helpful! Thanks ❤

  • @lisag9752
    @lisag9752 3 года назад +1

    Hi Scott. I greatly appreciate your advice and helpful videos. I live in So. Cal and would like to improve the soil in my established landscaping. If I spread steer manure on the ground before a rain, is that a good first step to improving my soil? I'm not looking to dig up anything, just add it to the surface and let it purcolate through after a rain. Should I do add a few handfuls of manure and/or compost around the base of the plants before each rain? Thank you!

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад

      Thanks. Yes, aged manure and compost can be a good way to improve soil from above. They should be used sparingly in areas with small plants, but I spread it liberally on top of mulch in perennial beds.

  • @drhelenloney1426
    @drhelenloney1426 3 года назад

    We got hit by a heck of a hailstorm, really knocked seven bells out of my tomatoes, amongst others. Usually, we get another couple of weeks. Oh well, sadly, the tomatoes carry blight, so I'm going to have to dispose of them

  • @MorelliMedia
    @MorelliMedia 2 года назад

    Can you add fresh manure at this point, too, and let that age in place in the bed, rather than aging it in a pile green adding in Spring. Thank you

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  2 года назад

      Yes, you can, as long as you don't plant right away.

  • @MsSunstoned
    @MsSunstoned 3 года назад +1

    Could you plant garlic in that bed this late fall? Thanks for sharing your knowledge .

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      Sure. That is my plan. Because the garlic won't be actively growing, the decomposing organic matter will be okay.

    • @MsSunstoned
      @MsSunstoned 3 года назад

      @@GardenerScott Great! Just what I needed to hear. It's hard to find garlic seed right now so I'm happy I planted plenty last year. I can plant my own garlic. Love it.

  • @moegirl76
    @moegirl76 Год назад

    Since I didn’t do any of this in the fall is it okay. To do this in the winter when the snow has cleared? It’s still 3 months until my last frost. Great video! I will do this next fall.

  • @mijejo11
    @mijejo11 3 года назад

    Hi Scott. Thank you for the very informative video. So that I may defend my use of it to others, can you provide more information which explains why sphagnum peat is sustainable in the US, please?

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад

      There are many sources you can find, but here's one: www.sungro.com/about-us/sustainable-peat-moss/

  • @peggyluo4563
    @peggyluo4563 3 года назад +1

    Hi Scott, I love you Vedio. Does kitchen garbage belong to organic matters, such as banana peel, rotten fruit . Can we put them into soil to decompose? Thank you.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      Absolutely. That is all good organic matter.

  • @milkweed7678
    @milkweed7678 3 года назад

    Why are grain farmers able to plant crop seeds right in newly tilled soil, sometimes plowed, that has lots of fresh amenities mixed in just prior to planting or close to it without hurting any growth? Corn stalks, cobs, bean stubble, various straw, sometimes green manures, hay fields, etc are incorporated without hurting a thing during early growth or during the growing season. I guess this would be called unfinished compost in gardening terms. But gardeners have always got to make sure the compost is mostly finished because of depleting nitrogen and hurting growth. Thanks for the great videos!!

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад

      Primarily it's because farmers are adding large amounts of fertilizer as part of the process. Gardeners can do the same, but many of us prefer to feed the soil naturally without the chemicals and that often means waiting for the organic material to decompose.

    • @milkweed7678
      @milkweed7678 3 года назад

      @@GardenerScott Ok, thanks! Couldn't figure that one out.

  • @judyvance1556
    @judyvance1556 Год назад

    I have field peas growing in my new raised bed. In spring should I just dug them in before planting ( provided the are still alive in spring.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  Год назад

      Digging them in is a good option. Here are some thoughts on using cover crops in spring: ruclips.net/video/yoaKyHDI4x0/видео.html

  • @springbankscrapper
    @springbankscrapper 3 года назад +3

    How do I amend the soil in a raised bed with perennials like asparagus or strawberries?

    • @CuriousinNY
      @CuriousinNY 3 года назад +1

      Anne Bury Good question. I have also wondered this, especially since you are not suppose to cover the crowns of the strawberries and their roots are so shallow.

    • @srshufelt
      @srshufelt 3 года назад +2

      I would lightly add a small layer of all ready composted soil to the top and gently work it in. Just a little bit at a time. Being careful not to hurt existing plants.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +2

      I amend from the top. I add compost on top of the mulch and then add more mulch.

  • @Andre-vx9zn
    @Andre-vx9zn 11 месяцев назад

    Wondering about weeds in the grass clipping. How would that effect the bed?

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  11 месяцев назад

      If the grass hasn't flowered and set seed and if other weeds weren't allowed to set seed when growing in the grass, there is little likelihood that seeds will sprout.

  • @scottaloha8543
    @scottaloha8543 3 года назад

    I am so into focusing on soil health knowing that plant health follows. If i have a garden bed that i don't plan on clearing (because of our year round tropical growing season and my thriving plants). How should I amend my soil in an active bed? I am using a thick layer of grass clippings and dried leaves as a mulch. . I put a thin layer of finished compost on the surface below the mulch. Should i mix in things like dilute fish fertilizer, azomite, humic acid, espoma organic plant food or something else into the upper few inches of the soil? And how often? Thank you so much. I like your sound advice. It makes me approach my gardening with a clearer vision.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      If there is already organic matter in the soil, the mulch can be enough for a bed that will sit awhile. I don't see a need for Azomite, fish fertilizer and other liquid plant foods if the organics are in native soil, but they can be adequate amendments for soils known to be deficient.

    • @scottaloha8543
      @scottaloha8543 3 года назад +1

      Thank you for your help. I'll keep the mulch going. Since i started using grass clippings for mulch, my soil moisture has been so much more consistent. Your videos encourage me to do it.

  • @cypherknot
    @cypherknot 3 года назад +1

    Scott, you forgot to mention that when getting from neighbors a person has to make sure the neighbor doesn't put herbicides on their lawn.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      Absolutely. I've mentioned it in other videos but missed it in this one.

  • @kschleich1950
    @kschleich1950 Год назад

    I just amended my raised beds and topped with straw. If we have a lot of rain will it wash away all the nutrients I just added? Compost, perlite and peat.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  Год назад +1

      Some nitrogen might leach in very heavy rain, but a healthy soil should have plenty for plants.

  • @ozzieosawamick1712
    @ozzieosawamick1712 Год назад

    What about the roots of previous plants? Would it be best to take out or empty the bed and get the roots out?

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  Год назад +1

      I prefer to remove the bigger roots of plants like tomatoes and peppers. Less woody roots from plants like lettuce can stay in and should decompose faster.

  • @nalediCS
    @nalediCS 4 месяца назад

    Greate video, How about Apples ? can i put them in the soil? i have an overflow of apples in the autumn. insted of mowling them down can i just get it in the beds to help the soil ?

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  4 месяца назад

      Yes, you can put apples branches in.

  • @josteventon2246
    @josteventon2246 3 года назад

    I’ve been offered some fine grade organic spent mushroom compost for my raised beds. Should I use this and if so how much should I put in a new raised bed which I am about to fill? Love your explanations of everything, I’ve learnt so much, thank you.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      You can use that as an organic amendment. Some of the nutrients will have been used by the mushrooms, but there will be some good organic matter and microbial life in it. Like other amendments, mix in a few inches through your soil.

    • @josteventon2246
      @josteventon2246 3 года назад

      @@GardenerScott Thanks Scott.

  • @JiminTennessee
    @JiminTennessee 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for this great tutorial:)
    What are your thoughts on adding chicken poop during this process as well?

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  3 года назад +1

      I think it's a good amendment. I usually add chicken manure to my compost pile, but it can go directly in soil too.

    • @JiminTennessee
      @JiminTennessee 3 года назад

      Gardener Scott right on!! I am new to gardening/growing food :)
      As a result, so is my composite pile, which does get its share as well 👍

  • @ronjackway1101
    @ronjackway1101 2 года назад

    Can you give a link to your video for building the cement block raised bed please. Trouble finding it. GREAT videos. Learning a lot.

    • @GardenerScott
      @GardenerScott  2 года назад +1

      Here you go: ruclips.net/video/Vq2Mh3cQ7lc/видео.html

    • @ronjackway1101
      @ronjackway1101 2 года назад +1

      @@GardenerScott Thank you so much. Just got a home with 1/4 acre backyard that is nothing but grass. You have inspired me to get creative back there.