Find Your Local Native Plant Nursery HERE: themeadowproject.com/resources/find-native-plants/ Happy to dedicate a part of our property back to nature and give a little something back. Consider what might be possible for you. No pollinator garden is too small and every one is infinitely significant for our planet. Happy planting!
there is food for many pollinators now where there was once just a lawn. you made a huge difference to your local ecosystem, to your neighbors' gardens, and to your bee and butterfly friends. keep up the great work
Another option we have used to smother weeds and get a clean blank slate over a large area is to put down a large black plastic covering. We purchased one about the size of your area (40x100ft) for about $100. Then you just need to weigh down the edges with rocks or other heavy weight items so the wind doesn't blow it away. It usually takes 3 to 5 months during the spring and early summer to completely kill the vegetation but once you are done you have a clean blank slate with no herbicide used and no soil disturbance. We then planted it with cover crops and it worked for us perfectly and we got really good growth with almost no weed pressure.
Lovely video. I started my prairie over a decade ago. It's approximately an acre. In the beginning, I didn't do enough research and basically just let part of my yard grow, then burning it each year and adding more and more native plant seeds. I wish I could go back, but it's actually not too bad considering the rough start. It is deeply satisfying to watch the progress and see so many native pollinators, especially since I keep non-native honeybees. My original intent was to support the natives since honeybee pressure would be thick. To my delight, I do see more native wildlife in the prairie than my own honeybees. My guess is the honeybees tend to forage large swaths of pollen and nectar rich crops. So I feel that I have created some sort of balance in a roundabout way. Best of luck on your homestead. I'm glad I found your channel.
Tilling brings weed seeds back up to the surface to allow them to germinate. It also disrupts fungal networks in the soil. If you’re not dealing with compaction (and in some cases, even if you are), you should reconsider tilling.
Don’t use herbicide! This will kill your soil. You cab use a heavy layer of mulch over cardboard or another material that blocks light to kill off the grass/ weeds
@@hermetix7231 That is another way to do it - takes more and not practical to scale up. Regardless, I respectfully disagree that an herbicide such as glyphosphate would harm soil any more than cardboard.
This was helpful. I've had to look up several sources on what they recommend for transforming a large area into a wildflower meadow and this was the first one that told me I should keep it mowed down for the first 2 years. I'm a little disappointed to hear that but I'll do it to make sure it's done right.
Thanks so much ! thevideo explain very well the steps, we can see at which period of the project and which month of the year the flowers start to appear, i loved that ! I'm starting the same project in Quebec, Canada (seeds from OSC) with a 30m2 of full sun that i have in my small yard ! Patience is key !
some seeds do need winter cold stratification and germinate better when planted in fall. So basically when is the ideal time to sow also depends on the germination needs of the plant in question.
I’m launching conservative efforts on my grandparents 30 acres of land, starting with a 3 acre field, continuing into wooded efforts, and ideally getting neighbors on board with the idea, and expanding into a very large nature reserve.
Great video and graden. Do you plan to do burns to maintain your garden or will you mow at the end of the season. I have a 3 year old native garden and not sure how I will maintain it. I'm in the city and I don't know if my garden will continue to grow with natives if I don't burn. Maybe I can mow and rake at the end of the season?
Hi, great video, thank you! Quick question: I want to do this over my septic field (smaller space than yours) but our property is bordered by an old stone wall that has invasive grasses and other plants that I think we are going to have a hard time removing without destroying our wall. If we plan our native prarie garden like you did, is it going to be inevitable that these invasive will just take over in a matter of years? And if so, would a good alternative just to be to till the section and plan wildflowers only and weed the area (ugh)? Thanks for any advice. Beautiful job!
Shawna, I'm happy you liked the video! I am definitely not an expert so take my advice with a grain of salt. From my understanding, preparation is the most important step during this whole process. Some people opt to till, some might consider tarping, while others use herbicide in order to prep the area. You want, as close as possible, a blank slate to allow your new plants to establish themselves and thrive. How you get there is entirely up to you. As you said, it is inevitable that invasive species will soon encroach. However, with a well prepped site, your new plants will have the leg-up they need in order to out-compete other less favorable species. If you are prepping over your septic field, be cautious using tilling methods as this can damage your pipes (if you are unsure of their depth). Tarping over septic leach fields is probably less than ideal as it inhibits the field's ability to evaporate and get rid of excess moisture. Due to excessive heat and lack of oxygen, tarping may also disrupt the fragile microorganism environment that helps purify your wastewater. I would speak to your local health department or contractor if you have concerns.
@@IndyHomestead thank you so much! We are nervous about tilling for that very reason (unsure of depth) and we are personally against herbicides (unless you can recommend any organic ones?) so I think we'll be contacting our local Cornell Co-op Master Gardner program. Really appreciate it!
Manure is a bad idea. It can carry seed from weeds the cattle were eating unless you hot composted it first. Also too much nitrogen isn't necessarily good for prairie plants but helps the non-native plants to out compete the desirables.
Find Your Local Native Plant Nursery HERE: themeadowproject.com/resources/find-native-plants/
Happy to dedicate a part of our property back to nature and give a little something back. Consider what might be possible for you. No pollinator garden is too small and every one is infinitely significant for our planet.
Happy planting!
Which seed mix did you get? Looks like a great amount of variety there! We are looking to do a similar project in central Indiana.
there is food for many pollinators now where there was once just a lawn. you made a huge difference to your local ecosystem, to your neighbors' gardens, and to your bee and butterfly friends. keep up the great work
Another option we have used to smother weeds and get a clean blank slate over a large area is to put down a large black plastic covering. We purchased one about the size of your area (40x100ft) for about $100. Then you just need to weigh down the edges with rocks or other heavy weight items so the wind doesn't blow it away. It usually takes 3 to 5 months during the spring and early summer to completely kill the vegetation but once you are done you have a clean blank slate with no herbicide used and no soil disturbance. We then planted it with cover crops and it worked for us perfectly and we got really good growth with almost no weed pressure.
Lovely video. I started my prairie over a decade ago. It's approximately an acre. In the beginning, I didn't do enough research and basically just let part of my yard grow, then burning it each year and adding more and more native plant seeds. I wish I could go back, but it's actually not too bad considering the rough start. It is deeply satisfying to watch the progress and see so many native pollinators, especially since I keep non-native honeybees. My original intent was to support the natives since honeybee pressure would be thick. To my delight, I do see more native wildlife in the prairie than my own honeybees. My guess is the honeybees tend to forage large swaths of pollen and nectar rich crops. So I feel that I have created some sort of balance in a roundabout way. Best of luck on your homestead. I'm glad I found your channel.
This video healed my soul a bit. Thank you for the sights and sounds
I'm in Indiana and this EXACTLY what we want to do to our farm! Fantastic video and your meadow looks incredible. Good job
Tilling brings weed seeds back up to the surface to allow them to germinate. It also disrupts fungal networks in the soil. If you’re not dealing with compaction (and in some cases, even if you are), you should reconsider tilling.
I planted a small native prairie this spring using tilling and it was a HUGE mistake - so many weeds!!!! Will try herbicide next spring!
Don’t use herbicide! This will kill your soil. You cab use a heavy layer of mulch over cardboard or another material that blocks light to kill off the grass/ weeds
@@hermetix7231 That is another way to do it - takes more and not practical to scale up. Regardless, I respectfully disagree that an herbicide such as glyphosphate would harm soil any more than cardboard.
I read that is why if using tilling, you need to till twice, at least 2 weeks apart to kill the second round.
glyphosate is damaging to plant, animal, and human health. undiluted it may cause cancer
Great start, would be fantastic as a pasture forage long term as well with rotation.
Such awesome information, thank you for sharing. Im an Ohioian with a dream and this gives me such hope!
Amazing video. I hope there's a summer 2022 update. Great work.
Thank you, Joe!
We are happy with the results and would love to document and show this year's progress.
Your passion for plants is contagious! 🌱💚
Would love a spring update
Just beautiful. What patience you have!
Thank you so much. I have been looking to see how other people created a meadow over the leach field.
Awesome stuff. Can't wait to do something similar on my property in Southern Tasmania.
your voice is so nice?? very gentle/calm
@indyhomestead what was the specific seed mix you purchased from Heartland?
This was helpful. I've had to look up several sources on what they recommend for transforming a large area into a wildflower meadow and this was the first one that told me I should keep it mowed down for the first 2 years. I'm a little disappointed to hear that but I'll do it to make sure it's done right.
This is a great video for the span of time you cover. Thank you!
Thanks so much ! thevideo explain very well the steps, we can see at which period of the project and which month of the year the flowers start to appear, i loved that ! I'm starting the same project in Quebec, Canada (seeds from OSC) with a 30m2 of full sun that i have in my small yard ! Patience is key !
some seeds do need winter cold stratification and germinate better when planted in fall. So basically when is the ideal time to sow also depends on the germination needs of the plant in question.
I will be doing g this in a front yard easement a utility made last year! Wish me Goodluck! BATTLE GROUND, IN
Looks really great!
So beautiful 😍
Thanks for the video, keep them coming!!!
I would love to see a small fire to reset the native prairie
I’m launching conservative efforts on my grandparents 30 acres of land, starting with a 3 acre field, continuing into wooded efforts, and ideally getting neighbors on board with the idea, and expanding into a very large nature reserve.
Awesome!
Great video and graden. Do you plan to do burns to maintain your garden or will you mow at the end of the season. I have a 3 year old native garden and not sure how I will maintain it. I'm in the city and I don't know if my garden will continue to grow with natives if I don't burn. Maybe I can mow and rake at the end of the season?
One thing for sure is to not now or weed it until next spring because the insects need the dead plant parts as a winter refuge ;)
Great idea 👍🏼
Hey guys 👋 just dropping by to rev you up a bit and say we MISS you! Hope you’re all ok ❤❤
Beautiful.
So how do you maintain this area after this point? It seemed too tall to mow. (I understand leaving the stalks and seed heads for wildlife)
Probably prescribed burning
Hi, great video, thank you! Quick question: I want to do this over my septic field (smaller space than yours) but our property is bordered by an old stone wall that has invasive grasses and other plants that I think we are going to have a hard time removing without destroying our wall. If we plan our native prarie garden like you did, is it going to be inevitable that these invasive will just take over in a matter of years? And if so, would a good alternative just to be to till the section and plan wildflowers only and weed the area (ugh)? Thanks for any advice. Beautiful job!
Shawna, I'm happy you liked the video!
I am definitely not an expert so take my advice with a grain of salt. From my understanding, preparation is the most important step during this whole process. Some people opt to till, some might consider tarping, while others use herbicide in order to prep the area. You want, as close as possible, a blank slate to allow your new plants to establish themselves and thrive. How you get there is entirely up to you. As you said, it is inevitable that invasive species will soon encroach. However, with a well prepped site, your new plants will have the leg-up they need in order to out-compete other less favorable species.
If you are prepping over your septic field, be cautious using tilling methods as this can damage your pipes (if you are unsure of their depth). Tarping over septic leach fields is probably less than ideal as it inhibits the field's ability to evaporate and get rid of excess moisture. Due to excessive heat and lack of oxygen, tarping may also disrupt the fragile microorganism environment that helps purify your wastewater. I would speak to your local health department or contractor if you have concerns.
@@IndyHomestead thank you so much! We are nervous about tilling for that very reason (unsure of depth) and we are personally against herbicides (unless you can recommend any organic ones?) so I think we'll be contacting our local Cornell Co-op Master Gardner program. Really appreciate it!
what riding mower do you have?
2007 Cub Cadet RZT 50
Fire... all the native Prarie plants evolved with fire.
Need that " east coast florida wildflower mix. God it's got grasses flowers and small herbs. Don't put it in your flower beds.
I love mowing grass and all my mowers, but we really need to stop destroying the native ecosystem.
Alternative preparation: Do nothing. Plant some seeds. Let them grow. Remove the plants you don't want. Done.
There is no such thing as weed.
what did i just smoke then
Manure is a bad idea. It can carry seed from weeds the cattle were eating unless you hot composted it first. Also too much nitrogen isn't necessarily good for prairie plants but helps the non-native plants to out compete the desirables.
I'm in Indiana and this EXACTLY what we want to do to our farm! Fantastic video and your meadow looks incredible. Good job