Straw Bale Bible |
If you’re planning to plant a SBG, now is the perfect time
to start the process, don’t wait two weeks like I’m probably going to end up
doing. Either way, please enjoy this helpful info I wrote previously:
I have a friend who has recently become enamored of straw
bale gardening—you know, planting veggies on top of bales of straw instead of
tilling up the soil and planting seeds in the ground, the cold, wet, muddy
ground as God intended. And like all good, newly-converted enthusiasts she
couldn’t wait to bring her subversive literature over to my house and attempt
to convert me. Now, I’ve seen it done before and my reaction has always been
WHY? It just looks, well—MESSY. Green plants sprouting out of shaggy, slowly
decomposing bales of straw, not at all attractive to my eye. Then she handed me
her propaganda, a book filled with various sized gardens and all sorts of cute
configurations—there was even a straw bale garden in a shopping cart. The
literature claimed amazing results with little effort—that’s sound good, right?
And the small footprint such a garden would require could be easily and
inexpensively fenced to keep those pesky elk at bay. I have to admit that at
this point the entire idea was starting to sound pretty enticing. It seems
rather straight forward to get started: buy some straw bales—straw, not hay.
Hay seeds will sprout and, unless your goal is to grow a baleful of hay, nobody
wants that. You will also need some potting mix or garden soil, soaker hose,
and fertilizer. Along with seeds and/or seedlings that’s all you need. Before
you know it one of my sons was interested in the whole process and started
thumbing through her propaganda . . . and that’s all she wrote.
old friend
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