June 28, 2024

VIDEO: True NO TILL Organic Vegetable Gardening with mulch for beginners 101. Pt 6


NO TILL Homesteading Organic Vegetable Gardening method with deep mulch for beginners 101, Pt 6. Also How to build healthy soil – You can use composting leaves too.

Prices on new items:
New sickle bar for tractor: http://www.northerntool.com/shop/tools/NTESearch?storeId=6970&ipp=48&Ntt=sickle+bar
other source: https://www.everythingattachments.com/Tractor-Sickle-Mowers-s/10538.htm
BCS New blade ONLY: https://www.groworganic.com/bcs-tiller-attachments-sickle-bar-mower-40.html

THIS is the paper mulch I use. http://www.weedguardplus.com/

30 thoughts on “VIDEO: True NO TILL Organic Vegetable Gardening with mulch for beginners 101. Pt 6

  1. Hi Mark enjoy all your video, Starting to try and apply no till here on out farm here in Philippines, Here they have destroy the soil,,, they plant rice every year and just pile on the fertilizer , We have no leaves like you got , very little, But we do have rice hauls from the mill. Glad I found your channel. By the way we do raise Red Dragon Fruit here all so about 1600 plants so far . I'll be watching , Dave

  2. As always, I love your videos! Nice scythe. Keep up the good work. My family owns a farm and they plant rye for crop rotation. They have some very nice equipment. They use a mower attachment and a rake attachment. They rake it into huge rows, then come back a few days later and spread it out again. I didn't realize that the mechanized rakes could spread the straw out so evenly.

  3. I've just bought a scythe as well for cutting grass with it. I haven't quite got the hang of it yet though. I think grass might be more difficult to cut than rye. Some of it just bows down and gets back up 🙂

  4. Maybe you can answer a question I am having a hard time finding the answer to.  This fall, will you plant more winter rye on top of the straw already there?  Just broadcast it, or what?

  5. You thanked viewers for stopping by to watch your video's – I'd like to thank you if you allowed me to become your neighbour … I could listen to you for hours. I enjoy this free information, it's concise, entertaining and I just wished I lived close enough to taste some of that produce … especially a handful of free strawberries :- )

  6. you really are organic gardening. Everybody else is very theoretical with flashy animated videos. But you do it in practice, the proof is there.. I have a 1/2 acre fallow field growing next to my house. It is strong, waterlogged compacted clay soil. However, I think I will spread coffee grounds over it and then plant it with Rye, clover and alfafa and let nature do the rest (as you showed me). So that in 2-3 years of that cover crop growing, I could send a pig on the field who will plough it for me. Then I could plant with the ploughed field with brassicas, root crops and other vegetables! sound like a plan?

  7. I'm totally hooked on your videos…informative, down to earth, frugal. I like it! Plus, you seem like such a pleasant individual! Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience!!

  8. When, or why, do you roll the rye to plant like the last video and when, or why, do you decide to cut it before you plant? Thanks, very helpful stuff!

  9. Hey Mark. I use a string trimmer, but instead of a string, i attach a two point disc, and it does great mulching. It results in something between the scythe and the string trimmer.

  10. No shock to me. Planted cover crop of rye and crimson clover next to my wood chips and some got in my chips. Clover now a foot high and rye 5 feet tall. Just left it thought it would be beneficial to my plum trees and blueberries. Just recently went out and crimped it over. Question about cereal rye. I know you should crimp at the milk stage. If you wait till it matures, are you going to lose any benefits or nutrients of the rye by letting the plant mature?

  11. I like your engineuity, waste not want not. I know you did a video on the seeder you use, but I was unable to find it. What I wanted to know is, where did you buy the seeder at? Thank You Mark for your time.

  12. What was the wire that you had the lettuce and kale growing through? Looked like fence paneling but it was so long. Really neat, informative videos – thank you!

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