May 28, 2024

VIDEO: Spring Garden Prep 2020 | Cover crops in your Backyard Garden


Spring Garden Prep 2020 | Cover crops in your Backyard Garden.

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30 thoughts on “VIDEO: Spring Garden Prep 2020 | Cover crops in your Backyard Garden

  1. Excellent video; I wonder if our deep and continious snow cover here in zone 3, which insulates the ground, would allow the soil microbs to work closer to the surface during the winter?

  2. I to am in 6b zone, and for years added chopped up leaves into my garden, around mid November. April I would till under and lots of worms, but just as you have showed, soil would be clumps. So I planted for the first time a cover crop in late September. So, to my question. The cover crop is much taller than yours. Can I use a "chop n drop" and cover with cardboard, since I don't have leaves?
    Really a good video. I'm happy to have found you.

  3. Mark:
    Question: since I just moved into a new house and I’m just starting out on a new backyard garden that is only hard packed dirt and weeds should I just focus on cover crops the first season or should I try and grow all my favorite veggies like tomatoes etc. I would really like a garden this summer but I also want to do what is best for growing soil in a new hard packed yard.

    Right now I have a large (300sq ft) garden area covered in approximately 200 trash bags of fall leaves mixed with aged chicken manure with red wrigglers. I have also built several other hugculture beds that I’m hoping to grow in this summer. Since I am also in zone 6b in Flagstaff AZ, My plan was to start snap peas as a cover crop next month, then I would put in all my other veggies in May. What do you think. Should I just grow cover crops only this summer?
    Thank you so much! I have learned so much from your channel.
    Silas

  4. I have 2 questions:
    1) if I have perennial bed e.g. strawberries – should I still attempt to put winter rye in between for the sake of it's root depth and decaying root organic matter and how to implement this (i.e. how to seed it in the fall and than to kill it in the spring)?
    2) if I would stop seeding cover crop or adding mulch for a few years (but would still not till) would the soil reverse back to it is compacted and low OM state? Or could the soil in perennial beds (such as strawberries) "maintain itself" ?

  5. Great knowledge and information as usual! One thing I’ve noticed on your videos is that you tend to be off screen most of the time. It would be nice to see is more action video as opposed to picture style with you describing. But I will say I’ve learned more from your videos in the past month or so that I found you than any other channel. Keep up the good work! Great to see the live experiments and watch failures in action (on a few occasions)! Seems I learn the most from the things that go wrong.

  6. hey what do you think, ive sowed cover crop into freshly spread compost in my bed and then covered it with about 2 inches of woodchips. will i have a supercharged garden this year or is the cover crop gonna fail?

  7. I used leaf mulch on top of the ground all winter in my back yard garden. I have some crimson clover seed. should I throw it in the garden now before planting to start a summer cover crop. Then continue to use the leaf mulch around the seeded rows and transplants.

  8. Can you speak to the irrigation of cover crops? We have drip irrigation in our rows, and I don’t think anything will grow outside the line unless I install a different system.

  9. Really enjoyed this. We have moved from a till to a no till garden with fairly heavy mulch (in areas). We need to add the use of cover crops into our garden. Our soil has improved tremendously since we quit tilling, but it is still not where it needs to be. Very interesting, thanks!! -Lea

  10. Thank you Mark
    What would happen if the cover crop is not terminated?
    If I could understand what happens when the plants are there both together,how does it affect and why?
    If you can make a video explaining that and also the same question goes to weeds, what happens to the plants, to the soil and why.
    Thank you again for all your great videos.
    You're the best…

  11. Mark, I’m also zone 6B in New Jersey —-next fall, when I do a cover crop – do I want some thing that winter kills like common oat; or something that is hardier that does not winterkill?

  12. Excellent video! Just wondering, if we are planting full rows of seeds within the cover crop, not actual plants from seedlings, how would we remove the cover crop in long swaths without breaking the soil up or tilling? Also, with your leaf mulch that was in your second garden shown in the video, what do you do with that mulch? Leave it in place and plant within it or remove it and compost it, or…? I have straw down on my garden over winter but I'm not sure if I should leave it or remove it, plant, then put new mulch down? Thanks in advance!

  13. Thank you. your videos have been so helpful. I need to plant cover crops and it is almost frost time, but this gives me hope that they still may grow for the Spring if planted late. This is the best video I have seen to explain all of this. I have asked many professionals and could not get answers. Thank you!

  14. Mark, please Do one on Spring and Summer cover crops similar to this one. Can you plant them as under plantings and which are best for summer? I am getting a much better understanding of cover crops from you.

  15. great explanation and example of how amazing a cover crop can benefit and build the soil. I have just planted my winter rye cover crop for the first time. Looking forward to next year's garden already. Thank you.

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