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By November you’ve probably pulled out your dead vegetable plants, pulled out plant stakes, cleaned up your perennial areas, and mulched the leaves over your lawn. But what about your soil? We usually think of our garden soil in the spring when we get ready to plant and want to amend it. But you can do some beneficial things for your soil before winter arrives.
Amend your soil
Fall is an excellent time to amend garden soil. Well-rotted manure, compost, and leaves can
all be incorporated before the ground freezes, enhancing beneficial
microorganisms and soil insects.
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I attended a presentation this October by Dr. Tamla Blunt,
CSU Bioagricultural Sciences and Pest Management Department called “Putting the
Garden to Bed.” She named the benefits for doing mulches, cover crops, compost
or manure to cover and protect the soil:
- Makes it difficult for weed seeds to germinate or seedling weeds to survive
- Reduced evaporation from soil surface and stabilizes soil moisture (dry soil gets colder faster than wet soil)
- Improves the soil tilth and helps lessen soil compaction
- Moderates soil temperature extremes and controls erosion
Why do we want to do these things? The microbes for a
healthy living ecosystem. As Dr. Blunt said, “the main criteria for soil
health is the presence of active organisms in the soil such as insects, worms
and microorganisms.”
What to use
To organically amend soil, add a two-inch layer of organic
material over the surface of the soil and mix it into the top four to six
inches. Add four cubic yards of organic amendment per 1,000 square feet of soil
area. [https://planttalk.colostate.edu/topics/soils-amendments-composting/1605-soil-preparation/]
For vegetable gardens, a green cover crop or a straw-covered layer of manure will work slowly over the winter to enrich your soil, attract earthworms, and feed the legions of beneficial microbes needed for healthy spring crops. [https://ucanr.edu/blogs/blogcore/postdetail.cfm?postnum=28295]
Compost – your own or purchased
Besides manure, your can use bark chips, grass clippings (herbicide
free), and leaves
Straw on top with 3-4 inches is good for weed control. Use
organic straw to avoid herbicides and as Dr. Blunt recommended, make sure you don’t mix in the straw with
the soil later as it can disrupt the carbon/nitrogen ratio. Just use it as a
cover.
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To till or not?
I also recently attended a presentation by Soil Ecologist, Jean
Reeder, Ph.D. After retiring from the USDA as a research scientist, Jean is now
a soils instructor for the CSU extension, Denver Botanic Gardens, Front Range
Community College and local nurseries.
In my research I found differing points of view on whether
to mix in soil amendments or not. Dr.
Reeder promotes disturbing the soil as little as possible so as to not disturb
the microorganisms keeping the soil healthy. Other sources from universities say
to only incorporate amendments 4-6 inches into the soil. But the conclusion I
came to was that we shouldn’t be doing the deep rototilling that was
recommended in the past. Even commercial farmers are starting to learn that
heavy tilling decreases the health of the soil and thus their crop output. [https://www.usda.gov/media/blog/2017/11/30/saving-money-time-and-soil-economics-no-till-farming]
Consider soil testing now
So just when you thought you had all your fall garden chores
done, think about giving your garden soil some amendments that can break down, start
releasing nutrients, and protect and keep your soil healthy through the winter.