No-till
No-till farming (also known as zero tillage or direct drilling) is an agricultural technique for growing crops or pasture without disturbing the soil through tillage.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No-till_farming
When I first heard about no-till, it made a lot of sense to me.
So, I tried using more no-till ideas and principles in my garden.
I called it the 'Sepp Holzer Experience' and blogged about it.
While it clearly comes with some benefits, in my context here, it's terrible.
Succesful till
This year, I used the exact same plot and planted like I normally would;
Into tilled soil.
I also blogged about that.
I don't have a plough or tiller.
I turn the soil with a spade. By hand.
The way I do that does not compact the soil like a big tractor and plough would.
This is the last of the potato harvest:
High Yield
I had excellent yields this year.
It's hard to measure, since I harvested in stages, had no scale and gave a lot away right after harvesting.
...I think I pulled out around 50kg of produce out of this patch.
The Last 2 Rows
In the picture above, I marked the 2 rows I harvested the other day.
Here is the result, left out in the sun before cleaning them and transport:
Conclusion
I write this post, because I want to make a point.
[...] tilling kills ALL the biology crops need to be healthy.
@goldenoakfarm commented this under another post of mine.
First of all:
bio-logy
bio: means 'life'
logy (logos): means 'science' (in this context)
Both words are of greek origin.
Biology is the science of life (of everything living).
You can not kill it.
I know what she means, though.
[...] tilling kills ALL the life crops need to be healthy.
This can also not be true.
I have healthy crops. I had a very succesful harvest to prove that.
[...] tilling disturbs ALL the life crops need to be healthy.
Tilling disturbs the soil, and disturbs the life in it.
That, I can agree on.
Does this hurt the plants?
Clearly not.
I really wanted this no-till approach to work.
It just did not.
I would have probably had better results, if I had used much more mulch.
But I don't have access to that much mulch. Not even close.
I'd have to have it transported here and would probably have to pay for it.
That is not sustainable.
@goldenoakfarm
I hope you don't take this too personal.
I follow your blog and vote on it, occasionally.
I respect what you are doing on your farm and with certain things you are well ahead of me.
But: No-till is not always the best solution for everyone and every crop.
Here, in this climate, with this soil, with the things I have available, tilling is superior in some cases.
Far superior for potatos.
I have been growing this stuff for decades and copy the methods my grandparent's generation used.
I try incorporating new ideas, too.
I try to stay objective.
Mulching has its place. I adopted that practice. I mulch a lot now.
But that does not replace proper tilling and aeration.
Low Impact
I call my approach 'low impact gardening' from now on.
I am trying to get the best results from as little work as possible.
Gardening is not a precise thing. Results vary.
The End
I conclude with this shot of a spider.
Totally random, no hidden meaning.
I just liked that photo and wanted to share it.
Everyone’s soil is different and I expect that some soils may need to be worked. Just if it can be avoided, the biology will thank you. I am glad you got a good harvest! Love your spider!
These potatos look great. Since you are good at cooking when are you going to share a recipe with us with vegetables all from your garden?
Thanks!
Honestly, I cook like that all the time, but putting extra effort into presentation and photography is such a hassle...
C’mon man you can do it. Everyone on Hive does that even me 😂
I have so much stuff to blog about right now...
I am blogging, almost daily. I think that's enough.
If I ever run out of material, I will post food, though :P
Okay I hope I don’t have to wait for months 😂
To get over the waiting period, have a look at my Kartoffelpuffer from a while ago.
I will 100% post Kartoffelpuffer again.
It's proof that we Germans don't always eat bland, boring food.
I think this recipe would work everywhere in the world.
What... Felixxx can make food also 👀👀👀👀 ??
Opinions vary, but I have gotten positive feedback on my cooking skills in the past B)
Ah ... I go soon look it :)) , I hope yo make more food posts in long run ;)
It be fun to see what you going to make :)
You do not listen shows! I gotcha!
I also try to put a minimum of effort into the garden and do not use chemical control agents. Now I am harvesting beans, they have grown a little smaller than their seeds. But I didn’t fertilize it with anything and, apart from weeding a couple of times, I didn’t do anything to it. Good harvest.
Beans went crazy this year for me.
But I fertilize. Even the beans.
I have access to a lot of animal poop, though.
!PIZZA !WINE
$PIZZA slices delivered:
@mundharmonika(1/5) tipped @felixxx
But since they're not going to be planted in the soil, how are you going to prevent animals front picking the plant and disturbing it from germinating?
I am not sure, if I understand correctly...
This is the harvest.
I did plant them in the soil. 4-5 months ago, that is.
edit:
nvm I think I understand.
With no-till, you would drill small holes to plant into.
Or cover them with a lot of mulch.
Okay, I get it now, I thought it's a pattern where you completely leave them in open space.
I even have a special, old tool for it:
With these potatos, you have to cover the lower part of the plant at some point, somehow.
If the sulight touches these potatos, they turn green and they become inedible, even toxic.
No-till relies on heavy mulching.
I cover them in dams.
like so: