Growing veggies in the remnants of a straw bale garden

This Year’s Veg Garden Experiment:

The last two years have been straw bale gardens with great success!  This year, there is still so much straw that I decided to see how the tomatoes and peppers would do in the remnants of composted soil and leftover straw.

The garden in November 2014

The garden in November 2014

When observing the garden for the first time after the Winter, I saw a few dried tomato vines and the blue string that encircled the four straw bales that acted as ‘soil’ for last season’s tomatoes and peppers.

 

Last year's garden, raked and ready

Last year’s garden, raked and ready

I picked about five or six weeds, that’s all!

The old straw is mixed with the rich soil

The old straw is mixed with the rich soil

When raking out the mounds of old straw, I was simply delighted to see that all the old straw from the last two years had formed a foot high mound of the blackest, richest looking soil I’ve ever seen. I mixed the old straw with the soil with my hands and mounded the whole thing up about one foot again.

Drip lines are still in place

Drip lines are still in place

I added a box of Blood Meal to add nitrogen in case the composting had diminished it, and then watered it in well.

Tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers planted early this drought year, on March 30!

Tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers planted early this drought year, on March 30!

In the last two  years, I used four straw bales forming the ‘L’ three on the long side and one at the bottom.  These mounds lay in the same places.   I’m expecting the roots to extend into the ground under the soil mix here.

Note: From the previous years, hardware cloth was put down under the bales to discourage any possible gophers and is still there.

The 'L' shaped garden mounds, planted

The ‘L’ shaped garden mounds, planted

You can see the “L” shaped mounds here with a flat of veggies I planted yesterday. Next, I’ll string up the wire trellis and when weather gets hot in July start the drip system going.

Last year's strawberries in the Hugelgarten are looking well after just a few meager Winter rains

Last year’s strawberries in the Hugelgarten are looking well after just a few meager Winter rains

I love garden experiments!

More of the story:

Part 1: Trying out a straw bale garden

Part 2: Summer progress on the straw bale garden

Part 3: Straw Bale gardening in the Sierra foothills: Harvest

 

The Book:

STRAW BALE GARDEN:Straw Bale Gardens: The Breakthrough Method for Growing Vegetables Anywhere, Earlier and with No Weeding by Joel Karsten

2 comments

  1. JadeAcre -

    I did my own strawberry experiment this spring using plastic mulch. It ultimately failed. I wrote about it here: http://www.jadeacre.com/abort-seascape-strawberry-experiment/

    I was wondering if you had any experience/advice for using plastic mulch. In my Southern California garden, I’m doing everything I can to conserve moisture and thought plastic would be useful.

    By the way, I love your site. The design and photography is gorgeous!

  2. Pingback: Trying out a straw bale garden | Sierra Foothill Garden

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