Heavy loam made humus compost bark ash grass. dug up 5 times last year but I am still hands over?



The author posted a question in Animals, Plants

Heavy loam made humus compost bark ash grass. dug up 5 times last year but I am still hands over? and got a better answer

Response from Нина[+++++]
It's not like the plants are princesses on a pea. You don't have to work yourself to death like that. My mom just has clay, like plasticine. But she doesn't bother with it like you do. She just draws rows, sows the seeds and puts compost on top. Don't forget about yourself, do you?

Response from 0[+++++]
It's not like the plants are princesses on a pea. You don't have to work yourself to death like that. My mom just has clay like plasticine. But she doesn't bother with it like you guys do. She just draws rows and sows the seeds and covers them with compost. Don't forget about yourself, either.

Response from 0[+++++]
Cultivator certainly help a lot, but one year the earth does not turn into a fertile fluff. Work on improving the land to continue: make organic matter, arrange a compost pile, pour EM product on the ground at summer temperature to form the REAL microbiota and then you are good. Good luck.

Response from 0[+++++]
The tenth time the clumps will break up.

Response from 0[+++++]
The earthworms do the soil structure better than any other participant in the process. You don't seem to have any. And for the microflora as for the plant roots all these clods don't matter, so don't worry about it.

Response from 0[+++++]
2 times a year to make what you listed + sand and dig with a shovel, not hands to a depth of at least a bayonet, then in 5 years the soil will be light. You can dig with a pitchfork. There are no bacteria in the clay and there is nothing to speed it up. There are no worms. It's all in the organic residues. Baikal and all that stuff is put in compost piles, not soil poured in.

 

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