Due to all the compost and manure and everything else good that goes in my garden it is making the grass thrive around it.
I didn't even notice till my neighbor said something. He has a deck and has a better perspective but apparently all the rain we have had is running through my garden and down the hill right after it. I went to look at it and he is right. Directly below my garden and to side in his yard it is green and thick about mower thick. The thing he really noticed is the guy behind us has a big ol' patch of thick green grass right where my washout is and just up to where his yard starts to go back uphill towards his house. The rest of his yard is mostly yellow except for the washout area. I might have to send him a bill for lawn services.
There you go, proof positive my garden has something right in it.
I can't wait for this year to get moving, I have stuff planted but everything is limbo. We are stuck in a winter like pattern for a few weeks. We had 2 inches of wet snow yesterday and expecting another few inches today. The 2 day's before this it was in the 80's welcome to St Louis.
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I was thinking elderberries, or blueberries or rasperries, or currants, or gooseberries, or goji berries, or serviceberries or better yet, all the above! Eat what the birds leave; you are still getting more than you were before, and you have made great habitat too...
But ain't it nice to see the biology spreading out, getting the soil back to right, and even restoring where others have done the damage? That isn't nitrogen running away, it is simply biology spreading out and bringing life back to dying soils, and that is nothing but cool! Organic nitrogen doesn't run, it's bacteria! (and yes I know urea is an exception, but for the most part this stands true).
HG
But ain't it nice to see the biology spreading out, getting the soil back to right, and even restoring where others have done the damage? That isn't nitrogen running away, it is simply biology spreading out and bringing life back to dying soils, and that is nothing but cool! Organic nitrogen doesn't run, it's bacteria! (and yes I know urea is an exception, but for the most part this stands true).
HG