Going a different direction this year (strawbales)

Discussion in 'Fruit and Veg Gardening' started by blktalon3, Apr 10, 2017.

  1. blktalon3

    blktalon3 New Seed

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    To make a long story short, my soil is horrible. I eventually want to go with raised beds but this year I'm gonna try strawbales while I figure out the raised beds. I'm conditioning them now. I have some seeds started, so will be planting as soon as the seeds come up. Also hope to get a few more bales in a week or two. Wish me luck. :fingerscrossed:

    IMG_2321.JPG
     
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  3. eileen

    eileen Resident Taxonomist Staff Member Moderator Plants Contributor

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    Good luck blktalon3. I'll be interested to see how you get on with those straw bales.
     
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  4. Frank

    Frank GardenStew Founder Staff Member Administrator

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    This looks like it will be a successful experiment Blktalon3. Please keep us updated!
     
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  5. toni

    toni Mistress of Garden Junque Staff Member Moderator Plants Contributor

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    I have seen articles about the process in a few gardening magazines over the years and those gardeners have had great success with it. You should be having some great plants later in the season.
    Have you ever tried growing veggies in bags of soil? I did a few years ago, of course it was the year when the drought and ensuing watering restrictions were the worst so it was marginally successful for me but I have also seen articles about that type of growing in magazines.
     
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  6. blktalon3

    blktalon3 New Seed

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    I've tried with potatoes in bags which did ok but not great. But that was more my fault I'd say.
    I'm also doing some container planting to go along with the bales. The black pots in front of the bales in the pic have potatoes in them. I have 2 more I just planted yesterday. Also gonna do a few other thing in containers.;)
     
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  7. toni

    toni Mistress of Garden Junque Staff Member Moderator Plants Contributor

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    I have grown potatoes in all sorts of containers, a wheelbarrow for two years, large pots, a raised bed and this year in a cloth grocery bag that has the handles on wrong (came from the grocery store like that) our soil is black clay so containers are easier in some circumstances.
     
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  8. mart

    mart Strong Ash

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    I have grown tomatoes in the large round rolls of hay we feed our horses in winter. They were growing fine until they decided to put the roll in the horse pasture. I have two styrofoam coolers, the cheapie ones from the dollar store, that I grow lettuce in. I can plant them early for salads rather than waiting for the garden to be ready. They hold a lot of soil so even tomatoes or potatoes would do well in them. I put 5 holes in the bottom but next time I am going to put three holes. They will retain more water that way.
     
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  9. Kristin Marten

    Kristin Marten New Seed

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    So what is the process of growing in a straw bale? How does it work?
     
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  10. blktalon3

    blktalon3 New Seed

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    Basically the straw bale takes the place of soil. You have to condition the bale before planting. This gets it decomposing in the middle of the bale which feeds the plants you put in it. Search straw bale gardening on YouTube and you'll get the idea. I've never done it before so this is a learning process for me. Joel Karsten wrote a book on the process which is supposed to be really good.
     
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  11. toni

    toni Mistress of Garden Junque Staff Member Moderator Plants Contributor

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    Just be sure you get straw bales...they are seedless. Hay bales still have seeds and will turn into a nightmare when they start germinating in the rest of your yard.
     
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  12. 2ofus

    2ofus Hardy Maple

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    We tried straw bales last year and had mixed results. We planted one with carrots and one with zucchini. The article we read said to cut a groove in the one for carrots so they would grow straight, which we did, but they didn't grow very well. The zucchini did great though and it was so easy to see the small zucchini and pick them before they were over large. We always miss some in the garden until they are huge! It was hard to find the small bales though and we ended up driving 70 miles, one way, to get 2 $1.50 bales!
     
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  13. blktalon3

    blktalon3 New Seed

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    You have a lowes or southern states, something like that? They normally have some.
     
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  14. blktalon3

    blktalon3 New Seed

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    Beans are the first to go in.:)
    bean starts.jpg

    strawbale beans.jpg
     
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  15. Philip Nulty

    Philip Nulty Strong Ash

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    Looking good,..a friend of mine grew strawberries in bales and they did very well for him.
     
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  16. hummerbum

    hummerbum Young Pine

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    That is cool...please keep us posted!!
     
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