No Tilling Gardening. Also Called Lasagna Gardening (USA)

Discussion in 'Gardening Other' started by jnnwyman, Mar 11, 2006.

  1. jnnwyman

    jnnwyman Seedling

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    Lasagna Gardening-No Tilling

    From gardener Arden:

    Create a new gardening bed without tilling or pulling up grass and weeds:

    Once you have a well defined garden bed, no need to clear it of grass or weeds, just layer about 6 or 8 newspaper sheets or cardboard over the bed area, water the paper or cardboard to the soaking point (this method will eventually smother whatever is growing there).

    Over this paper or cardboard, you can build up layers of organic materials by using already made compost from your own pile or bought in bags from a nursery, chopped up leaves, grass clippings, chipped up prunings, produce trimmings, aged manure (not dog or cat), whatever you can gather that will rot. Pile it on as thick as you can and be sure it is kept well moistened as if you are watering a garden each week. This is known as lasagna gardening.
    Or you can mix everything together and then pile it on top of the paper or cardboard if you prefer.

    If you would like to have a top layer, wood chips can often be found at your city's Parks & Recreation Dept., or you can check with your local nurseries. This will make a good top dressing to keep moisture in and to keep wind from blowing away your lasagna.

    This material will break down and become a rich, loose loam. Keep adding to this each year and you will have a very nice gardening bed.

    **************************************************

    And here is another way from gardener Merrybelle:

    Lasagna gardening:

    Lasagna gardening is simply a short cut to digging and tilling up an area for new beds. I live on a hillside and part of our now yard used to be pasture land , so not only is the land compacted, it's also clay based with wild Bermuda in a goodly portion of it.

    To lasagna, you normally spray the grass with a grass/weed killer (I'll get creamed by the environmentalists on this one).

    Then you lay down your cardboard/newspapers.

    On top of this you put compost, top soil, potting soil, shredded leaves, etc.

    You are now ready to plant your beds.

    When using newspapers, they need to be thick, that's why I prefer cardboard. It suppresses the greenery underneath while decomposing, thereby enriching the soil. For some reason, the papers/cardboard draw earthworms like crazy, which is also good for aeration of the soil.

    You obviously cannot till in your dirt mixture immediately, that's why most people let the topsoil/compost/potting soil/shredded leaves sit for awhile on top of the cardboard/newspaper layers, to give them time to decompose. This is esp. true if you are going to be digging holes for shrubs, roses, anything that required more than a minimum of root cover.

    Being the impatient person that I am, I normally plant immediately on top, but then, I'm planting shallow rooted things like lilies, etc.

    All of my beds are lasagna'd - ie, layered.

    So in a nutshell, lasagna gardening is layer gardening, a quicker way to create new beds, esp. for us older folks who can't double dig, or who have very poor soil.

    HAPPY NO TILLING/LASAGNA GARDENING TO YOU!
     
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  3. cindyoh

    cindyoh New Seed

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    Best time of year/month to start killing off the grass?

    Newbie here, live in Dayton, OH. Got a fairly small backyard and have suddenly decided I'd like the grass gone and want to grow wildflowers/perennials. Have lived here nearly two years, used to be a dark dank jungle out back, had large trees removed (both dead old huge branches on the ground and stuff overhead) and it's looking mostly sunny now. I realize there'll be more work than I'm thinking in killing off this grass and that I should probably start small. Have been studying plans and am on the thrifty side but really think I can make this happen over time.
     
  4. Primsong

    Primsong Young Pine

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    Do you know anyone with a sod-cutter that you could borrow? We transformed a huge grass yard into a garden here as part of a community project and there's no way we could have conquered that stuff without the cutter. We were able to donate the sod to a neighbor, too (unless you'd like to have grass someplace else on the property).

    Once the sod was cut and lifted off, we added a load of good soil/compost and just went from there.
     
  5. cindyoh

    cindyoh New Seed

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    Sounds like a good idea....

    And less backbreaking/time consuming, I'm sure. Would probably have to rent one but at least can imagine the job going quicker with this method. I spent a great deal of time today, cutting and weeding and removing more branches from the neighbor's messy trees growing over my fence (a pet peeve, I've renters on both sides of me who could care less and both have terribly overgrown yards). Anyway, I'm a tired but happy camper. (Interesting how you forget how worn out yard work can make you but the rewards can be great).

    Thanks much, Primsong!
     
  6. dooley

    dooley Super Garden Turtle

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    I spent one whole summer, when we moved here, cutting grass out of an area where we wanted garden. It's easy to dig now, but every year the grass wants to come back and it's digging it out again. The neighbor just looks at me and shakes his head. His idea is to plant every inch with trees and bushes so he doesn't have to cut grass. Dooley
     

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