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Sep 11, 2017 9:57 PM CST
Name: Dawn Keckley
Virginia Beach, VA (Zone 7b)
plantmanager said:True! I was out checking my yard. The mint is finally gone, but I still have garlic chives in many places. My new dog loves chewing on it, so he's trying to help eradicate it. Smiling


I'm still ripping out mint. 🙄 I had garlic chives pop up too this year, but they are at least easy to get out. I have some to a friend. Is this going to be another mint-sized disaster?
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Sep 22, 2017 4:15 AM CST
Name: Bee
Happy In my Garden Of W'Eden
I grew Black Mustard as a green manure in my veg plot- early Spring it was covered in the brightest sulphur yellow flowers that were absolutely covered with pollinators so much so you could hardly see the blooms - Whistling well needless to say it ended up staying in there far longer than it should have as it was one of the best pollinator plants in my garden- Im now going to sow the seed i dried off to recreate a patch in my wildflower meadow for early drowsy hungry bees in Spring The young leaf was also nice as an addition to salads - nice and peppery as you can imagine and also did improve the soil and suppress the weeds in the plot too Thumbs up


Thumb of 2017-09-22/Bee_Happy/d024ee Thumb of 2017-09-22/Bee_Happy/835f36
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Sep 22, 2017 4:28 AM CST
Name: Bee
Happy In my Garden Of W'Eden
coconut said:Not plants, but i knew an old guy who would till in sawdust in the fall. He had the fluffiest blackest soil, in an area of Virginia that had heavy red clay soil. His veg patch could be seen from the road, and it was always gorgeous.
I agree I use premium wood pellet horse bedding from high-quality softwood pellets to bed my chickens on - when i clean them out gets put on my veg plots and when well rotted down as i mix it with compost gets used over the winter as a mulch in the flower beds that have died back - my soil is often referred to as black gold, thanks to my chooks bless um Big Grin
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Sep 22, 2017 7:01 AM CST
Moderator
Name: Christine
North East Texas (Zone 7b)
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I agree During the winter months, my garden beds become the compost piles where I add kitchen scraps and bedding from the chicken house. "Used" chicken bedding is the best compost! Chooks, I love that name. Smiling

Mustard seems like a good idea, with the bonus of early garden greens. Sometimes I find wild mustard greens growing near the chicken coop.
May your life be like a wildflower, growing freely in the beauty and joy of each day --Native American Proverb

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Oct 24, 2019 9:56 AM CST
Name: Alice
Fort Worth (Zone 8a)
Beekeeper Ponds Sempervivums
crimson clover is what i usually use, deciding whether this year
Avatar for Entwined
Jan 14, 2023 10:23 PM CST
Name: Retired from Forum
USA (Zone 7b)
In my region one of the most beneficial plants for our soil is a weed with roots that can go as deep as 30 feet into dry hard subsoil and bring nutrients up to the surface that other plants cannot reach. The plant then dies back in winter and forms a layer of organic material and this process repeats.

Over time barren soils are broken up into more friable material, enriched and they start to support grasses, which give way to shrubs and small trees, which are then able to survive and thrive on the plot of land, that has been worked and enriched by the plants over time.

The plant I am thinking of does poorly in fertile acidic soils, but does well in dry alkaline soils, so as it alters an environment over time and enriches it, this action of enrichment then causes the land to favor other plants and the original species dies off.

The plant is Convolvulus arvensis and I have watched it colonize barren soils and turn them into tree filled groves in less than a decade. It has amazing abilities to help soil though animals like cattle or sheep prevent the effects of enrichment and this type of effect is not observed on grazed lands, which decrease in fertility over time.
I have chosen to retire from this forum due to issues I have with regards to how it is moderated and personal drama I have recently become aware of.
Last edited by Entwined Jan 14, 2023 10:24 PM Icon for preview
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Jan 15, 2023 7:18 AM CST
Moderator
Name: Christine
North East Texas (Zone 7b)
Shine Your Light!
Heirlooms Native Plants and Wildflowers Organic Gardener Hummingbirder Bee Lover Herbs
Butterflies Dragonflies Birds Cat Lover Dog Lover Garden Photography
This is great information, Entwined, thank you for sharing about how deep rooted plants can bring nutrients up to the surface of the soil. The negative side is that your plant of choice, Convolvulus arvensis, Field bindweed is non-native, from Europe and Asia and is considered an invasive and noxious weed in 35 States of the USA. I would think twice before considering using bindweed as a soil enrichment plant and make sure it's not considered invasive in my area before planting it.
May your life be like a wildflower, growing freely in the beauty and joy of each day --Native American Proverb

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