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Gardening - Questions
Do I need a soil testing kit available at AGWAY?
What about stocking up on fertilizers or nitrogen? Lime? How big a compost pile do I need? How many Ball mason jars do I need for a family of four and 1/2 acre of harvest? I already cleaned out the local Ace store. What about gardening tools? The only seeds I have are the ones in the can from Nitro-Pak. I plan on dehydrating (Excalibur) and vacuum sealing (Weston) in the mason jars. |
Re: Gardening - Questions
Do I need a soil testing kit available at AGWAY?
They are a good idea for the basic NPK test + PH. IF you have a county extension agent there, you can get a cheap test done thru the State Ag Universities, also....but most of them won't test for micro nutrients. What about stocking up on fertilizers or nitrogen? Based on the test + add micro nutrient organic additives. Lime? Same How big a compost pile do I need? Hard to have one TOO big..... How many Ball mason jars do I need for a family of four and 1/2 acre of harvest? I already cleaned out the local Ace store. Hard to say what you'll get off a 1/2 acre.....but I figure one quart per day per person....that means a family of four needs about 1500 quarts. You probably can't grow 1500 quarts of stuff on a 1/2 acre, but that would include fruits, and meats you should try to get, not from the garden. What about gardening tools? Plenty of hand tools....for 1/2 acre, I'd get a GOOD tiller also. The only seeds I have are the ones in the can from Nitro-Pak. Start shopping local sources, and mail order catalogs....buy "heirloom" or open pollinated seeds....then learn to save your own. Corn, beans, melons are easy ones......onions, carrots, tomatoes are harder I plan on dehydrating (Excalibur) and vacuum sealing (Weston) in the mason jars. Learn to pressure can also.......you'll NEVER dry enough to make do, IMHO. |
Re: Gardening - Questions
I do not know about chemical fertilizers. You would need a large compost pile to sustain a garden that you were using for years. My father's garden has been exhausted afters five years of continuous gardening. This is even with constant amending with compost, ashes from a fire pit and the occasional chemical fertilizers. Once the land has been exhausted its night and day. This year my father's return on his garden was minimal except for the most of the tubers. And this was with a longer than normal growing season. I think with gardening or subsistence farming lots of compost and fertilizers will be necessary after exhausting the land.
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