Garden cover crop termination (without a tractor!)

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  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2023
  • One of the most intimidating parts of cover cropping in the home garden is figuring out how to kill it: different cover crops require different termination methods, so it's always smart to research that BEFORE you plant!
    I like using the peas when doing spring cover crops because they are easy to terminate and provide organic matter and nitrogen very inexpensively (the total cost for this entire area was less than $10)!
    You can go back and watch our planting video for more details on how we do this (linked at the end of the video). We planted the peas in about 6 weeks before last frost and terminated right at last frost, since peas are a cool season grower this works out quite well!
    Have you tried spring cover crops before? Let me know which ones you like or DON'T like!
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Komentáře • 32

  • @lindaschaefer2252
    @lindaschaefer2252 Před rokem +3

    Brianna, you will get more followers as people discover or even rediscover you. You are a no-nonsense, informative gardener. I love the way you never comb or curl your hair for the camera!😂😂

    • @Blossomandbranch
      @Blossomandbranch  Před rokem

      Haha thank you Linda!! I’m certainly no makeup influencer 🥴😂❤️

  • @marybendfeldt9596
    @marybendfeldt9596 Před rokem +1

    Super helpful for someone who just started cover cropping, thanks to my husband who promotes 4 the Soil here in Virginia. We started a little late last fall, but will continue to use the practice! Keeping the soil happy and healthy… Thanks for spreading the word!

  • @peterellis4262
    @peterellis4262 Před měsícem +1

    I'm a cutter ;) Chop and drop is about as simple and efficient as things get ;) Also - never trust a gardener with clean hands ;)

  • @jimkingsland1645
    @jimkingsland1645 Před rokem +1

    Thank you Brie for yet another informative video. I always learn so much from both your narrative and your demonstrations. What variety of peas did you use and how did you inoculate them? Looking forward to the direct sowing sequel. Thank you!

  • @susan_beaver
    @susan_beaver Před rokem

    4:51 C'mon, Dave! It's fascinating stuff! :D
    In all seriousness thank you for covering (ha!) this topic, it's an important one!

  • @Plantandpeoplecarer
    @Plantandpeoplecarer Před 7 měsíci

    Just found your channel, thank you for your videos! Love your methods and farm!

  • @stephentueller899
    @stephentueller899 Před rokem +8

    I tried peas for the first time this year and am curious why you recommend waiting 2 weeks after termination. I have been terminating minutes before transplanting into the pea residue and wonder what unforeseen complications this practice might lead to. Thanks!

  • @gardeningonthewestforkwith8994

    I learn so much from your videos thank you.

  • @mwmingram
    @mwmingram Před 4 měsíci

    Just what I needed to know. Thank you.

  • @mrs.mcnamara1669
    @mrs.mcnamara1669 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for that information.

  • @JuancarlosRodriguez-bx3bw
    @JuancarlosRodriguez-bx3bw Před 3 měsíci

    Nice and simple. Thank you

  • @ggsd4903
    @ggsd4903 Před rokem

    Great video. Very informative.

  • @justinsane7128
    @justinsane7128 Před rokem +10

    Weed is my cover crop, Sativa, not Stirred.

  • @RC-yb5dp
    @RC-yb5dp Před rokem

    My questions have been answered, thanks. 😮😊😮

  • @dhdrum33
    @dhdrum33 Před 10 dny

    Hi, thanks for the video. For pea cover crops like this, WHEN is the right time to terminate them? What are you looking for to determine it's time? If waiting to see flowers is "too late" b/c the nitrogen will already have started going to the fruit/seeds, then when is best?

  • @mickeyroberson9082
    @mickeyroberson9082 Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @fromthehutt9508
    @fromthehutt9508 Před rokem +2

    I have not done cover cropping but would like to start experimenting this fall. Any suggestions for a winter kill crop? I am in Nova Scotia so our winters get down to about -20c. One year I accidentally had a broccoli go to seed so it became a cover crop but would love some practical solutions.

    • @WesternMONo-TillGardening
      @WesternMONo-TillGardening Před 7 měsíci

      Sorghum sudangrass winter kills. You have to mow or cut it down a few times to keep it from going to seed, though. Oilseed radishes are a lower maintenance cover crop that winter kills.

  • @kimberlylumsden
    @kimberlylumsden Před rokem

    I'm curious about the stage of the soil when the peas were planted six weeks before last frost. Had it been bare? Was there residue covering it from a winter-kill cover crop? Was it covered by some other non-vegetative thing?

  • @thomcdixon
    @thomcdixon Před 11 měsíci

    curious about N content if the peas are allowed to fruit then the entire plant is worked into the soil (at a shallow depth to minimize soil disturbance).

  • @jenn976
    @jenn976 Před rokem

    Thanks for making this video. Question: I grow my sweet peas (ornamental) in large pots which I re-use from year to yer. My method has been to dump that used soil into other areas of my garden for the nitrogen but I’ve routinely done it in the fall. I only grow about 30-40 sweet pea plants so cutting by hand would work for me. After cutting down to the roots, should I leave the soil/roots in the pots over winter and wait until early spring to dump that soil in garden beds? Would that give me the most nitrogen-rich soil to work with?

  • @samanthagauthier9826
    @samanthagauthier9826 Před rokem +1

    How long were those peas growing for?

  • @Liz514
    @Liz514 Před rokem

    Question about green matter left behind and pests. I have lots of pests in my garden and all the guidance says to remove dead plants and leaves on the ground

    • @brandynash1409
      @brandynash1409 Před 9 měsíci

      You are deficient in Potassium. Your plants have to many carbohydrates (sugars) and it brings in the pests to feasts. And low potassium makes the cell structure thin. Which makes it easier for them to chew through.

  • @happyfatskinnygirl
    @happyfatskinnygirl Před rokem

    Why not cover the cover crop by covering it with a blackout tarp?

  • @muzammalpenduvlog7170

    Nice❤

  • @aryafeydakin
    @aryafeydakin Před 4 měsíci

    Not sure how much nitrogen 3 inch tall peas have accumulated in the nodules. Probably not much, if none at all.
    In temperate regions, the real reason for winter/spring cover crop is not fixing any nitrogen at all, but pumping back nitrogen leachates, closing the loop. The more agressive and deep the root system of the cover crop is, the more nitrogen residues are pumped back up and maintained into the living organic matter rather than lost into the sea.
    Because with bare soil, nitrate being an anion, is it not retained by the soil complex. If there's no plant roots to catch it up, nitrates slowly sinks deeper into the soil profile until it is lost into the aquifers or lateral water flow. But if you have a live cover crop (anything really), it will stop any leaching of nitrate by sucking it up from the soil solution with its roots.
    It's one thing to have rhizobium nodulations, it's another for the rhizobium to be actively fixating atmospheric nitrogen inside the nodules. To really know if the rhizobium is working, you'll have to cut up some nodules and check for coloration. If it's white, the rhizobium is dormant. If it's pink/red, the rhizobium is working.
    All things equal, nitrogen fixation by symbiotic rhizobium is time, temperature and strain dependent. When there's a lack of sun, the plant is not pumping enough sugars into the nodules so they stay dormant. The second factor is soil temperature. Nitrogen will not be fixed from the air if the soil temperature is too low. MOST rhizobium strain start fixating nitrogen when the soil reach a temperature of 25°C (77°F), so in temperate region that will not be before dead summer precisely when the plant goes to flower and seed.
    So you see there are many subtleties in all that nitrogen fixation story.
    There are some cold tolerant strains but then you'll have to know if the plant will accept them, and if there's not much sun hours, even some winter/spring rhizobium activity will not be significant in cool temperate climate.
    That's precisely because the plant has access to residual nitrogen, and the soil is too cool, and the sun is too low, that it won't spontaneously nodulate.
    I would ponder the necessity to go through with rhizobium inocculation for winter/spring cover cropping, and or even the necessity of using a nitrogen fixating plant at all in spring/winter cover crops especially if the soil is already at its peak fertility. All you need to do is just closing the nitrogen loop, not really add more.
    It would be best to use the plant with the deepest root system that is easy to terminate but usually that's antinomic.
    As for me, I'd rather keep empty plots empty because covers crops are unecessary work at such a small scale. Unless I want to make a full year fallow or more, then I'll use a BIOMAX seed mix rather than a single monoculture cover crop anyway.
    You can also have perennials or shrub borders and/or small trees for each beds that will pump most nitrogen leachates when the plots are empty during winter.

    • @Blossomandbranch
      @Blossomandbranch  Před 4 měsíci +1

      They were well over 6” but with no nurse crop to grow up they flop. All of the benefits of cover cropping are not in the nitrogen but also in organic matter and natural mulch accumulation.

  • @charliejohnson3344
    @charliejohnson3344 Před měsícem

    Try speaking a bit slower. Great information.

    • @keptyeti
      @keptyeti Před měsícem

      You can change the playback speed using the little gear icon.

  • @naughtyskyline
    @naughtyskyline Před 5 měsíci +1

    your hubs is like mine lol